Nice video from the D:5 conference. The bit I really like is the way it interacts with the Canon IXUS.
Daily Archives: May 30, 2007
Catalogue of Geoffrey Vickers’s papers is online
Hooray! The OU Library has published its catalogue of the Geoffrey Vickers papers.
Sir (Charles) Geoffrey Vickers (1894-1982) had a varied life as a lawyer, a soldier, an economic intelligence officer and legal advisor. In the later years of his life he became a prolific writer and speaker on the subject of social systems analysis and the complex patterns of social organisation. The collection includes materials created in this latter stage of his life.
The Geoffrey Vickers Collection at the Open University largely consists of draft material and correspondence relating to his published works, articles and speeches.
I knew him only towards the end of his long life. He was one of the wisest men I’ve ever met. And I guess he was the only winner of the Victoria Cross to write insightfully about complex systems and organisations.
(Image submitted to Wikipedia by Martin Hornby.)
The Wikipedia entry describes how Vickers won his VC:
On 14 October 1915 at the Hohenzollern Redoubt, France, when nearly all his men had been either killed or wounded and there were only two men available to hand him bombs, Captain Vickers held a barrier across a trench for some hours against heavy German bomb attacks (the ‘bombs’ of the citation were early grenades). Regardless of the fact that his own retreat would be cut off, he ordered a second barrier to be built behind him in order to secure the safety of the trench. Finally he was severely wounded, but not before his courage and determination had enabled the second barrier to be completed.
Not exactly your typical academic, then. He was also an astonishingly successful City lawyer, specialising in mergers and acquisitions at Slaughter and May. When Clement Atlee, the great post-war Labour Prime Minister, wanted to nationalise the coal industry, he brought in Vickers to handle the legal side of the process.
One of his sayings has remained with me ever since I first encountered it. “The hardest thing in life”, he said once, “is knowing what to want”. He was right: it is.
Buzzword
More info here.
Microsoft forsakes desktop for tabletop
From the Daily Telegraph
Microsoft has unveiled a coffee table-shaped ‘surface computer’ that responds to touch and is expected to generate a multi-billion dollar market.
Surface is a 30-inch computer display that is embedded on the table surface. It does not need a mouse to operate it, and unlike traditional touch-screens, can recognise more than one finger at a time, allowing small groups to gather around the table and use it at the same time. It also recognises objects that are placed on its surface.
For example, if you are out at a restaurant with friends and you each place your drink on the table, a range of information will appear by your glass, such as menu recommendations to go with your wine, and pictures of the vineyard it came from. You can order your next course with the touch of your finger and even split the bill.
Wonder what’d happen if you spilt Java Beans on it? Also, what do you do when your table crashes?