Ryan Tevebaugh (portfolio), an architecture student at NC State University about to enter his fifth year, produced this Origami chair for a furniture design course this spring. In this Flickr set you can see the progression as he moved from Rhino renders to the physical chair he produced in the shop. I love the form and contrast of materials. Be sure to check out the rest of the images on Flickr.
Archive for May, 2009
- Pep Rally
- Deny This, Last.fm
- I’ve been a huge fan of Last.fm for a while now. I hate to see the CBS acquisition resulting in such anti-user activity.
Tonight the Twitter team made, what they claimed to be, a ’small’ change to the notifications tab inside of a user’s Twitter settings. To quote the Twitter blog post:
We’ve updated the Notices section of Settings to better reflect how folks are using Twitter regarding replies. Based on usage patterns and feedback, we’ve learned most people want to see when someone they follow replies to another person they follow—it’s a good way to stay in the loop. However, receiving one-sided fragments via replies sent to folks you don’t follow in your timeline is undesirable. Today’s update removes this undesirable and confusing option.
From what I understand, hiding @replies to people you didn’t follow from your home screen was already default for new Twitter users. Users had to actively go into the notifications settings and enable @replies to everyone to show up on their home screen.
I had mine set to show me all @replies. @replies have actually been my primary method for finding new interesting people to follow. Someone I know would start having a discussion with someone I didn’t know, and if the discussion was interesting and relevant to me, I’d often start following the other participant. It’s how I found some of my favorite Twitter people. Now, I don’t even have the option to see these replies and discussions. There’s no way to opt back in. That’s absurd.
A couple other blogs have illustrated the issue much better than I have… be sure to read Jared Smith’s post and Read Write Web’s post about the issue.
In the meantime, putting any character infront of an @reply on Twitter will make the message show up for everyone following you, but does break the “in reply to” link feature on Twitter, as well as subject everyone to the message, regardless of what their “@replies from people I don’t follow” option was set to in the past. I’m using the #fixreplies tag to talk about the issue on Twitter, and it has apparently been the tag that has trended to the top tonight.
I generally embrace change, especially in online tools and communities. But this isn’t a change or addition, it’s actually taking away something that everyone seemed perfectly happy with. And for many of us, it was the mechanism that really made Twitter the interesting, useful, and exciting tool it has become.
The Twitter team has already updated the official blog post, trying to claim that there are plenty of other methods for discovering new and interesting users on Twitter. This is pretty ineffective damage control right now though, and I hope that we’ll see the system revert back to the flexibility and customization that we were used to soon. I’ve read speculation that the change was made to relieve server load for Twitter, and that makes sense, but getting rid of such an integral behavior is not the way to go about it. It feels like taking the engine out of a car because you’re trying to get 5 more miles per gallon.
- Apple rejects Bittorrent control app from App Store because it might be used to infringe copyrights
- Sony CEO Howard Stringer on music: “If we had gone with open technology from the start, I think we probably would have beaten Apple”
- Coke Truck Fail
- Samsung Alias2 – Slick Keypad Design | Mobility Site
- MPAA suggests teachers videotape TVs instead of ripping DVDs. Seriously.
- Pilot and Tech Support
- This is absurd. Is this another result of the Pirate Bay case?
- This phone uses e-ink in the keys to allow it to change the graphics on each key contextually. I’m really impressed that they were able to back (or side?) light the keys too!
