Eduard Grebe

Pics, links and brief thoughts

Fyodor Lukyanov: Destructive Soviet nostalgia

Lukyanov argues, interestingly, that nostalgia for the Soviet past persists in Russia because no credible ideological alternative has presented itself. And the lived reality of Russian “democracy” is often as bad or worse than the Soviet past.

Sorrow over the end of the Soviet Union primarily reflects the absence of a conceptual replacement for the former socio-political formation. The ideological anti-communist revolution of the early 1990s, designed to discredit the Soviet model to the world once and for all, quickly came to a halt.

Source: Russia in Global Affairs

Jason Tanz: The curse of Cow Clicker

A fascinating take on social games and “gamification” through a look at the surprising appeal of a deliberately stupid Facebook game.

Tosome industry stalwarts, the gamification craze looks a lot like Cow Clicker—mindlessly deploying gaming’s most superficial and addictive features,such as leaderboards and badges, without providing the underlying experience that gives them meaning.Bogost himself made this argument at a gamification conference, during a talk called Gamification Is Bullshit,in which he suggestedan alternate term, exploitationware.That,he said, represents the true mission of gamifiers: to use game mechanics to cynically ensnare their customers, much as Cow Clicker had unwittingly hookedits prey—including,as it turnedout, Bogost himself.

Source: http://www.wired.com/magazine/2011/12/ff_cowclicker/all/1

Nokia N9

Dan Hill writes an excellent meditation on the N9 in Domus from a design point of view. The main take-away is that it is a brilliant piece of design, with excellent hardware and software, pleasantly distinguished from Apple’s currently hegemonic design aesthetic, but seriously hampered by a weak app ecosystem.

I am incredibly sad that Nokia finally managed to complement its excellent hardware with a good mobile OS and then immediately obsoleted it to throw in its lot with Microsoft. I’m still tempted to buy an N9 though.

Dan Hill on the hardware:

Domus has had the N9 for the last month and thoroughly road-tested it. First things first. It’s a beautifully made device, perhaps the finest mobile phone handset design yet. The body is polycarbonate, a thermoplastic polymer. Or a plastic, in other words. It feels tough yet light.

Paradoxically, although the surface gives an impression of lightness, the body feels heavy. But it is exactly the right weight. It is roughly the same weight as the iPhone—slightly lighter in fact, despite being a tad larger. But the weight is right in the hand. It’s an example of where Nokia understands hardware, demonstrating that weight can lend handheld devices a perception of quality; see also an Olympus PEN or a Bang & Olufsen TV’s remote control.

On the software:

The graphic design in the Meego OS is often quite wonderful. You will never see a more beautiful calculator app, for what it’s worth. Similarly, all the core functionality—calendar, contacts, notifications, calls—are bold, confident and clear, and perhaps the most elegant of any phone OS thus far. There is some strong work here.

Setting the clock has entailed a redesign of clock-based interactions themselves, which Meego just about gets away with. This brave move indicates the verve that pervades much of Meego, and presents a sharp contrast to Apple’s hokey Vegas-slot-machine-style drums for the same function. All the other core phone-related apps, as well as Camera (which is excellent), Gallery, Videos etc., are well executed. Nokia’s new typeface, ‘Pure’ by master craftsman Bruno Maag, is used throughout, and particularly strong at medium and large sizes. At a smaller size, it gives the perception of being slightly brittle, almost a quaint echo of how phones used to display type. The vivid colour scheme—all rich saturated pinks, oranges and cyans, offset by whites, blacks and greys—is in harmony with the phone’s physical design and that starless and bible black display.

Overall, Meego’s design feels marginally stronger than Apple’s inconsistent designs in iOS, which is both a breath of fresh air and some achievement. Steve Jobs believed that above all his firm had “good taste”, and placed great sway in that; entire swathes of iOS exemplify this belief, with rock-solid interaction design supported by responsive performance, strong accessibility, clear metaphors and big bold buttons.

Yet the skeuomorphic nonsense that incomprehensibly pervades apps like Apple’s own Contacts, Calendar, iBooks, GameCenter, Find My Friends et al—all awkward faux-leather, wood and paper stylings—is is of such questionable “taste” it threatens to damage the overall harmony of iOS with its discordant notes. You cannot derive value from the idle suggestion of such textures on screen; they are physical properties and should be experienced as such, or not at all. Yet Apple’s design team will not explore those physical properties, merely sublimating their desire for such qualities into a picture of leather, a picture of wood. It recalls Marcel Duchamp’s critique of ‘retinal art’ i.e. intended only to please the eye.

This has no place in Nokia’s design universe, thankfully. The design work here is intrinsically of its medium and pleases the eye consistently, without resorting to cheap imagery, but it also pleases the hand and the ear rather more than the iPhone.

And on its possible fate:

The Citröen DS was ultimately destined to befall the fate of mummification as a ‘design icon’ rather than a major commercial success. Numerous beautifully-maintained examples are still just about running, maintained by obsessives who spend their Sunday mornings patching up fuel sumps, buffing white leather interiors and browsing eBay for increasingly rare spare parts.

Perhaps as with the DS 19, the N9 will also end up maintained by an army of enthusiasts, a lost classic filed away in some museum of digital artefacts, an open-source movement supporting and extending Meego as a kind of avant-garde alt.OS, augmented by 3D-printed replacement physical parts or modded components, as with Leicas and Polaroids.

Source: http://domusweb.it/en/design/portable-cathedrals/

The lion and the lamb

But which is which?

image

Photo credit: Janneke van Rooyen

WordPress for Android

I am surprised to find that the WordPress Android app is vastly superior (even in UI) to the iOS app. A pleasant inversion of the usual situation.

wpid-IMG_20111225_104029.jpg

Glenn Greenwald on the intellectual cowardice of Bradley Manning’s critics

The persecution (and vigorous prosecution) of Manning illustrates a crazed devotion to “national security on the part of the Obama administration. Change we can believe in indeed.

Greenwald points out the absurdity of defending the Pentagon Papers leak but condemning Manning:

To the extent one wants to distinguish the two leaks, Ellsberg’s was the far more serious breach of secrecy. The U.S. Government’s own pre-leak assessment of the sensitivities of these documents proves that. How can someone — in the name of government secrecy and national security — praise the release of thousands of pages of Top Secret documents while vehemently condemning the release of documents bearing a much lower secrecy classification?

Source: Salon.com

On standardized post formats – Andrew Nacin

I am glad that WordPress started implementing standard post formats (like Tumblr has had all along). But the implementation leaves much to be desired. For example, this post is a “link”, which results in the theme rendering the post title as a link to the external site. Great. Except there is no URL field – you have to put a link somewhere in the body. Which results in two links to the same content (the post title, and somewhere inside it). That is just silly.

And what happens when I add two links in the body? I don’t know, but I’m guessing the first one will be used. Which would not be my preference, because I might add one or more links to earlier things that frame the discussion before adding the “Source” link—the convention I decided upon to deal with where to put these sorts of things.

Source: Andrew Nacin.

John Cook on Hitchens’s unforgivable mistake

A last Hitchens link for now.

Hitchens’ style—ironically, given his hatred for tyranny and love of free expression—brooked no dissent. There was little room for good-faith disagreement or loyal opposition. His enemies were not just wrong, they were stupid or mean or small-minded or liars or cheats or children or cowards. It was thrilling and gratifying to see that articulate viciousness deployed against the Clinton cartel, or Mother Teresa, or Henry Kissinger—against power and pretense. To see it deployed in favor of war, on behalf of a dullard and scion, against the hysterical mother of a dead son was nauseating.

Source: Hitchens’s unforgivable mistake

Corey Robin: “Yes, but” – more on the reaction to Hitchens’s death

Second, the problem isn’t just that Hitchens was wrong on Iraq and the war on terror; it’s how he was wrong.  As I showed in my previous post, Hitchens’s words betrayed—actually, since he made no secret of it, displayed seems the more appropriate word—a cruelty and bloodlust, a thrill for violence and apocalyptic confrontation, an almost sociopathic indifference to the victims of that violence and confrontation, that are disturbing and frightening. What’s more, he included these feelings among his reasons for wanting to fight the war on terror.

Some might consider such confessions honest and brave. They are not. What’s honest and brave is to acknowledge these feelings in oneself and to seek to curb their influence on one’s reasoning.  Not celebrating them, in the vein of politicians and propagandists in 1914 who sent men to die in vain. Hitchens’s is not the voice of the Enlightenment; it’s the voice of the men who brought that dream to an end, when they welcomed the bloodbath of the First World War as a relief from the tedium and boredom they had evidently been suffering from throughout the long nineteenth century.

Source: “Yes, but”: More on Hitchens and Hagiography

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 335 other followers