First Williams, Now McLaren

Joe Saward reports that Auto Motor und Sport are running a story about McLaren trying to arrange an engine deal with Honda. The deal would see McLaren use a Honda V6 turbo from 2014 onwards.

First Williams Renault, now (apparently) McLaren Honda.

All aboard the retro bus!

 

An Interesting Take on Verification

Came across this interesting verification text as part of a sign-up form today:

Human verification

(I entered ‘electronic calculators’. Worked just fine.)

 

The Right Way to Tell Me I Don’t Have Flash Installed

When I installed Lion I made the conscious decision to remove Flash from the system. I don’t tend to visit sites that require Flash and, for those sites that do require it, I fire up Chrome, which has it’s own version of Flash, one that is separate from the system-wide plugin. I’ve been running this setup for months and it works just fine.

Not having Flash installed means I come across a lot of “Flash isn’t present” messaging. It generally follows a pattern of telling me that I need Flash to view the content, which can’t be found, therefore something is wrong with my system and I need to do something to fix it.

Take any page with video or audio content from the BBC website as a good example of this kind of messaging.

An example BBC page

The message is presented in a very negative manner and leaves the user with all the work to do if they want to enjoy the content. The burden is on the user to update their system, rather than on the content provider to offer an alternative non-Flash version of the content.

Whilst this is obviously the path of least resistance for most large-scale organisations I find the shift in blame annoying. With the death of mobile Flash and the proliferation of mobile devices (to use just one line of argument) the emphasis is surely now on responsible content providers to make sure they have suitable non-Flash alternatives in place for those systems that don’t support Flash, either through design (e.g. iOS) or choice (e.g. my Mac).

Now, I’m not so naive to think that this is the work of a moment. Nor do I believe that Flash on the desktop is going to go the same way as Flash on mobile devices anytime soon. But I do believe that Flash will cease to be the de-facto method of displaying all rich media content and that content providers should be communicating more clearly with users to reflect this shift.

The Audi website is a good example of how to do it.

An example Audi page

The basic message is the same — that this particular part of the site requires Flash, which isn’t present — but rather than telling me I need to install Flash to view it, the message tells me that Audi are working to resolve the problem which, one assumes, means a non-Flash version of whatever this content is.

It’s a much more positive way of framing the message.

The burden shouldn’t be on me to have Flash installed. It should be on content providers to serve up decent, non-Flash content. Their messaging should reflect that.

 

Redesigning the Country Selector

A simple yet effective replacement for drop down menus as country selectors in web forms.

Read the backstory on Smashing.

 

PopClip

PopClip

PopClip is a faster, easier way to work with text on your Mac. Just select some text with your mouse, and PopClip appears.

Popclip

 

Georgia Pro & Verdana Pro

Co. Design have an interview with Matthew Carter, the designer of the original Georgia & Verdana typefaces.

I’ve always loved Georgia. The new ‘pro’ version looks like a beautiful update.

 

Round Rects Are Everywhere!

Why rounded corners are easier on the eyes:

Some experts say that rectangles with rounded corners are easier on the eyes than a rectangle with sharp edges because they take less cognitive effort to visually process. The fovea is fastest at processing circles. Processing edges involve more “neuronal image tools” in the brain. Thus, rectangles with rounded corners are easier process because they look closer to a circle than a regular rectangle.

 

He’d Make a Good Politician, No?

Luca di Montezemelo, Sunday November 6th:

“If Formula 1 still wants Ferrari it must change and go back to being at the cutting edge of research, while always keeping an eye on costs.”

Ferrari, Monday November 7th:

“Montezemolo’s observations were seen by some as a sort of ultimatum or even a threat to leave Formula 1, but the Whisperer can assure you that it was nothing of the kind”

 

Keeping Your Slap Urge in Check

Danny Katz in The Age:

“…in all of human history there has never been a more feral, obnoxious and ill-mannered generation of children than the one we’ve got now”

 

The Guardian Wins the Award for the Lengthiest Alert Box

Visiting the Guardian site on an iPhone invokes a wondrously long dialog box informing you about their mobile app