now with double the colour and flavor!
This 16th and 17th June, London is going to be the stage of the next Hack Day.
Alexandra Palace is going to be the meeting place for hundreds of hackers to play with tools, APIs, data, assist some delicious presentations from some respected webdevelopers and also socialize with very interesting and talented people from all parts of Europe.
You can find more information in the official site or take a look at the user-contributed wiki which has a bunch of useful resources for those going.
I have my ticket and my expectations are high, I’m sure it will be a blast so I’ll see you there. :)
Reading Fred Oliveira’s post on desktop experiences made me think about all those little gems we have installed on our computer (or could have) and deserve more attention.

One of those applications on my Mac that I simply adore and is not related to work is Delicious Library. You see, it’s simply fantastic.
Delicious Library lets me organize all my stuff, like books, video-games, videos, comics and I can later browse, sort, and search through all that information in lists or digital shelves. This is the best part, It’s simply amazing to see, for example all my comic covers organized by series in a wooden background. :)

Adding information is also easy since I can use the iSight camera from my Macbook to scan the barcode at the back of the book or just simply search using the ISBN or title, it doesn’t matter because Delicious Library uses the Amazon API to search and give you recommendations based on it’s database. You can even sync the library with the iPod or print a color catalog.

It’s the kind of experience that I find very difficult to mimic on a web application but works flawless and smooth on desktop, there’s a “gratification” as Fred stated that you can’t (yet) get on the web because of responsiveness and other problems.
Fortunately there’s efforts being made to diminish the gap between desktop and web environments, let’s see what Apollo, Silverlight and Firefox 3 will hold for us.
What about you, what’s the desktop app which you can’t live without? What application makes you all happy to boot up the computer or make your life easier. Tell us about it.
Microsoft delivered yet another impressive update (for better or for worst) for the Xbox 360 Dashboard and Xbox Live (as the two are linked together), to make the list short, here’s some of the new stuff:
* Windows Live Messenger Integration
* More detail in the “achievement unlocked” pop-up
* Enhanced family settings
* New Marketplace blade
* Enhancements to Xbox LIVE Arcade
* Ability to fast-forward, pause, and rewind video as it’s being downloaded from Marketplace
* A setting for consoles to finish downloading content, before powering down
* Crappy Marketplace Region Lockdown :|

Meanwhile, the fine people at Craxtion posted a detailed full list of new features brought by the update, you can read the whole XBox360 May Dash Update (Real) Feature List at Craxtion.
But if you wish for a more visual walktrough, you can watch a video explaining all the new updated features over at MaxConsole.
The video reproduction settings and accepted formats were vastly improved by Microsoft so it’s no wonder alot of doubts were brought up about streaming speeds, resolution, sizes, codecs, etc. Luckily, Engadget sought to end these doubts and explored all the technical issues in the article Spring Dashboard - Video Hands on at Engadget.
“Technically speaking the Xbox 360 now officially beats out the Apple TV in the digital video arena, both in resolution and bitrate. (At best the ATV only does up to 720p at 5Mbps, while the Xbox does 1080p up to 10Mbps; neither supports higher than stereo audio.) ”
If you’re looking into even more details about the new video playback features, the Team Xbox Blog (FYI: MS owned blog) posted a Spring 2007 Video Playback FAQ.
Unfortunately, the update also brought new measures to restrict users from getting content from a region where they didn’t “belong”. The following is a explanation from Microsoft at the GamerscoreBlog reads:
“(…) I understand that there’s often great content that you, me and my cats want on the US Marketplace that isn’t on any of the European Marketplaces – but if people are able to download content in countries that it’s not licensed for, people get upset, content gets pulled, cool new content doesn’t get uploaded to Marketplace, and everyone ends up unhappy.”
“Q: So when will Xbox Live members in Europe get the chance to download the kind of cool content that is, for example, available to US Xbox Live members on Video Marketplace?
Michael Newey: At the moment we have made no announcements about Xbox Live Video Marketplace for Europe.(…)”
Yeah, thanks alot. Thanks for the 1/3 of the US Xbox Marketplace content (Gamerpics, Themes, Game Addons, Movies, etc) and making me pay the same price as the other users.
I’m also very unhappy with the Babelfish style translations over at the portuguese Xbox Marketplace mixed with the rest of the Dashboard items still in English, it’s soooo fun paying for an incomplete product with half the stuff from the other European countries and waiting double the time for all of it (even though, all the games are in English, so why the wait?).
In other words, if you neglect your users they will end up forgetting you.