Nokia AeonS Concept
Thomas Menguy | October 9, 2006After the BenQ Black Box, Here is the Nokia one … with no button either (seen on pdafrance)
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Update: It seems that TomSoft has been quicker than me on this one
After the BenQ Black Box, Here is the Nokia one … with no button either (seen on pdafrance)
![]() |
![]() |
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Update: It seems that TomSoft has been quicker than me on this one
YouTube – MIT sketching
enjoy:
I have coded an application on palm that was able to tranform sketches in geometrical forms … but this one is really great, mixing physics and so one, nice touch! (ie : I have to work in those areas someday )
Good article at brighthand about input entry methods : The Writing in Your Hand.
I firmly think that voice is not a natural way to communicate with a computer, or write a message, and if you have already tried DragonDidacte/IBM Via Voice, you know how painful it is : the issue is not the recognition engine accuracy, but that you don’t write like you talk!, sounds obvious…You need to talk as if you were writting, not so easy, and not effortless. In France Orange has changed its voice mail machine to answer to voice commands like “callback”, “delete”,”next”,”previous”…and you know what? Technically it works like a charm, ergonimically it’s hum..crappy , you really felts like an idiot talking (giving orders) to your phone (ok ok, this one seems paradoxical). Talking is a human affair, and talking with a non sentient entity, (a pedantic name for a machine
) IS un-natural. It is why I agree with the last conclusion of the brighthand article: new entry methods have to be found!
Nothing related but here is a potentially very interesting new 3D display technology, seen at Engadget:
NTT DoCoMo unveils portable 3D display – Engadget
Mobile shopping may become much more attractive, and … and did you say games!
If you add movement detection for gesture commands … a “brave new world” of user interactions may be opened!
MEX – the strategy forum for mobile user experience – Zi makes progress with Qix
I’ve missed this one … even if we are working with Zi as an IP provider for predicitve text input, I’ve never heard about Qix (see the Zi Qix Web Sit).
It really looks like the Palm Treo Initiate launcher : use any bit of information to quickly access the data … errrr everything is about data those days (see my 3 to 4 previous posts). In the case of Qix it is only text, but for initiate it is also voice,… google search on the phone anyone? coupled with applications to display and use the found data…: THIS is interesting, and a good alternate way to the menustrees.
I am a convinced defensor to the all-flat-search-by-content organization oposed to the classical folder trees (perhaps because I’m NOT organized , see my post about desktop search engines ). It should be pushed a little more to also launch actions, etc. Definitively something to keep in mind for user interactions!
they also bought Decuma it seems, a very powerfull text recognition engine for stylus input (found an the defunct Sony Clié PalmOS devices).
iF Design iF details view: The Black Box Concept:
What I especially like is the “no button” design (like an ipod , or a LG chocolate) : The whole User interaction is software , yummy
Great read from TomSoft about Mobile Ajax:
TomSoft » Myths of mobile Web2.0 (and mobile Ajax).
Really in line with what Thomas said, especially this point :
…Ajax applications will run the same on mobiles than on PC, and this will save us some porting costs. Wrong! Seems that the Write Once Run Anywhere myth is back!! It was actually already not achievable through technology designed for this, so I did not see how Ajax app…
Same for me … the more I work in this industry with european, chineese,Korean partners the more I see:
A good technology should help this diversity and free the creativity of those actors… wrong idea to lock them in one scheme, one way to do … how will they differentiate?
Customization is key, and is not at all limited to theme, colors and image, but of the whole software …this is our vision here at open-plug
Suddenly everything’s coming up widgets – September 1, 2006 Is an interesting introduction to the widgets and why this concept is successful:
…In the early days of the Internet, most companies would create a destination website, wait for users to show up, and then make money from the advertisements. Now they use widgets to reel users in.
A Gmail widget on someone’s desktop that shows “10 unread messages” will make that user click and go back to the Gmail website, where the ad-based cash register goes ka-ching! Microsoft (Charts), AOL (Charts), Yahoo (Charts), and even Nokia (Charts) are also offering widgets. …
And …:
…Of course, the main reason widgets are hot is that users love them. That’s because they help to make the Web user-programmable…
So it has something to do with advertising for now : display snipets of information …. to attract user more often to advertized content.
As for RSS feeds the “data” coming from the content provider is highly minimized and standardized, and IS PUSHED to the content consumer; then a local “application” or service is displaying it nicely according to the system on which it is running: the winning equation seems to be again a strong separation between the content and its representation (as everything around XML, PUSH mode instead of passive publication plus a good standardization and description around the content itself : it reminds me of the microformats concept (see this great microformat blog for more information) and the concept behind Ruby on Rail …
Looking for links for this post, I’ve found this interesting MVC introduction, worth a read if you don’t know it!
UPDATE: I’ve crossed this post just after this one: Open Gardens: The implications of ‘Data is the intelligence’ on mobile software development the data IS the value. (found from the excellent “Carnival of the Mobilists” of this week)
Thanks moPocket for the video!
Ok it Seems a little bit SciFi for now, but after all look at the VK 2020 or the latest korean “card size” phone are not so distant (ok appart the flexibility ).
But what is even more surprising is the software depicted in the video : it is adapting to the user and any context … so far from our little applications and their static icones, a BIG step further compared to the previous post about live UI.
:: mobiface :: next gen mobile interface thoughts : Wow great idea! The background image is going more cloudy when the network strength is going down…neat!
Today, in the cellphone space (as it was for the PC years ago), two main applications/services launching UI paradigms are fighting for dominance: