Terence Eden. He has a beard and is smiling.

Terence Eden’s Blog

Theme Switcher:

Stop adding email tracking links to phone numbers!

· 6 comments · 450 words · Viewed ~9,294 times


Gmail showing the tel URl scheme of a link with extra tracking information in it.

My Chinese takeaway delivery was late. Very late. I flipped open the confirmation email sent by Just-Eat to double-check I had all the details correct. At the bottom was a "click to call" link. Hurrah! I clicked dial, and this is what filled my screen: An absurdly long phone number. Bemused, I went to inspect the link I'd clicked. This is what it showed: The tel: URl scheme is brilliant. …

Book Review: The Pursuit of William Abbey

· 250 words


A man trapped in a maze.

A young and naive English doctor, William Abbey, witnesses the lynching of a local boy by the white colonists. As the child dies, his mother curses William. William begins to understand what the curse means when the shadow of the dead boy starts following him across the world. It never stops, never rests. It can cross oceans and mountains. And if it catches him, the person he loves most in the…

Technology, Interrupted

· 3 comments · 250 words


A woman wearing headphones.

Here's a brilliant idea I had. And it would work if humans weren't garbage. I was sat on a stationary train. It had stopped for some unfathomable reason. I say "unfathomable" - the driver made an announcement over the speaker system, but I didn't hear it because I had my Bluetooth headphones on. Imagine if important information could interrupt your audio. Here's a *hand-wavey* description.…

Book Review: The Memory Illusion

· 1 comment · 250 words


A pair of spectables in front of a blank face.

In The Memory Illusion, forensic psychologist and memory expert Dr Julia Shaw draws on the latest research to show why our memories so often play tricks on us - and how, if we understand their fallibility, we can actually improve their accuracy. The result is an exploration of our minds that both fascinating and unnerving, and that will make you question how much you can ever truly know about…

Turn an old eReader into an Information Screen (Nook STR)

· 16 comments · 850 words · Viewed ~14,721 times


Nook with a train display.

Here's a quick tutorial for turning an old Nook into a passive display. This is an update to my 2013 post End Result An eInk screen which displays the trains I can catch from my local station. It shows the next few available trains, and whether they're delayed. It also shows how long until the next local bus to the train station. Updating the Nook Before doing anything, manually update the …

Book Review: Sapience

· 100 words


Jupiter looms.

What kind of life will we find in the depths of Europa's Oceans? What kind of life will we allow an AI with human level intelligence? The ten stories in Sapience: A Collection of Science Fiction Short Stories explore these questions and many more. A delightful - and weird - collection of sci-fi shorts. All loosely tied together by the looming moon of Jupiter. A couple were a little too grim…

Coming Out Stories

· 4 comments · 500 words · Viewed ~333 times


Two little Lego Stormtroopers hold hands in front of a sunset.

The scene: post-conference, sat in an airport, one dark winter's morning. I'm casually chatting to one of the other speakers about our mutual hate of being sat in an airport this early. His phone rings and he excuses himself to answer it. My German is pretty rusty, but good enough to understand "...Yes, I am at the airport... Yes, I'll make the flight... I have my passport... Do you want any…

Book Review: Alone Together

· 200 words


People staring at their phones.

Technology has become the architect of our intimacies. Online, we fall prey to the illusion of companionship, gathering thousands of Twitter and Facebook friends, and confusing tweets and wall posts with authentic communication. But this relentless connection leads to a deep solitude. MIT professor Sherry Turkle argues that as technology ramps up, our emotional lives ramp down. A profound and…

Post-It Notes aren't Agile - they're wallpaper

· 9 comments · 300 words · Viewed ~2,957 times


A whiteboard covered in post-it notes. Photo byJim Downing.

Post-it® notes are the life-blood of Agile. So we're told. Those little flaps of paper, usually hastily scribbled on, are the only way to prove you're Doing It Right™. I'm not a big fan. They're environmentally wasteful, inaccessible, and a bit crap for remote workers. But some people love them, so who am I to judge? Recently, I visited a fairly large company who are making the painful tr…

Book Review: The Guilty Feminist

· 350 words


Book cover.

Why do we find it so hard to say 'No'? What does poker teach us about power structures? How can feminism be more inclusive? The Guilty Feminist will challenge you, reassure you and empower you to see the world differently. A fantastic book. Even if you've listened religiously to The Guilty Feminist Podcast, or seen the author's solo shows, there's plenty of new material in here. It's a…

Responsible Disclosure - John Lewis

· 550 words · Viewed ~859 times


John Lewis Website with a big circle drawn on it.

The HTML5 specification is complicated. I've been an author on it, and even I couldn't tell you all the weird little gotchas it contains. Between that and "idiosyncratic" browser engines, it's a wonder the world wide web works at all. Let's talk about the humble <meta> element. As its name suggests, it contains metadata about the document. A typical element might look like this: <meta…

Book Review: Sorcerer to the Crown

· 150 words


A tangled red mandala.

Winner of the 2016 British Fantasy Society Award for Best Newcomer. Shortlisted for the 2016 British Fantasy Society Award for Best Novel. Shortlisted for the 2016 Locus First Novel Award. Sorcerer to the Crown is the first in Zen Cho's thrilling magical adventure series, the Sorcerer Royal Trilogy. This was an absolute delight to read. Magic, racism, and sexism, wrapped together with…