When’s the last time you heard a funky diabetic?

From Spin:

A Tribe Called Quest will serve as the opening act for two shows on Kanye West’s fast-approaching Yeezus tour. That’s a noteworthy pairing in and of itself, but the upcoming gigs have taken on some extra heft now that Q-Tip has hinted they’ll be his group’s last-ever performances. “In August, ATCQ did our last show FOR Cali,” Tip tweeted on Wednesday (via Consequence of Sound). “It’s only right we do our FINAL 2 joints where we started… NYC.”
ATCQ opening for Kanye is like Led Zeppelin opening for Guns ‘n Roses.
I should be happy ATCQ is back together and on tour. And I am, it just feels weird.

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Music

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Hollow Icons Are Still A Bad Idea

Dave Wiskus shares the methods to his madness for the note-taking app, Vesper.
First off, Dave and his team members put a lot of time and effort into their creation. That said, I still think the rationale behind icon outlines is bad:

At first glance, it looked as though the fashionable thing to do in iOS 7 would be to take your existing icons and just turn them into outlines. That ends up looking pretty good for most glyphs, but instead of mimicking the style we wanted to emulate the spirit. It’s not about being thin or wispy, I don’t think. It’s about lightening the UI so the content can stand out more.
His rationale sounds good, but he still implemented outlined icons:
vesper_icons_are_bad.png
I’m going to once again quote Aubrey Johnson’s observations on the cognitive issues with hollow icons I quoted back on October 2nd:
Take a look at the example above. The red lines indicate areas where cognitive load is occurring. Your brain traces the shapes on the first row an average of twice as much. Your eye scans the outside shape and then scans the inner line to determine if there is value in the “hollow” section.

Icons without this empty core are processed as definite and only the outer lines are processed. Depending on the outline of the shape, this happens pretty fast. No matter the shape, though, the hollow icons take more time to process.
If I may be a broken record,
Hollow icons are an example of form over function.
Hollow icons are an example of form over function.
Hollow icons are an example of form over function.
Hollow icons are an example of form over function.
Hollow icons are an example of form over function.

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Human Experience

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OAK =! BKLN

Mayor Jean Quan of Oakland recented compared Oakland to Brooklyn.
Peter Lawrence Kane of The Bold Italic sees if this comparison holds up:

How cool is Oakland? Well, Manhattan is the global capital of all media. Brooklyn has Girls and writers named Jonathan. San Francisco has Looking, the newest Real World, and Blue Jasmine, as well as Twitter, Yelp, Reddit and all the rest. Oakland has Pandora and a growing number of high-profile tech companies, but not nearly as many ­- and there lays part of its charm, at least for now. Oakland is considered cooler by not being quite as marketable, because Manhattan and San Francisco – and, rapidly, Brooklyn – are taking coolness down with them as they ascend up out of reach. The human body is exquisitely attentive to a certain calculus wherein it feels its movement relative to everything going on around it, not just from geographical center to periphery but in the vertiginous up-is-really-down movement of the city and desire.
I lived in Manhattan for 12 years, 5 of which were in the the East Village—still one of the best neighborhoods in NYC. My brother moved to Cobble Hill in Brooklyn a few years ago and I will admit, if my wife and I ever move back to NYC, Brooklyn is one of the top places I’d consider moving to.
From what I’ve heard from natives here in San Francisco, Oakland doesn’t have BKLN Cool Status yet.

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Community

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Done By Design

So, this whole government shutdown? Republicans have had it planned for a while:

With polls showing Americans deeply divided over the law, conservatives believe that the public is behind them. Although the law’s opponents say that shutting down the government was not their objective, the activists anticipated that a shutdown could occur — and worked with members of the Tea Party caucus in Congress who were excited about drawing a red line against a law they despise.

A defunding “tool kit” created in early September included talking points for the question, “What happens when you shut down the government and you are blamed for it?” The suggested answer was the one House Republicans give today: “We are simply calling to fund the entire government except for the Affordable Care Act/Obamacare.”
Partisan politics. So effective.

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Politics

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Day 13

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Look at that mess. This website is so broken they can’t even be bothered with loading CSS while they’re trying to fix the backend. Two weeks into the Affordable Care Act rollout and this is what New Yorkers are dealing with.
And it’s not just New Yorkers. The national website, healthcare.gov, is so broken that people are having trouble even logging in. As bad as New York’s site is, at least I was able to progress to the eligibility portion of the process before it finally shit itself completely.
Republicans in Congress and conservative pundits have been working up some effective framing about the health care rollout this past week. On this morning’s talk shows, it went something like this:
“This isn’t a glitch. The system is breaking down…repeal Obamacare.”
To be sure, the technology failures plaguing the rollout are serious and inexcusable, especially considering the government had three years to develop this program, and spent more than 400 million dollars, just for the national website. Many millions more have, of course, been spent on the twenty or so state-run sites. The technical requirements for running these exchanges is enormous, but doable. As Paul Krugman tried to point out on This Week, before he was shouted down by a wave of talking points, the exchange in the nation’s largest state, California, has been working well, auguring the fact that given time, the technical challenges will be overcome.
What is disheartening is that, even though these pundits and politicians are reading from a script, they do seem to believe that the technical problems mean the health care program is fundamentally untenable, and they couldn’t be more wrong. These are people who make their livings in the world of partisan proclamations and ideological utterances. They tend to be middle-aged, and probably began their careers hammering away on IBM Selectrics. They wouldn’t know how a webapp works from a hole in the ground. When I see Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius stumble through an interview on The Daily Show, or Peggy Noonan spout her rhetoric at Krugman, I wonder why I have yet to see any of these shows bring on someone with experience building websites.
I want to see someone on these shows who has had experience with phased rollouts (something the government unwisely decided not to do). I want to see someone who has spent weeks or months whittling down a bug list. Most importantly, I want to hear from the people who saw this train wreck coming from months away. No web project this fucked up could have possibly been a surprise to the people involved. Having been on some doomed projects here and there, I can imagine the waves of feature creep and endless conference calls throughout this past spring and summer as, all of a sudden, the deadline for rollout approached.
And the reason I want to hear from these people, is because they, and only they, can give the public an accurate representation of what is happening regarding these websites. That is, they can point out that the problems are not indicative of an unworkable law. Rather, they are indicative of complex challengess that are technical in nature. And technical problems are eminently solvable. The fact that some states do have working exchanges shows that time and effort will resolve the issues plaguing the systems.
So, I have confidence that the insurance exchanges will be up and running. Critically for me, and millions of other Americans, is that the sites be fixed before the technological illiterates that run the government pull the plug. This is it. This is the only way I, and so many others, will be able to find affordable coverage. We need this more than most people can imagine. We’re not going to see the Medicare rolls expanded into universal coverage. We’re in a health care limbo whose costs in both lives and dollars is too high. The Affordable Care Act is probably the only step we’re going to see in our lifetimes towards righting an unconscionable wrong in this country. I, for one, am willing to give the law more than thirteen days before I throw up my hands in despair and declare it time to scrap the whole thing. But the people responsible for this royal fuckup aren’t making my position any easier.

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Technology

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Day 12

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Dear New York,
Your health care website is garbage. Fix it.

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Technology

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Firefox & HTML5

From Webdesigner Depot:

Just weeks after the successful launches of the first Firefox OS smartphones to Spain, Colombia, Venezuela and Poland, Mozilla has announced that new launches of Firefox OS smartphones will begin soon with more devices and in more markets around the world.

App designers may already know this is not “yet another platform” to factor for projects. Rather than building apps for Firefox OS — developers are able to build HTML5 apps for the Web. Part of the Firefox OS genius is that it enables developers to access the hardware of the phone by means of Web APIs.
How very 2007 of you, Firefox.
I’m sure this makes developers SUPER excited.

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Technology

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