EverBook: Evernote Device Concept

Evernote is an incredibly useful tool, but I constantly find myself distracted by the overly complex UI for the desktop app. I found myself wishing that I could have a stand alone device that is focused on providing a streamlined Evernote experience. I had to mock up a design for the device to get it out of my head. It is far from a practical product idea, I would love to have one.

The basic idea for the EverBook is a small notebook, sized somewhere between a netbook and a smaller laptop, that has a full keyboard, wifi/3g card, microphone and camera (on the back of the screen. The writing experience on the device would offer a minimalist alternative to a Markdown editor. You would have all the wonerfull syncing features that come with Evernote, and you could use richer formatting than is available in Markdown without cluttering the screen with UI.

Below you can see a more clear view on the keyboard for the device. The row of keys along the top would be used for formatting. The keys next to the spacebar that would typically be used for control, alt, etc. would be used for Evernote system functions.

A Preview-less Markdown Editor

I love me some markdown. John Gruber‘s creation of the concept is the one reason I am able to tollerate the Apple darling’s writing. I use Markdown every day to focus in on writing tasks, but I’ve always been frustrated with the state of the editor experience. Byword and iA Writer both get a lot of things right, but, for me, the display I see while writing is too disconnected from the output I am trying to create. I’m forced to use an app like Marked or the preview mode in Byword to see what my document should really look like.

There are a few ideas that I haven’t seen in any editors yet that I need for an ultimate editor experience:

1. Headlines that resize

2. Lines that become solid when your cursor is gone

Using these two new features along with the best features from existing editors, a really solid editing experience could be created that would remove the need for a preview mode or an additional app.

This is what my ultimate editor would look like:

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Microsoft’s New Futurist Vision

The most impressive part of this video is the graphic design work, but there are a few interesting ideas. As usual with these Microsoft futurism videos, much of it doesn’t make any practical sense. Eternal pessimist, Nicholas Carr used this video as the inspiration for an interesting post about how Utopia is creepy.

Some of the concepts surrounding the future of work aren’t half bad:

Large 3d display reminiscent of a drafting table. In the video, working guy does a lot of gestural control of the on-screen content.

Still using a physical keyboard but the entire desk surface is a display and touch surface.

Video communication with others made to look like tiny versions of coworkers are sitting across the table from you.

IDEO’s vision of “The Future of the Book.”

IDEO released a great video depicting their vision of the future of digital books. As mobile devices are maturing, we are finally in a position to apply the benefits of interactivity and social networks to long form text documents. Definitely some cool ideas in here. It isn’t thought through completely, but that is the nice thing about making a video like this.

The part of the video I most want to come true is the second piece, dubbed Coupland.

Coupland

Coupland explores the possibilities of sharing the experience of reading with your friends and coworkers. It would definitely be nice to see what your friends are reading and send recommendations to them, but I was more intrigued by the idea of having access to a company library. If the organization you work for or belong to has a group license to a title, everyone in the group can access the book. Just think of how a shared catalog of books and discussions around them would affect a company culture.

Company reading lists could be made public. In this example you see information about the books people are reading at Google. This information would be more useful and meaningful than an amazon review by a random person or a professional review from someone that doesn’t have similar tastes or fields of interest.

It would be refreshing to have social networking used like this. The discussions that take place on Facebook are generally mundane. Facebook exists for generic socializing, and there isn’t really a point to it. Social networks of the future should allow you to have meaningful discussions about more in-depth topics with people that share you interests. Ping is half heartedly trying to accomplish something like this for Music. Last.fm is similar, but seems to have more of a focus on letting you data mine yourself through scrobbling (which I actually love) than allowing you to discuss the music you are listening to with your friends or the community. I’m hoping that social systems for media content will not be attached to single retailers. That’s what I’m so cynical about Ping.

The video doesn’t explore the annoying road blocks that are holding us back from a system like this. Book publishers have been so cagey about changing anything relating to their business model. Negotiating group licenses will probably be a difficult. Too bad creating real life solutions like the one IDEO has envisioned isn’t as simple as coming up with UX design.

Xbox Dashboard Update

The new Xbox dashboard has been leaked, and I’m liking the changes that have been made. It’s certainly not a revolutionary update like the last one. This update has minor changes to the functionality and visual design.

The new style matches the flat, square look that Microsoft seems to be pursuing across all their products. I like the move away from unnecessary gradients, gloss and skewed objects. The most dramatic change from the current dashboard is how the horizontal browsing has been flattened. The benefit of this change is that you can see part of an item to the left of the one you have selected.

UX Study – Multi-directional Corner Menu

UX Study - Corner Menu

UX Study - Corner Menu

UX Study - Corner Menu

I designed this menu concept when I was working on a site for the DSi browser. I was trying to come up with a menu that would work for either orientation of the the device.