The displays of the world are getting wider. For those of us who work, this is not progress. Sure, wide-screen computer screens look cool, but in the real world of working on laptops, a wide-screen display is an ergonomic step backwards.
Before I slam the move to wide-screen computers, I will gladly admit that for entertainment content, wide-screen works. Our eyes are side-by-side, after all, and having a story unfold in a way that more closely respects how we see gives a more engrossing, absorbing experience. Wide-screen plasma and LCD television sets make sense, as do CinemaScope movie theaters.
But when we have work to do, the fact that our eyes are set up to spot a herd of jackals approaching us over the plain becomes irrelevant. For most people, the world of work is in portrait mode, and wide-screen displays offer scant benefits.
Like reading a page of text or a book, most Web sites are set up with strong vertical orientation. That works for text-based material, since wide lines of text, longer than about 60 characters, become hard to read (the reader has a hard time finding the beginning of the next line).
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Continue reading about The myth of width: When wide screens don’t work
HP MediaSmart Server
(Credit: HP)
Hewlett-Packard announced Monday that it is upgrading its MediaSmart server lineup with new, more powerful hardware and, more importantly, with software support for Macs and improved over-the-Net streaming of users’ media files. (A software update will allow users of existing MediaSmart boxes to access some …
Originally posted at Webware
Continue reading about HP upgrading Home Server lineup, Apple may follow suit
Hoop jumpage. Totally hot.
I finally got the SMS alert on my iPhone telling me that I now have access to the WiFi hotspots at Starbucks, for free. Cool. But the images I had of just sauntering in to a Starbucks, selecting the local WiFi network and jumping on the …
Originally posted at Webware
Continue reading about Rant: AT&T iPhone WiFi free as in money, but not as in time
We all know that it’s going to be a “soft” holiday shopping season. There are stories to back it up from Amazon.com and elsewhere. And now Retrevo, a consumer electronics research site (arguably a CNET competitor), is launching the charts and graphs we all need to drive the …
Originally posted at Webware
