Recently I got a Nexus One, which had me curi­ous to dis­cover the value (if any) of location-sharing appli­ca­tions like Foursquare and Gowalla. I had dor­mant accounts for both, and decided to see who among my con­tacts were actu­ally using these things. I imag­ined not many.

Foursquare’s friend finder was straight­for­ward and I was able to add three or four peo­ple. Gowalla’s, on the other hand, mis­led me into send­ing an invite to all 947 peo­ple in my Google con­tacts. This includes peo­ple I bought stuff from on Craigslist; old bosses; old girl­friends; co-workers; prob­a­bly even prospec­tive employers.

The trick was in mim­ic­k­ing a fairly stan­dard “Step 2″ for­mat for these types of func­tions. It appears that I’m being pre­sented two choices here: the first, to begin fol­low­ing only those con­tacts who are already on Gowalla; the sec­ond, to send invite emails to all checked names in the list.

Instead, both but­tons do exactly the same thing. So when I clicked the but­ton at the top, an email was sent to every per­son on that list. There was no pop-up win­dow telling me, “You are about to send an email to 947 peo­ple. Continue?”

For­tu­nately I hadn’t used my full name on my pro­file; the email peo­ple received came from no-reply@gowalla.com or some­thing sim­i­lar; and I deleted my pro­file as soon as I real­ized what had hap­pened. So hope­fully I wasn’t as incrim­i­nated as I may have oth­er­wise been. I know I roll my eyes when­ever a friend has fallen for an obvi­ous trap like that. And I like to think I’m pretty good at spot­ting these tricks. But this lay­out is out­right deceptive.

When Mark Shut­tle­worth announced the rebrand­ing of Ubuntu, it seemed nobody noticed that he men­tioned a new sys­tem font was being devel­oped. Cur­rently Bit­stream Vera Sans is the default (if I’m not mis­taken), appear­ing on menu bars, title bars, but­tons — pretty much every­where. I’ve always thought it has served its pur­pose well, and was frankly a lit­tle wor­ried that they wouldn’t get the new sys­tem font right. Type design is extra­or­di­nar­ily tricky.

Now how­ever details are start­ing to emerge. OMG! Ubuntu! describes how to get a boot­leg copy of it. And at UDS back in May, Bruno Maag gave a ses­sion enti­tled “Mak­ing Beau­ti­ful Fonts” in which he elab­o­rated on the cre­ation of the new font. There is now video of that ses­sion, as well as the slides, which were sadly not included in the frame.

My first impres­sion is that it feels a bit too stiff, rigid, and tech-y. Of course there’s no way to tell until you use it on your desk­top. Reas­sur­ing, how­ever, that they’re giv­ing it proper italics.

Adobe has announced a poten­tial secu­rity risk in ver­sions of Flash ear­lier than 10.0.45.2. This includes the ver­sions in Lucid’s default repositories.

If you’re feel­ing para­noid or would just like to try the lat­est Flash 10.1 release can­di­date, you can down­load it from Adobe, and fol­low the install instruc­tions from Web Upd8.

Update: The final 10.1 release from Adobe has hit the main Ubuntu repos­i­to­ries. A soft­ware update should do it.

Well put.

One of the first things a care­ful observer will likely notice about a fresh Ubuntu install is the dis­tinctly odd appear­ance of their favorite web­sites. The cause for this is that, although Ubuntu ships with a fair selec­tion of fonts, they aren’t prop­erly assigned as aliases to the pro­pri­etary fonts that most web­sites call for; Hel­vetica and Arial have a per­fect cousin in FreeSans, yet are sub­sti­tuted with Lib­er­a­tion Sans by default, the lat­ter of whose stemmed “1” and barred “J” (among other things) is a dead give­away. Like­wise, Ver­dana is also sub­sti­tuted with Lib­er­a­tion Sans, when DejaVu Sans is a much closer fit. Then there’s Times New Roman, Lucida Grande, Baskerville — none of which is ade­quately mimicked.

Sev­eral of these fonts are bet­ter served by some Ubuntu defaults, and still oth­ers — Gill Sans, Optima, Caslon, Tahoma, and more — have decent sub­sti­tutes just wait­ing in the repos­i­to­ries. Typog­ra­phy plays a greater role in user expe­ri­ence than I think most peo­ple work­ing on Ubuntu real­ize, and it should be a goal of 10.10 to ele­vate this part of the OS as much as pos­si­ble. This requires just a few extra kilo­bytes in pack­ages and some changes/additions to the files in /etc/fonts/conf.d/. In a sub­se­quent post I’ll be cat­a­loging what those changes should be.

Con­tinue reading →

Accord­ing to this.

But what’s Ubuntu Aubergine?

Avant Garde Demi-Bold and Book Con­densed. I think. I’m not sure about that cap­i­tal ‘G’ though.

Other than the type, I think I like it.

From Giz­modo:

The per­son who even­tu­ally ended up with the lost iPhone was sit­ting next to Pow­ell. He was drink­ing with a friend too. He noticed Pow­ell on the stool next to him but didn’t think twice about him at the time. Not until Pow­ell had already left the bar, and a ran­dom really drunk guy—who’d been sit­ting on the other side of Powell—returned from the bath­room to his own stool.

The Ran­dom Really Drunk Guy pointed at the iPhone sit­ting on the stool, the pre­cious pro­to­type left by the young Apple engineer.

“Hey man, is that your iPhone?” asked Ran­dom Really Drunk Guy.

“Hmmm, what?” replied the per­son who ended up with the iPhone. “No, no, it isn’t mine.”

“Ooooh, I guess it’s your friend’s then,” refer­ring to a friend who at the time was in the bath­room. “Here, take it,” said the Ran­dom Really Drunk Guy, hand­ing it to him. “You don’t want to lose it.” After that, the Ran­dom Really Drunk Guy also left the bar.

I have a pretty strong sus­pi­cion that this “Really Ran­dom Drunk Guy” is a fab­ri­ca­tion of the guy who found the iPhone — “I didn’t pick it up; it was handed to me.”