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Search : Teaching old dogs new tricks

apps, tech

best in show

Here´s a common experience: You´re searching for a holiday, new gadget, clothes etc.  You type in a few keywords in your search engine and receive a nicely presented list of thousands of results.  You read through at least 20 results while not actually coming any closer to your answer and now your head seems to be bursting with useless information. What´s needed are new ways to search and there are hundreds of options. I decided to pit one of them against the more traditional web search engines with a search for a new imaginary best friend.

In February Microsoft released a new tool called Pivot that provides a new take on searching. Currently the data to be searched is organised into “collections”. For this test I decided to search for a medium sized intelligent and friendly dog (any breed) with a long average lifespan. For this I used “2009 AKC Dog Breeds” collection in Pivot. For this highly scientific test the search terms were: “Medium sized friendly intelligent dog with long lifespan”. Each search took 10-15 seconds including entry.

Google: Top result: German Shepherd
Accuracy rating: 4/10
Comments: 7-10 year lifespan is not relatively long and while I´m sure many owners will say they are friendly, there´s a reason they´re freaking guard dogs!

Bing: Top result: Jack Russell
Accuracy rating: 2/10
Comments: Medium sized? In Lilliput maybe. Also having been savaged (ok, maybe a small exaggeration) by these as a kid I make no apologies for not including them in the friendly camp.

Yahoo: Top result: Boxer
Accuracy rating: 4/10
Comments: Although the top result is listed as “Boxer”, Yahoo´s actual top result didn´t include a dog breed at all but a blog called “medium dog blog” which I admit is pointing me in the right direction..”you want a medium sized dog, check out the medium dog blog”. I see a possible business expansion for these guys, “small dog blog”, “big dog blog” or for exercise fantics, “jog a dog blog”.

Pivot: Top result: Border Collie
Accuracy rating: 9/10
Comments: Pretty damn accurate, however the search categories also reminded me that they need a lot of exercise, but seeing as they’re so intelligent I’m sure I could just give “skip” a ball and tell him to go to the park and make his own friends.

While many search engines are customized and/or contain powerful features under the surface to refine your search they mostly follow the same pattern, i.e.
you add some keywords and the results contain these words. This often works well, but for many searches  you need to compare many different features e.g. finding a new camera or gift.

Viewing data in different ways also broadens your knowledge, for example I learnt that the machine gun was invented by a British guy in 1718 with the erroneous title of the “puckle gun”. Obviously a fearsome band of medium sized Jack Russells just wasn´t enough.

Discover more useful/useless info with other useful search solutions:

Flickr : http://www.compfight.com/

Search by sketch/image : http://labs.systemone.at/retrievr

Lists of some others can be found here and and here. An interesting point which is best left for another blogpost is how many searches are now based around social media.

spotibot

spotibot

Spotify has long been a favourite but one of the things that I miss from other options like Pandora, Last.fm and Apple’s Genius playlists is the possibility to seed a playlist with a track and get a generated playlist that introduces you to new music you probably wouldn’t have heard without it.  Well now that’s a possibility with a new project that has the dubious but memorable name “Spotibot”. Powered by Spotify and Last.fm, this new service from Andy Smith offers playlist generation and he also has a handy bookmarklet that you can use to make sense of the normal random Spotify online playlists.  I’m sure that at some point Spotify will introduce a similar feature but until then Spotibot is definitely worth checking out. See the site here.

I have lots of things TeuxDeux!

apps – tags: ,

A great idea by swissmiss and Fictive Kin. TeuxDeux is a intuitive, clean-looking little to-do app. It’s simplistic design gives focus to the content and it looks like an easy app to use. I’m looking forward to giving it whirl and crossing things off my to-do lists! Add “teuxdeux” to blog

Mobile apps: moving away from the desktop

2009 was the year for mobile Apps with perhaps Apple being the most notable for its hugely successful App store. Many others have followed suit and now there are App stores for platforms including Android, Nokia, Blackberry and Windows Mobile.

Working in the creative industry for many years I’ve been surrounded by Apple evangelists and I’m accustomed to the almost godlike status Apple users accord the company. However after playing with a friend’s iPhone a couple of years ago and seeing some of the first Apps available I realised how great this would become as a platform. Whilst I think the majority of Apps on the Apple App store fairly useless there’s a small percentage  that are really worth installing and now I coudn’t imagine not using them.

It’s an indication of its maturity as a platform that people now are much less likely to install an app that makes fart sounds and more likely to use them to interact with their social networks, blog, find locations, check mail, watch movies, upload/download photos etc. Although Apple has been pretty restrictive in managing both developers and customers of the App store I think they’ve blazed a trail for mobile Apps that has raised the bar for everyone.

I’m really looking forward to seeing what new Apps will be available in 2010 with rising trends like Augmented Reality, location aware apps and social networking. As more mobile platforms become available and the technology gets cheaper, I think a much greater number of people will use mobile in place of desktop Apps, especially those that don’t need the performance or storage of a laptop or desktop e.g. web based Apps.

5 music making apps for the iPhone

If you’re into making music on the go, here’s a list of 5 great music making apps for the iPhone/iPod touch, guaranteed to make you a maestro, or at least provide a lot of enjoyment whilst giving you RSI!

Xewton music studio | Price 11,99€ or £8.99 | Developer: Xewton
This has been described as GarageBand for the iPhone. Well, it’s not quite that but it’s the closest you’ll find for the iPhone/iPod touch at the moment. It’s programmed well and is pretty intuitive for anyone who’s used a sequencer (including GarageBand). If the sounds were better/programmable, or you could load your own samples and the FX were more flexible it would be a killer App. It’s good and fast for getting musical ideas down.

Beatmaker | Price 15,99€ or £11.99 | Developer: Intua
This is a little trickier to use than Xewton but way more flexible in the control you can have over sounds.  You have 16 programmable pads that can be loaded with samples, reversed, pitched and sliced and then record them into patterns or play live over existing patterns. Three types of effects can be applied to each pad. Patterns can be organised into songs and exported as wav or midi files. If Xewton is GarageBand for the iPhone then this is an AKAI MPC.

Noise.io | Price 11,99€ or £8.99 | Developer: Amidio
If you’re into synthesis then this is a compulsory purchase. Using a method of synthesis called  “ESFM (Enhanced Subspace Frequency Modulation)” which essentially a simple FM + Subtractive Synth with some patience you can make some really nice sounds.  Its features include; sequencer, keyboard, FX, EQ and filters and an XY “Kaos” style pad that as well as touch gestures can be programmed to respond to movement.It’s interface is tricky to use and takes a bit of time before you can do more than just play around with the presets but it does sound great.

HammerHead | Price FREE | Developer: Bram Bos
Relatively speaking for the App store, the previous four apps have been pricey. The last one is free and great quality/easy to use. Hammerhead brought out a free TR-909 groovebox style app for the PC years ago that was really popular. Now it’s available for the iPhone/iPod touch.  A pro version is available for 49p that has a lot more samples and ability to load/save patterns.

JR Hexatone Pro | Price 7,99€ or £5.99 | Developer: Amidio
Described as a “6-directional drum machine/rhythm sequencer” this is an unusual and interesting App, well suited to making any music that you don’t want to be too predictable.  It consists of 6 “oscillators” in a grid of hexagonal shapes or “cells” that can trigger and shape a sample and / or pattern.

Made in collaboration with Keyboard guru Jordan Rudess it’s definitely worth checking out. It comes with 400 samples and you can load your own, [more mobile music apps should allow this]. I still haven’t mastered how this thing works but it’s capable of generating some great loops. Also like all Amidio Apps, audio can be exported for use within Intua’s Beatmaker.