A complete solution for mobility:
Electric car model and battery change distribution system - http://blip.tv/play/gfIU2P5LhZlM
Electric car model and battery change distribution system - http://blip.tv/play/gfIU2P5LhZlM
prototype philosophy | signaled by mark schraad - IxDA - http://www.ixda.org/discuss.php?post=31696
Great article on the business week site today about design…
http://www.businessweek.com/innovate /content /jul2008 /id20080728 _623527.htm?chan=innovation _innovation +%2B +design _top +stories
Near the end of the article Claudia Kotchka talks about prototype workshops…
“Participants get scared using such rough prototypes to elicit consumer feedback at the beginning, but they are won over when they see the benefits of co-creation, ” says Kotchka. “We have found that the more finished a prototype is, the less feedback people will give you. When you give prospective users something half-finished, they think you don’t know the answer. They know you need their help—and really open up.”
She probably should have given some credit to Bill Buxton regarding the notion of using form and polish to project openness and encourage input and exploration.
Mark
Google Knol has launched and I’ve made a contribution about microblogs as my first Knol I worked on.
10 reasons why my bicycle is better than trains.
1 - My bicycle don’t have “hours”, I can move when I want, never have to wait it come, it’s just here !
2 - My Bicycle is in house… don’t have to go so far to get one, it here in my garage !
3 - My bicycle has privacy… I don’t have to be with all this people I don’t even know !
4 - My bicycle is convenient, it can bring object, look at the basket you can put in front or the caddies you can attach in the back !!
5 - My bicycle is cheap… look at all the train ticket you paid… make the adition, your bike cost less than 3 month of train !
6 - My bicycle is friendly : I can take a friend with me if I want !
7 - My bicycle is customisable !! if you put a sticker on a train, you can be arrested !!
8 - My bicycle is popular : sooo many people over the planet use one !
9 - My Bicycle is easy to use : trains are so complicate…where I am, where I go, where have I to change ?? Bike is direct A to B !
10 - My bicycle is clean. It run with only my muscles, no gaz, no oil, not even nuclear electricity : it’s the cleanest way to move.
What ? to go in vacations ? euh…..
The listing of the better microblogs at http://microblogs.ning.com starts with this statement:
“This list is a personal choice and based on three criteria: ease of operability, quality of service and experienced functional up-time.”
Nice, we all want this. But the question remains: what makes up a really good microblog ?
For me it are these ten requirements:
1* login with username
2* immediately ready for posting after login
3* 140 characters mininum
4* no title needed
5* standard sending to all people
6* no extra tagging needed
7* respecting commas in urls
8* shortening urls
9* directly ready for reposting
10* presenting your previous postings
This list of requirements is ofcourse strictly personal, but I wanted to be able to discuss about quality so I had to substantiate what I see to be necessary for quality.
These seven microblogs meet all these criteria:
http://twitter.com
http://smspr.ru
http://zuosa.com
http://gozub.com
http://blip.pl
http://feecle.jp
Do you know of any other microblog meeting these criteria, let me know it right away !
Pieter Jansegers
Microblogs are here to stay and the most important thing about microblogs is their immediate feedback information loop capabilities.
Some microblogs worldwide
This list is a personal choice and based on three criteria: ease of operability, quality of service and experienced functional up-time.
general
http://twitter.com
http://jaiku.com
http://pownce.com
http://yelago.com
http://beemood.com
http://yonkly.com
Chinese
http://fanfou.com
http://zuosa.com
http://komoo.cn
Indian
http://snockles.com
Singaporean
http://tiish.com
Italian
http://meemi.com
Spanish
http://khaces.com
http://fritsi.com
Turkish
http://nolyo.com
French
http://noumba.net
http://tapioka.ca
http://frazr.com
Korean
http://playtalk.net
http://me2day.net
Japanese
http://feecle.jp
http://haru.fm
German
http://niimo.com
http://dukudu.de
Polish
http://blip.pl
Dutch
http://numpa.nl
Portuguese
http://gozub.com
Russian
http://smspr.ru
Arabic
http://watwet.com
Romanian
http://cirip.ro
Mexican
http://mexicodiario.com
special
http://tumblr.com
http://hictu.com
http://babl.nl
http://floort.com
http://help.com
http://justtell.us
multiple posting
http://hellotxt.com
The most exhaustive list I know about is the list made up by thw http://www.thws.cn/articles/twitter-clones.html
Pieter Jansegers
I wrote
Writing down thoughts and quotations has been practiced almost since the beginning of writing.
Proverbs of Ben Sira are finally very nice tweets.
I believe it’s Cicero who said: ‘Whatever is well said, no matter by whoever it’s said, I use it’.
Erasmus took notes because he argued that you don’t have time to read a book over again without loosing time to read new ones.
Blaise Pascal wrote his Pensées in tweets as well.
Rousseau pointed out he want to walk and took notes on new thoughts that arised from walking.
Dale Carnegie stimulates people to write down thoughts that can be used later on in his [Dale Carnegie’s Lifetime Plan for Success: The Great Bestselling Works Complete In One Volume]
Before blogs, microblogs, chronicles and even paper was available, people wrote already tweets on wall.
The popular Latin language is known due to this kind of inscriptions.
Isn’t Twitter just a modern form of textual graffiti ?
People want to leave their mark behind, knowing that “verba volant, scripta manent” (words fly away, but what’s written remains)
This is not really amazing because both hieroglyphs and runes were essentially used for religion, and if I’m not mistaken the predictions of the greek oracles where written down by priest.
Hebrew, Sanskrit, Greek, Latin and Arabic are considered sacred language because the sacred or holy words were written down in these languages.
Initiation in reading was getting initiated in the possibility of reading these scriptures.
But writing has of even more importance, because it meant to be able to leave thoughts to posterity or send them to people far away.
Twitter has the same attraction to people as trees do the lovers: it enables people to leave a trace of the things they’ve felt, observed, discovered, lived or promised for ever and for everyone to see and read.