daghoidahl / Dag Høidahl

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Huffduffed (19) activity chart

  1. Excessive Enhancement: JavaScript’s Dark Side

    Are we being seduced by the animation and rich UI capabilities of modern browsers at the expense of the underlying platform of the Web?

    The Web has entered a new phase in its evolution: The proliferation of a JavaScript enabled audience with increased processing grunt in their devices, better and more ambitious JavaScript developers, and users with an appetite for sophisticated experiences, all seem to be helping to move the web in a rich and exciting direction.

    Good developers understand about graceful degradation, progressive enhancement, unobtrusive JavaScript and the like, so why are we seeing big companies building web offerings with little apparent thought for their impact on the Web?

    We’ll explore this by looking at what the Web was, is now, and might become. We’ll look at examples of exciting user interfaces and sophisticated interactions. We’ll also examine some emerging techniques for providing rich user interactions without hurting the web or killing kittens.

    Phil Hawksworth, Technical Director, R/GA

    Phil began his career building web applications for financial institutions such as Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, and the London Stock Exchange in the late nineties. A focus on web architectures and real-time data delivery lead Phil to a variety of web development roles with particular attention to emerging front-end development techniques and JavaScript application development.

    After several years working on web applications and consulting on web best practices at technology companies such as Verisign, VMware and BT, Phil made the move into the agency world where he managed development teams and architected solutions on projects for clients including of eBay, Sony and BP.

    Phil Hawksworth is a Technical Director at R/GA and enjoys talking about himself in the third person.

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl one month ago

  2. Uh. Forgot what this was.

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl 9 months ago

  3. Evolving English — Steven Pinker

    Steven Pinker discusses the interplay of language and the mind and how psychological processes have shaped the English language.

    The best stuff is about using Google’s enormous database of word-from-books to track how language evolves over time, in particular the gradual erosion of irregular forms in English (keep/kept and drive/drove) in favour of their regular counterparts (beep/beeped and jive/jived).

    Which you WILL want to follow up with a visit to Google Ngrams - http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/ - essentially Google Trends but with all written words in the English language for the last 1,000 years (instead of all search terms in the last ten years).

    Mind-blowing.

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl 11 months ago

  4. The Problem of Sock Puppets

    On the Media, a US NPR program, examines what happened when Dilbert creator Scott Adams joined Metafilter to defend himself in a forum criticizing him, but did so using a pseudonym. Scott Adams was outed very quickly by members in the forum, but Metafilter also confirmed it was Scott Adams after he refused to admit it himself.

    A great overview explaining the various cultures and community mores that exist across the internet, just as all communities differ from each other. The best overview how complicated social can be in 6 minutes.

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl 11 months ago

  5. Andy Borowitz: An Unexpected Twist

    Huffduffed from http://feeds.feedburner.com/themothpodcast

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl 11 months ago

  6. Productive Morning Rituals

    How to build a simple morning ritual that will take you from 0 to 60 as soon as you wake up.

    http://www.asianefficiency.com/habits/productive-morning-rituals/

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl 11 months ago

  7. Radiolab » Words

    It’s almost impossible to imagine a world without words. But in this hour of Radiolab, we try to do just that. We speak to a woman who taught a 27-year-old man the first words of his life, and we hear a firsthand account of what it feels like to have the language center of your brain wiped out by a stroke. Plus: a group of children invent an entirely new language in Nicaragua in the 1970s.

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl one year ago

  8. Reward, regret and consumer behaviour

    Hyperopia: it’s a term used to describe excessive farsightedness and over-control. Many believe delayed gratification is a good thing. It’s generally thought that in the long term we’ll be happier if we don’t act on impulse. You could say civilisation has been built on this premise. But is there a possibility that in the future we may experience regret?

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl one year ago

  9. 43f Podcast: John Gruber & Merlin Mann’s Blogging Panel at SxSW

    http://www.43folders.com/2009/03/25/blogs-turbocharged

    download

    Tagged with

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl one year ago

  10. The Dunning-Kruger effect - Science Show

    The dumb get confident, while the intelligent get doubtful. That’s the conclusion that David Dunning and Justin Kruger came to when studying people’s perceptions of their own talents. What has now become known as the Dunning-Kruger effect helps describe why lay people often act as experts and inept pollies get our votes.

    —Huffduffed by daghoidahl 2 years ago

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