Terence Eden. He has a beard and is smiling.

Terence Eden’s Blog

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A Glimpse Into The Future

· 450 words · Viewed ~442 times


My eye has been caught by a stunning new gadget - the Immortal Video Eye Gear. Head mounted 3-megapixel video camera.  Seamlessly embedded within a pair of innocuous looking sun glasses.  At £250, they're not cheap.  While battery life looks good at 2.5 hours, they can only record one hour of video. No method of playback means no deletion, so you're stuck until you can find a laptop.  No expa…

Doctor Who QR Codes

· 2 comments · 400 words · Viewed ~1,548 times


Mobile QR codes are fantastic. They're real-life hyperlinks. Snap them with your phone and go direct to a website. What could be better? The BBC, however, need a few lessons in how to optimise the experience. As part of their Prisoner Zero page - the BBC have an awesome "Wanted Poster". Here's the teaser image. Prisoner Zero - QR Code Let's take a look at the full QR code. This is about…

Doctor Who and Mobile Phones

· 5 comments · 250 words · Viewed ~581 times


A slightly modified BlackBerry Storm.

It shouldn't come as a surprise to any reader of this blog that I'm a phone geek. And a Doctor Who geek.  So, image my utter nerdgasm when we got to see the 11th Doctor using a mobile he'd nicked.  The burning question is which phone? Touchscreen It's quite hard to see throughout the episode. It just looks like a standard touchscreen device in a rubber casing.  I had wondered if the props team h…

Plot Holes in The Eleventh Hour

· 1 comment · 300 words · Viewed ~231 times


I'm a shameless Doctor Who geek.  I loved the first episode of the new series.  But I wanted to point out a (minor?) plot hole in the episode. Slight spoilers here, so wait until you've seen the show. Towards the end, the Doctor is having a stand off with the Atari.  He's discussing the planet Earth and asks... Is this world protected? The Atari play a montage of various baddies the Doctor ha…

Wanted: TARDIS

· 5 comments · 100 words · Viewed ~1,964 times


Many years ago, when I was very young and you were even younger, I bought a TARDIS. Sadly, it turned out to be made of cardboard and only suitable for storing DVDs. No flying through time for me :-( Also, it turns out that it wasn't bigger on the insider than on the outside.  Meaning, it's now full.  Does anyone know where I can get another one? …

Elections In A Digital Age - blogging, tweeting and buzzing to the polls

· 1 comment · 650 words


Photo of a wooden sign indicating there's polling station here.

Weeks before Britons go to the polls, there's still no comprehensive list of candidates. Four citizens' initiatives have joined forces to tackle the problem. They've been gathering basic information about thousands of candidates and making the data public. "It may seem surprising but there simply is no single listing for all prospective parliamentary candidates. We want people to make an…

Pair & Go Wii Fit Battery Pack - Rubbish!

· 3 comments · 400 words · Viewed ~372 times


I want to tell you a story about really appalling industrial design.  This isn't about a nuclear reactor melting down due to covered switches, or even lethal doses of radiation - but of a much more sinister threat.... Pair and Go's battery pack for the Wii Fit! Take a look at their promotional image - it seems like a nice, drop in replacement for 4 AA batteries.  What could possibly go wrong? P…

Bugs in Twitter Text Libraries

· 5 comments · 400 words · Viewed ~220 times


The Twitter Engineering Team have a set of text processing classes which are meant to simplify and standardise the recognition of URLs, screen names, and hashtags. Dabr makes use of them to keep in conformance with Twitter's style. One of the advantages of the text processing is that it will recognise that www.example.com is a URL and automatically create a hyperlink. Considering that dropping…

Direct Digital Democracy - A Disaster?

· 5 comments · 650 words


Logo for Get A Vote.

While on the anti-Digital-Economy-Bill protest, I bumped into Denny de la Haye. I've known Denny virtually for a while - and he's commented on this blog a number of times. Denny is standing for parliament in Hackney South and Shoreditch. He is standing on a platform of Direct Digital Democracy.  If he is elected, he will run an online poll for his constituents.  Whichever way they vote, he v…

Protesting the Digital Economy Bill

· 150 words


A woman with dyed red hair holds up a placard. It is completely black. In the background, protestors hold up similarly black signs.

On Wednesday, I attended the "Stop Disconnection Demo" to protest the Digital Economy Bill outside parliament. Protestors I've been on a few protests in my time. Anti-war, anti-nukes, anti-tuition fees and the like. This was one of the most cheerful protests I've ever attended. The protesters were friendly and erudite. Passers-by seemed happy to take our literature. The speakers - while hard…

Mobile Badvertising - Intercontinental (and the BBC)

· 650 words


If you're outside of the UK, you will see adverts on the BBC site. This also happens on the mobile site. Here's a typical example. BBC Advert Intercontinental are a premium brand. No doubt their mobile advertising is really good. Right? First Impression Intercontinental Advert Page 1 We start off with a mobile friendly page.  Almost.  There are five flaws here. Large image.  While vi…

Dabr - Reply to all and Geotagging

· 350 words


People have been very excited to see some new functionality in Dabr - the mobile Twitter client I develop for. But what is it and how does it work? @@ and geotag Reply to All The @@ symbol allows you to reply to all the people mentioned within the tweet. It only shows up on tweets which mention other users - so you should only ever see it when it can be used. Hitting @@ on the above tweet…