Archive for March, 2011

Parkinson’s Law of Triviality

March 11, 20111:25pm

Poul-Henning Kampin applies C.Northcote Parkinson’s Law of Triv­i­al­ity in to explain the dis­pro­por­tion­ate atten­tion given to triv­ial details in soft­ware devel­op­ment . It applies rather well to design:

Should I care what color the bikeshed is? The really, really short answer is that you should not. The some­what longer answer is that just because you are capa­ble of build­ing a bikeshed does not mean you should stop oth­ers from build­ing one just because you do not like the color they plan to paint it. This is a metaphor indi­cat­ing that you need not argue about every lit­tle fea­ture just because you know enough to do so. Some peo­ple have com­mented that the amount of noise gen­er­ated by a change is inversely pro­por­tional to the com­plex­ity of the change.

To expand, wikipedia has:

Parkin­son dra­ma­tizes his Law of Triv­i­al­ity with a committee’s delib­er­a­tions on a nuclear power plant, con­trast­ing it to delib­er­a­tion on a bicy­cle shed. A nuclear reac­tor is used because it is so vastly expen­sive and com­pli­cated that an aver­age per­son can­not under­stand it, so they assume that those work­ing on it under­stand it. Even those with strong opin­ions often with­hold them for fear of being shown to be insuf­fi­ciently informed. On the other hand, every­one under­stands a bicy­cle shed (or thinks he or she does), so build­ing one can result in end­less dis­cus­sions because every­one involved wants to add his or her touch and show that they have con­tributed. While dis­cussing the bikeshed, debate emerges over whether the best choice of roof­ing is alu­minium, asbestos, or gal­va­nized iron, rather than whether the shed is a good idea or not.

Stunning google street view stills

March 1, 201111:57pm

via Jon Raf­man @9-eyes.com.

Data visualisation: Global Android activations

5:24pm

A Data visu­al­iza­tion show­ing global Android device acti­va­tions from Octo­ber 2008 to Jan­u­ary 2011. I par­tic­u­larly like the count­down to sig­nif­i­cant events such as Droid and Galaxy launches

via Flow­ing Data

Grape juice concentrate and Mega Purple

5:08pm

Filed under “Stuff I never knew”: appar­ently grape juice con­cen­trate and mega Pur­ple are widely used in the wine mak­ing industry …

Most con­tro­ver­sial of all is a sub­stance called Mega Pur­ple. This is (sup­pos­edly) fre­quently used in Cal­i­for­nia to add colour to wines, as well as a lit­tle sweet­ness, and has caused quite a stir – per­haps, in part, because of the name … Grape juice con­cen­trate is made by con­cen­trat­ing unfer­mented grape juice, typ­i­cally by boil­ing it in a par­tial vac­uum, which low­ers the boil­ing point to a tem­per­a­ture where the flavours aren’t com­pletely cooked. It’s then added to wines that have already fer­mented to dry­ness at the blend­ing stage.

via jamie goode’s wine blog.