If you like JavaScript. Java would be better. There is the Bean Shell. That doesn't replace BASH for what it does well. In fact, that's the point of BASH, not to replace traditional languages but to bind their output programs together.
If users must visit social websites like Facebook in privacy mode in separate browsers, perhaps they should rethink whether they should be using Facebook at all.
The convenience/security trade-off varies user to user, but for something as simple as FB, it might be considered overkill by most.
I would encourage browsers that support isolated profiles, multiple browsers that don't share cookie storage, or using a jailed site-specific browser approach.
Theres no reason why Adobe [ or more likely, a startup ] cant write a superb (web based) animation editor for designers, which spits out HTML5/CSS or SVG + Javascript.
Couple that with basic workflow and 'publish to site' and you have a product with very wide appeal and usefulness.
Why not just launch a startup and build a superb reader that solves the problem and looks nice?
Wouldn't it be better to have the freedom to implement your own version of what the ultimate Reader is, especially in newer tech [ websockets, node.js, realtime updates, drag to rearrange widgets .. whatever ]
Id love someone to make a nice reader [and a nice mail groups] web app, Id enjoy working on these myself. It must be more efficient to build these things outside of Google, as a startup.
An RSS reader with nice UI, realtime update, location sensitivity, smart filters, and unobtrusive social features .. you had me at RSS :]
Geo-data is effectively 'read-only', it seems to me..
There are things local people know about, which still diffuse by word of mouth - and I still see paper notices posted on lamp-posts and at supermarket boards. This is why I did an experiment and built lokenote.com
I havent nailed it with lokenote, but it hints theres something there... Im aware this is a first, imperfect approximation of the kind of tool that will enable people to annotate locations. Sometimes you need to build these experiments to see what works or doesn't.
I dont think the storing/retrieving of geo-data is that hard a problem, you can roll your own nested squares approach, or reuse whats there now, eg. Mongo 2d indexes.
Rather, I think the problem is making a nice way to integrate the location dimension into our tools/web apps more seamlessly. eg. a dating chat app might just favour partners close to your location without being told what postcodes to look in. I see this as a 'too many knobs' type problem ( a bit like those search forms you see that have options for 10 different dimensions to filter on, which are better replaced by a single text search field, with hidden smarts. )
So how to bring location to the people, so its useful, effective, un-intrusive and read-write ? I dont think that question has been answered.
Whilst it's true a lot of data appears to be read only (of the kind, what is where?), even geological features change given enough time (or little time if we're talking water features in a world of global warming).
Given that what we're discussing is mostly man-made features, such as physical buildings and the businesses that occupy them... these are open to change. Buildings get built, demolished, and far more frequently modified.
And then there are problems like "Where can I park?". Most parking in London is street parking rather than car parks, and parking restrictions change frequently enough that it isn't static data.
Once you concede time is a dimension that affects spatial information, you open yourself up to far more interesting possibilities: What is happening nearby? Where are my friends? There's traffic up the road, what's causing it and should I detour?
This is massively changing data. It could be expressed as a read-only stream of 'events' that 'occur' at different places (check-ins, tracking data)... but the data is refreshed so frequently that storing as a read-only audit trail of events just disguises the fact that people will perceive the information as permanently changing.
I think the hardest part of dealing with geospatial data is ensuring that it is fresh enough to be valuable data. And that is to work from the point of view that everything changes constantly.
yes.. I didn't mean to say location information is time-static.. I want there to be better tools / web UI to supply current location information. So the person in the street can flag something, and other people can make use of that.
By 'read-only' I mean its not easy for people to supply location information thats current. I put into Lokenote app an expiry date tumbler - eg. Street party for a few hours, blocked drain for a few days, building site for a few weeks.
Because of overhead at the moment, youd probably only enter location information that is going to be there for a long time.. but if it were easier to share that, wed see a more dynamic and relevant picture over smaller time scales.
Wikipedia, etc, have made an effort to standardise so that wiki articles can be tagged to a location, but I think theres a whole mass of less formal information thats really useful thats not being captured or used - ants would leave pheremones to signal other ants, we currently leave paper notes on lampposts, there should be a better way.
Geo-grafitti isn't new, but it hasn't taken off either. I like the idea (especially in Melb!), but I agree it's difficult to make seamless. Seems like it could be ubiquitous with the right implementation.
Can you make the app push-enabled, so you can be notified when you're close to a lokenote? (Noting I have no idea about push-enablement). It seems like the big difference is you notice "missing cat" posters and/or new cafes as you walk down the street; having to check your app every 5 meters is less useful. Push could help that.
I don't think this will really take off until we have full-time AR overlays on our normal vision. Of course, that's just wishful thinking ;)
yeah I really want Lokenote to be realtime, but hit the practicality of shipping.. so its 'hit refresh' initially :[
My intuition is that 'Layers/Layars' are a good abstraction for developers.. but I think maybe simple tag / search might be a better way to filter those things I want to be notified about as I walk around?
AR is cool, but I wonder if this coolness actually gets in the way.
Id like to set some interest filters and then walk around and get push notifications on my mobile home screen.
Eg: set 'tell me about' = 'clothing discounts', 'art deco buildings', '2nd hand record shops' and 'friends with status Im-up-for-a-coffee'.
I think we need to take that step so that the technology kind of disappears into the background - location isn't there yet.
I dont think it needs a HUD VR helmet to work - just look at how crappy and successful the keyboard is.. so, yeah, simple short text notifications as you walk around would really make this meld into the daily routine.
great idea, thanks. its a bit of work, but doable.
I created Lokenote.com as I saw people posting adverts on lampposts, but I think that was too vague an idea, so maybe my first go at Lokenote was too generic [ pinning a note to the map ].
I did also build it for a guy who delivers packages all day and wants to share notes with other drivers on how to get to teh right entrance at a building or property - so I need to get that guy to use my site and make it useful for his realworld problem.
Reality has this way of being unpredictable... which makes it interesting, right?
node.js is great for all those perl-y 1 to 10 liners. It should be the shell.