Archive for February, 2008
The definition of (OS) diversity
This is what happens when your school library closes at 1:00pm because of a snowstorm and you need a quiet, distraction-free place to actually work on your research papers. Our suite doesn’t fit into the quiet and distraction-free category, so I spent the afternoon turning my ThinkPad T60 into a Hackintosh so I could evaluate Apple’s MacOS X. The process took awhile, and I’m still trying to figure out how to get wireless and audio working, but the overall experience has been compelling enough for me to consider getting a Mac the next time I need a new laptop (which won’t be for quite awhile, but still).
Matt took a few photos of the installation process and UI, so here they are for your viewing pleasure!
Now I’ve got an Asus EEE PC running Ubuntu, a T60 running Mac OS X 10.5.1, and my X61 and desktop running Vista Ultimate. I think I need to sell some of these computers…
Adaptive hypermedia
I’ve been mulling over ideas for a research paper I have to write for my HF760 - Intelligent User Interfaces class. I originally wanted to write something on portable reading devices, but upon further examination, it didn’t seem like there was anything “intelligent” enough about the Sony Reader or the Kindle user interfaces to write an entire paper on. My professor, Roland Hubscher, recommended I look into a field called adaptive hypermedia. It includes, but isn’t limited to, the customized presentation of information to a particular user. We talked a bit about how one day, you might walk outside and pick up your newspaper. Once you got back inside, you’d look down to find that all of your favorite sections are at the front of the paper! Stories you would most likely be interested in would be prioritized within each of those sections, and you’d basically have your own custom newspaper every morning. Hand it off to your significant other, wait a moment, and their paper might be totally different from yours.
This sounds incredibly nifty, so I think I’m going to make adaptive hypermedia the focus of my research. I just need to track down an existing application of hypermedia first, as the paper needs to home in on a particular product or research prototype. Time to start looking!
The world’s worst…
These are the worst driving directions ever. I’m currently evaluating the Tally-Ho! Uniforms website for my project management class. If you’ll take a look, you’ll see it’s one of the most poorly designed pieces of junk in existence.
Does the walker choose the path, or does the path choose the walker?
When I in the middle of the college application process in high school, I knew I wanted to do something that involved either or both of the following:
- Working with people
- Working with consumer electronics products
I thought about going to school for psychology…until I realized that there was the whole problem of having to go for a doctorate if I really wanted to be a psychologist. How does one pay the bills in the interm? I told myself “Self, I’ll be damned if I end up being the ‘computer guy’ for the rest of my life,” so initially, I swore off going to school for any sort of computer science program. I settled on Bentley with the idea in my head that I would go for marketing. This was after seeing a particularly awesome class on product prototyping (with popcorn!) during an open house. I had planned on getting a minor in something like food science, then going off and doing research and development somewhere in the food industry. Science! Food! Products! People! What could be better?
Then I was informed, during a CIS information session of all things, that getting there required a decade or two’s worth of climbing up the corporate ladder (in sales! Noooo!). All of the recent CIS majors there had converted from marketing, and a quick survey of salary information said that marketing was probably not the direction I wanted to head in. I switched to Computer Information Systems soon after, though I ‘kept in touch’ with my love of the social sciences and people in general through lots of philosophy and sociology courses. (for electives).
I noticed throughout my undergraduate education that I enjoyed low-level hardware stuff the most. My favorite classes in the undergraduate CIS program were Irv Englander’s CS240 course (Business Processing and Communications Infrastructure) and David Yates‘ CS440 (Advanced Net-Centric Computing). While the other classes were informative (and I’m happy I know all about database backends and programming), I just didn’t get the same kick out of them that I did with my electives or the “nitty-gritty” CS classes. I figured out that while what you can do with a technology is important, I was happier learning and focusing on the technology itself. “Nevermind that this particular handheld has a GPS and navigation software built in; what I want to know is what’s running under the hood? How powerful is this GPS chipset compared to others? Is there a better technical solution?” It’s with the rare devices that I pick up that manage to impress me not only with their usefulness, but with their technical specifications as well, that I love the most. I know that sounds backwards, but that’s how my brain operates. I look for technical superiority first and then examine the ‘applications’.
But I digress. Around this time last year (Feb. 2007), I more-or-less realized that I didn’t want to program or do database work at all. This left me in sort of a pickle; how do I leverage my love of technology with my love of people? I like to dabble in all sorts of fields too, so I asked myself “How can I interact in as many fields as possible in a particular job?”
Human Factors was my answer. I had to go to graduate school to get a degree in it (and it’s been tough so far!), but I had found the major that combined everything I loved to do.
- I get to work with people all the time (users, clients, all sorts of folks).
- I get to dabble in tons of different fields, and I need to learn something about all of them to work successfully with a client. One week I can be working on medical devices, the next a website for a game development company. Maybe a telephone or some specialty accounting software the next week. There’s a lot of variety here, and I think that’s what appealed to me more than anything else.
- It’s part marketing, part psychology, and part technology. Evaluating and improving product and website designs from a user-centric perspective requires a passion for all of these things. I’ve always thought of myself as something of a renaissance man, so what better way to “do everything” than to work with people from all walks of life?
Does the walker choose the path, or does the path choose the walker? Either way, I certainly am excited about where this path is taking me!




