Please note: This site is now an archive, visit Atomic Ninja Labs for the latest content and updates.
In five days, this blog will be 3 years old.
Normally, after a few years of *something* existing it’s time to party. Perhaps a re-design, re-purpose or simple “thank you” to all those who have followed the ups and downs and still continue to tag along for the ride.
If there is one universal constant, it is that I am not normal. Another is that what goes up, must (eventually) come down.
And it is with a combination of sadness (and hope) that I officially close down smackfoo.com. Whilst the site will remain active for posterities sake1 it will cease to be my primary voice and will as such not see updates.
It’s also time to bid Wordpress goodbye. It’s been a fine vehicle for basic content management, but is simply not heading in a direction that I chose to follow. It is increasingly difficult to maintain code for the platform and consumes more time than it really should.
I have always appreciated the chance to share ideas and philosophies2 and I thank each and every visitor and regular alike for dropping by.
As I’ve hinted at previously there is however, a new love in my life. The Lab has been quietly taking shape and has developed over a few months of mixing chemicals and powders together to see what explodes. The odd scorching aside it’s worked out pretty well.
Thus, I would like to invite you all to visit the Atomic Ninja Labs — my new home.
0500 hours ∞
Thursday, 24 April 2008
Nine hours and fifty-five minutes of mad design clean up and deployment begins. Now.
“We know what we are doing.” — a phrase oft spoken, or written that simultaneously proves neither is true. The statement itself is an example in foolishness, indeed how can one intuitively “know” everything? Worse, how can trust of any sort be placed in such a statement? This is an ode to that phrase and […]
Waiting for God ∞
Thursday, 10 April 2008
Kath, my wonderful and insightful partner, has something to tell door-to-door bible bashers.
If someone wandered into the woods and came back proclaiming he’d discovered gold tablets with a whole new gospel on them I’d be doubtful. If he said he was the only one who was allowed to see them I’d be skeptical. If he said they told him he was allowed more than one wife but it didn’t go the other way — only one husband for the ladies — I’d be laughing.
It never ever seems to strike those who go from house to house, attempting to subvert smart people into believing that their God is the “right” God, that we just aren’t that stupid. It’s like George Bush meets Leisure Suit Larry — all the wrong idiots in all the wrong places.
Communication vs controversy ∞
Thursday, 10 April 2008
Another blogger gets it.
I’m all for communication between author and reader, but comments are the lowest possible denominator. More often than not, they bring out the absolute worst in people. via.
There are far better ways to converse, rather than a comment field that is just plain designed to invite commentary from everyone except those who actually have something real and wise and vibrant to add.
On a side note, Steven’s new minimalist design helps get the message across, without cruft.
waffle on apple software updates ∞
Sunday, 23 March 2008
Jesper speaks with a clear and (in my humble opinion) wise voice in his post The Sliding Scale of Right.
The real takeaway is that when Apple does shit like this, it degrades Software Update and the extent to which people can unconditionally recommend it as a useful and convenient security precaution. Good security precautions don’t come with caveats.
Apple has dropped the ball here. And it is as simple as that. Automatic select-and-install of anything the user hasn’t specifically said “yes, please install application n, I approve that action by selection” by default is bad form. It’s wrong.
The Operating System in question is irrelevant, the principle is the same. Do not install shit I do not ask for, especially if you try and hide it as an “update”, purposefully or no. Apple’s software update hasn’t done this in the past (at least not on the Windows platform) and whilst it’s obvious Apple seeks to push their browser of choice, it should never be at the expense of user knowledge or by sneak attack.
The single best option is to revert the action back to what it had always been prior to the latest release of Safari. That is what the user expects. And thus that is what it should be — if I have not requested installation of the application, it remains un-installed.
Give An Attentive Shit ∞
Friday, 21 March 2008
Jeff Barlow has distilled the art of understanding and importance down to a simple catch phrase — pay attention and give a shit.
And it left me thinking, what have I learned? And more importantly what have I learned that I could share. Of late, I’ve simplified some lessons-learned into two ideas I keep repeating to myself: Pay Attention and Give a Shit.
A great article that breaks down the idea of keeping it real and building importance.
Endless Journey ∞
Wednesday, 19 March 2008
Bravo! Michael gets it — blogging is a journey.
For the longest time, I thought blogging was about you. That’s what everyone told me. “Blogging is a conversation”. Not my blog. My blog is a place where I share my thoughts. Where I write what I want to write. Not for you. For me.
When you understand that blogging is in many respects a gift given freely to others, you begin to understand that the finish line, fame and fortune really isn’t the goal.
Blogging isn’t conversation — with it’s propensity for short duration and expectation of feedback — it’s communication. There are simply no limits in what one can achieve when the journey becomes more important than the end.
Text Link Style ∞
Wednesday, 19 March 2008
Andy Rutledge has posted an in depth take on hyperlink style and construction.
Differentiating text links by color and/or decoration is just a fundamental approach. Your decisions for what color or what sort of decoration to use hinges on some important issues that reach beyond considerations of contrast and distinction. So these decisions cannot often be made arbitrarily.
Textual navigation’s entire function is to simplify access to content and to guide the reader to where they need to be. It should invite further participation and fit within the bounds of the design, getting from A to B and back again, without losing the reader in the process.
If your reader cannot cannot distinguish between content and interface, between link or highlight, or simply just how to proceed forward, they likely will not. A failure in anyone’s language, surely.
As previously mentioned I’ve got something cooking, so to speak. Andy has provided a timely reminder for this author of just how important placement and ease of navigation — something that is all-to-often sidelined — plays in overall site design.
I’ve been working on something. It’ll be live soon and it’s a whole new direction. More soon.
On a side-note — filed under the special-things-that-turn-one-homicidal category — something was slightly h0rked after a recent hosting upgrade. I think I’ve nailed it now. Mostly.
“Uh, we had a slight weapons malfunction, but uh… everything’s perfectly all right now. […]
Seth Godin is, as usual, right on the mark — no user servicable parts inside:
That’s what it says on countless electronic and mechanical devices. “Don’t touch this,” it says, “you’re way too dumb to open it… you’ll get hurt”
The problem, of course, is that pretty soon you start looking at the entire world that way. Whether it’s web design or Google analytics or backing up your hard drive or just talking to the guys in the plant about your new ideas, it’s really easy to see the world as a black box.
Here’s a simple secret of success: ignore the sticker.
I’m a geek. I work with servers, infrastructure and network hardware. I know how a good deal of my industry’s stuff works because I was never afraid to rip the cover off and get my hands dirty — a parentally challenging (and initially somewhat destructive) habit as a child has lead to a busy and often productive work ethic as a result.
When I tackle something new, be it technology or software, I still whip the cover off for at least a brief look at the clockwork action below.

