How my day was...
My day at work was almost entirely taken up with the Patent Review Committee: a dry run in the morning for my presentation, and the meeting itself all afternoon. My walk got squeezed down to under half an hour.
But the presentation went well; I'll find out tomorrow whether it passed. In any case, the next step is to get back to turning it from a bailing-wire-and-duct-tape demo into a real system. I'm actually rather pleased with it -- it's a system of physical devices, not just software.
Somehow I managed to twist my right ankle, just standing up out of my chair. Aspirin and a brace seem to have taken care of the worst of it, but I'm grumpy. That was the good ankle.
Not my project, but it's cool as heck and launched today: iCandy.ricohinnovations.com. No Linux client yet, unfortunately; I'll see what I can do. [11-10: Note: iCandy is cool technology, but it's still beta at this point and the site might not be the best introduction to it. The somewhat-misnamed About Us page might be a better place to start. Note that you need a webcam and iTunes in order to use it; we're all hoping that the need for iTunes will go away, because it's just as useful for sharing links to photos and websites as it is for sharing links to music.]
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It's mostly for music, linked to iTunes (hence the name) and last.fm. It's a research project that several people at my lab have been working on for the last couple of years.
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If you're not seeing a blue round-cornered rectangle with the words "iCandy Where "personal push" comes to shove" and a row of grey buttons below that, then they may be doing something stupid with browser detection. There should also be a row of text links across the bottom titled "About Us" ... "Developer Blog". In any case, I'll point the team at your reactions; you obviously had a much different reaction to the page than they -- or I -- was expecting. Neither of us is probably in their target demographic, though.
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I think this is a neat idea, kinda like taking the CueCat idea and instead of only letting manufacturers define where people go letting the users do it themselves.
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(Anonymous) 2008-11-10 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)iCandy is an interesting technology that people instantly *get* when they see it demoed but has proven elusive to describe in words. Stil, we're working on it.
Margarita
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I read about the process in Wired (I think) a month or two ago. It looks like something that will be wildly popular with certain sub-sub-cultures of younger users. But it's not something I can imagine myself ever having any use for at all. (And I flatly refuse to install iTunes on my computer. I did, once, for something that needed it; iTunes took up way too much storage space and way too many other resources, had some unpleasantly spyware-like habits, and ultimately crashed my machine.)
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I don't use iTunes, either, but I can see myself putting QR codes on, e.g., advertising fliers for my CD or for one of my websites, if it ever became popular.
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And, yes, the technology behind iCandy could be very useful in advertising.
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(which would have been a much better place to link to.)
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It's still valuable feedback: if the first thing someone sees on a page is a signup link with no indication of what the site is about...
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(Anonymous) 2008-11-10 08:30 pm (UTC)(link)We've been working on the website since it became publicly accessible last Wednesday and continue to evolve it as we get feedback. The team (3 people) comes out of research not website development so we're rapidly moving up the learning curve on implementing all the finer points and details. We didn't want the great to be the enemy of the good (enough) to start getting early feedback on how to make things better.
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You might want to involve a web designer at least part-time, though.
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Eventually they'll want broader appeal, because Ricoh's main customer base is small businesses and workgroups.