July 31, 2013
Nelson Minar on fixing toxic behavior in online communities
— most bad behavior comes from normally good people; great talk about the League of Legends tribunal system #
Glenn Greenwald on XKeyscore, NSA tool to collect HTTP activity
— bizarre to read the very matter-of-fact internal presentation #
Bret Victor's The Future of Programming
— inspired by Alan Kay, a time warp back to 1973 to talk about programmer humility #
Randall Munroe completes Time
— 3,099 panels, an artificial language, animated starfields, and more (via) #
Penny Arcade on the Internet's war against creatives
— when you live in public, it's hard to block out the tiny, but vocal, minority of assholes (via) #
NYT on Reddit's involvement with misidentifying the Boston Marathon bombers
— includes some new bits about Aaron Swartz and Reddit (via) #
Jennifer Dewalt's learning to code by making a website daily for six months
— the coding equivalent of Dance in a Year #
Gamasutra feature on the ethics of "free-to-play" games
— like in gambling, there are "whales" who devote huge chunks of their income to virtual upgrades #
Scott Pilgrim's Bryan Lee O'Malley interviews Homestuck's Andrew Hussie
— great interview that explains why Homestuck's cult following is so huge, but ignored outside of its fanbase #
Questlove on Trayvon Martin and race in America
— also: Ta-Nehisi Coates on the irony of American justice #
This American Life's best episodes
— in honor of episode #500; Ira Glass's favorites and other staff picks #
SoundSlice launches Pitch Perfect, guitar tab store for artists
— official transcriptions in the best UI ever made for guitar tab #
The era of constant photography
— I keep waiting for a device that records audio or video constantly, stored remotely #
DefCon asks government to stay away
— the feds were asked not to attend for the first time, in the wake of Snowden and Manning #
Screens on Screen
Recently, a site started making the rounds called Kit FUI — a new IMDB-like database of FUIs, fantasy or fictional UIs from TV and film. You know the ones: the virtual-reality Unix filesystem from Jurassic Park, the Terminator 2 HUD, the Esper photo analyzer from Blade Runner, and countless others.
Of course, Kit FUI wasn’t the first site to track fake UIs. In 2007, Starring the Computer began indexing computers in film, many with fictional displays. Access Main Computer File started on Tumblr in 2010, and Fake UI followed in 2012.
I’ve linked to every one of these sites in the past, because each reminded me of an incomplete project I started in 2004, but always wished I’d finished.
In August 2004, I posted a question on Ask Metafilter asking, “Is there a website compiling framegrabs of computer screens in feature films?” The consensus was no, so I decided to do it myself.
One Metafilter member, Mike Lietz, responded that he was willing to capture some screenshots from his own DVD collection. We connected by email and got to work.
For lack of a better name, I called it “Screens on Screen” and set up the database and a simple viewer, while Mike started sending me screenshots. I built a tool for categorizing the UIs by period (past, present, or future), the platform, and what type of application they depicted. But the data entry was tedious, and Upcoming.org was starting to take off, so I put it aside. But not before Mike had captured over 1,200 screenshots from 47 films, dumped into an open directory on my server, where it stayed undiscovered for nine years.
Yesterday, on a whim, I mentioned my secret stash of screenshots on Twitter.
What's that? Oh, just my secret stash of 1,200 screenshots of computer interfaces from old movies. http://t.co/Acy1mkEQVS
— Andy Baio (@waxpancake) July 10, 2013
It immediately exploded. Even with its extremely simple directory listing, it captured people’s imaginations.
Within a couple hours, three awesome geeks immediately built new ways to browse the collection.
- Peter Hellberg made GUI, a simple, but beautiful, fullscreen photo viewer on NeoCities, that supports touch events and spacebar to advance.
- Dan Phiffer made a simple wiki to add metadata to the images.
- Jim Nielsen made a scrolling, lazy-loading interface to view them all at once.
And me? I’m absolutely giddy that people are finding new uses for a project that sat on my server ignored for nearly a decade.
Any creative person builds up a cache of unfinished projects. They usually stay hidden forever, buried and unexplored, taken to the grave.
Photographer David Friedman constantly came up with ideas he didn’t have the time to pursue, so finally decided to start doing idea dumps, posting his work in its incomplete state. To his delight, several of his ideas were picked up by his readers, who went on to make them real. I shouldn’t have been surprised the same thing would happen with Screens on Screen.
I’m going to take this as a personal lesson: stop hiding your imperfect and incomplete ideas for years. Stop collecting them in your head, like dying butterflies in a glass jar. It’s always better to let them fly.
New Yorker profile of Desert Bus
— didn't realize my 2006 post played a role in the charity; I've served 9.6 terabytes so far! #
NYT Magazine profile of ex-Nirvana/Soundgarden guitarist turned war hero
— fired from both bands, he went on to become part of the U.S. Army Special Forces #
RIP Douglas Engelbart
— watching the Mother of All Demos again today, it's still astounding how visionary he was #
Marco Arment on the Reader shutdown, interoperability and independence
— "Well, fuck them, and fuck that." #