Could the HCI industry be headed down a blind alley?

Could the HCI industry be headed down a blind alley?

There’s an awful lot of research going into voice-driven interfaces, on the grounds that that’s where we’re headed. But Ben Schneiderman, the HCI guru from which many of us first learned about the subject, thinks it may all be a waste of time. According to the Washington Post:

“Hollywood and the image of HAL gave us this dream, this hope, this vision, but the reality is quite different,” says Shneiderman, a computer science professor and well-known researcher, sitting in a College Park office more cluttered with books than computers. “It turns out speaking uses auditory memory, which is in the same space as your short-term and working memory,” he adds.

What that means, basically, is that it’s hard to speak and think at the same time. Shneiderman says researchers in his computer science lab discovered through controlled experiments that when you tell your computer to “page down” or “italicize that word” by speaking aloud, you’re gobbling up precious chunks of memory — leaving you with little brainpower to focus on the task at hand. It’s easier to type or click a mouse while thinking about something else because hand-eye coordination uses a different part of the brain, the researchers concluded.

Clay Shirky on the insoluble domain name problem

Clay Shirky on the insoluble domain name problem

Typically thoughtful essay. Quote:

“Unfortunately, what made domain names contentious was simply that the internet became important, and there’s no putting the genie back in that bottle. The legal issues involved actually predate not only ICANN but the DNS itself, going back to the mid-70s and the earliest decision to create memorable aliases for unmemorable IP addresses. Once the original host name system was in place — IBM.com instead of 129.42.18.99 — the system was potentially subject to trademark litigation. The legal issues were thus implicit in the DNS from the day it launched; it just took a decade or so for anyone to care enough to hire a lawyer…”

From Dave Winer…A picture named hammersley.gif“Here’s some exciting cross-pollination. Ben Hammersley, writing in the Guardian, explains how Web services are the province of the little guy. Analysts who follow the BigCo’s, please read this piece and consider the point of view. Blogger’s competitors (including UserLand) have adopted and even extended the Blogger API, so the same tools can be used to create content for the centralized Blogger app, or for Radio running on the desktop. This is the process by which new technology enters our culture, also known as bootstrapping.”   [Scripting News]

FT.COM bites the subscription bullet

FT.COM bites the subscription bullet

It will begin charging for premium content this month. There will be a lot of free stuff on a day-by-day basis, but everything over seven days old will be available only to subscribers. Which leads to the thought: what happens to all the links Webloggers like me post to FT.com stories? Presumeably they will all lead back to the subscription gateway — a dead end for most followers of those links. Net result: the FT will be cited less on the Web. Which will be a shame because actually it’s a damn good paper.

Apr 30 2002: A new study from Websense indicates that the number file-swapping, and peer-to-peer (P2P) websites, has grown by 535 percent in the past year, despite legal efforts to have them shut down.

According to the study findings, the number of P2P websites totals nearly 38,000.

Around 30 percent of the most popular downloadable applications on CNet’s Download site, are P2P services, says Websense.