Just as I was getting all excited about the price of #dogecoin, it’s dropped down again.
So the plan now is to buy thousands of dollars worth of DOGE, then go looking for more bobsled teams in need of some funds…
Just as I was getting all excited about the price of #dogecoin, it’s dropped down again.
So the plan now is to buy thousands of dollars worth of DOGE, then go looking for more bobsled teams in need of some funds…
Beginning experimentation with tipping UIs: added BTC and DOGE tipping links to homepage with rel-payment
and experimental u-x-payment
, documented a bunch of tipping UI examples on microformats.org/wiki/payment-examples
Compilation of some sub-optimal gauge design I’ve come across recently. First up is BBC iPlayer’s speed tester+comparison tool:
Ignoring the questionable pyramid chartjunk, there are a bunch of issues here — the use of arc length and exceedingly inconsistent scale on the skeuomorphic gauge, the strange choice of colouring on the comparison bars (is green good and red bad? or better/worse than my connection?) and the totally useless “status” column add up to a confusing graphic.
The next is this set of dials from pool.dogechain.info — again the use of arc length is unnecessary, and very few comparisons are possible. At first, the scales look fairly sensible — perhaps the maximums are pool maximums, or averages or something?
Uh, apparently not.
These dials are always half full. They use up hundreds of pixels of colour and drop shadow, taunting you into thinking you’re getting some sort of useful comparison, when actually they’re informing you that two times twenty three is forty six. Astonishing.
Simply erasing the colour creates a much cleaner graphic
which can be further improved by clearing some of the resultant whitespace
The addition of time-series data might make a genuinely useful contribution, as could some comparisons or proportions allowing your rate to be compared to the pool average or total.
Another welcome, and obvious addition would be “how much do I make per second/minute”, “how much have I made so far”, “how does that compare to other miners” and “how much is that in real money” — these are the questions that I as a miner actually want answered when looking at a dashboard, but the few relevant statistics which are shown are relegated to a small corner.
@brennannovak wow; such wealth; very processor-intensive; much fan noise
Moderately productive Sunday — set up bitcoin, dogecoin (mined 9 DOGE!), tor and GPG, made best pizza so far and repaired headphones.
Cryptocurrency prediction: the easiest one to use will succeed. Currently it seems to be dogecoin.