The Washington Post
describes CNN's Multi-Touch Collaboration Wall, its "touch table" used to show graphics on the network. It was rolled out for the Iowa caucuses and it expected to be a star player tonight.
While "ooing and ahhing" over the technology, the article does highlight, subtly, that this is basically a big monitor and if you put too much complex information on it, viewers only see confusion. I'm curious too how watching the talking heads manipulate the Wall with their hands is that much more entertaining than if they (or someone behind the scenes) controlled a mouse or keyboard. Perhaps it's just the novelty at this point?
I'm also concerned that the Wall is perhaps getting credit for software others have created - say Google Earth. It was cool before the Wall and will be afterward. Still, the article reports that CNN's "fancy version of the Wall" comes with lots of extra software. It's unclear if its content, analysis or simply navigation tools.
I do want to raise the "touch screen" will solve all interface problems vision I seem to run into now and again. A user interface is not necessarily better with a touch screen than with any other input. Interface design is still difficult. At one time I felt many in the geocommunity felt that once GIS was in the browser, it would be"easy." In some cases, that's true, but one need only look at how complex browser apps and often their interfaces can become, to see the other side of the story.
Comments
May 17
MapServer can also be used to display [...]
George about Jane's Puts Global Incident Map Behind Pay Wall
May 17
I am a little irritated by this product [...]
Jorge2 about Blue Dasher, the next Immersive Media?
May 16
The new companies such as Blue Dasher [...]
Tim Heinse about Dangermond on TomTom Acquisition Approval
May 16
I believe the real question is what will [...]
spatial360 about Jane's Puts Global Incident Map Behind Pay Wall
May 16
What's wrong with a company that [...]
Stevenr about Quote of the Week
May 16
It is inevitable with the number of [...]
Jamie about Google/ESRI Announcement in Plain English
May 16
Yep. City, county, and state level, and [...]