The ikan and other robots we will know


The Ikan is a new way to shop for groceries, it says. You can read about it at the site. I would include some text on it here to promote it, but all the text is trapped in Flash. 😦

While it seems like a neat idea, I actually think it has the potential to be a great idea. I was thinking of this when I read about the listeria outbreak this week. What would be good if I could have something like the ikan and have it scan the food in my fridge (or tell it where I purchased the food). The ikan could then check and tell me whether I should be concerned about it or not.

In fact, it could take it even further. If my grocery bill had good marking on it, I could give it to the ikan when I got home. Then it could do things like periodically remind me about food in my fridge that has gone off, or even advise me of specials that might be occurring.

More and more appliances are morphing into agents and robots. Like the roomba, the ikan might be the beginning of the next wave of things in our home.

There is no Helvetica in Microsoft Word, just Arial

Inspired by my last post, I took this test, How to Spot Arial.

I started Microsoft Word, I typed in the word “Rates”, and I changed the settings from Arial to Helvetica. Guess what? No change occurred. All the telltale signs of Arial are still there.

Perhaps it’s just my version of Word (2002), but it looks like it provides Helvetica in name only.

Death to Arial! (The font, that is.)

Can you spot what is wrong this picture?

If you go over to the blog, panopticist there is a posting talking about it: Mad Men Gets All the Details Right—Except One

I was surprised that I actually found one error myself, but the other is subtler. I was also fascinated by the discussion of a font that we — ok, I — use all the time: Arial.

After you read this posting, the ones below are worth a read, too.

Styrobot!

What do you do with all that styrofoam that is shipped to your house? If you are Kevin Kelly, you make this!

No, it doesn’t transform into a car, but the transformation from packing material to awesome robot is cool in itself.
For the whole story, see here