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#macromondays #chip

 

A potato chip (often just chip, or crisp in British and Irish English) is a thin slice of potato that has been either deep fried, baked, or air fried until crunchy. They are commonly served as a snack, side dish, or appetizer. The basic chips are cooked and salted; additional varieties are manufactured using various flavorings and ingredients including herbs, spices, cheeses, other natural flavors, artificial flavors, and additives.

 

In little world they get some more usecases than just to be food. Sometimes it gets used by skaters as an half pipe :)

 

Thank you for visits, comments and favs!

 

Vielen Dank für Eure Besuche, Kommentare und Sternchen!

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

I took a similar shot ages ago with my K5 and the DA40 limited. Same usecase: small enough to get into my bag. However, this time size-wise even smaler and the EVF allowed easier exposure... Though composition is not perfect, as I needed to hop onto the plane...

 

Olympus OMD EM5

Olympus 17mm F1.8

 

I'm sure you've all seen it, but there's been this post-a-note meme on Facebook in which you write down 25 random facts about yourself and then tag 25 of your friends to read it and share theirs.

 

Long story short, I wrote them down last night at 5AM (I was working, and then I couldn't sleep). Some of the sentences are written all goobeldy gook because I was getting tired. I wrote a list of people I would share it with on facebook, but I'll just share it with you guys instead!

 

25 Random Facts About Me:

1. I love soup.

 

2. When I was little (and because I watched way too much Out of this World) I thought that I was actually half alien because I could see spots of colors when I closed my eyes.

 

3. I'm living with a girl who was my best friend in second grade. We started a drawing club, invented a code language for secret pen pal faxes, and choreographed a synchronized swimming routine to Watermelon Man

 

4. In high school I preferred shots of vodka. In college, 151. Now I like whiskey best.

 

5. I wear a tiny gold chain around my neck that used to be my grandma's.

 

6. I've beat Final Fantasy VII four times (each time I got the Golden Chocobo AND defeated Emerald Weapon)

 

7. I'm trying to cut down on my coffee intake (I'm at on average 4-6 cups a day).

 

8. I love my family and I wish they visited more often.

 

9. When guys try to outwardly hit on me, I get really awkward, clam up, and run away. Unless there's whiskey.

 

10. I really regretted being an art major and being a real shitty oil painter.

 

11. At some point I'd like to publish a graphic novel or series of comic strips. I'd also like to sell my drawings someday (but I don't really know how).

 

12. I feel like I'm a terrible excuse of a friend sometimes.

 

13. I would like to learn Japanese and Mandarin so I can run away to Asia and become a pop star

 

14. I'm thinking of running away to Berlin.

 

15. I really want a French Bulldog. I'm not positive whether I want to have kids or not.

 

16. I pretty much only listen to new music that people send me.

 

17. I have pipe dreams of inventing a Web 3.0 miracle site with Danny Morgan and Amy Cheng sometimes.

 

18. A fortune teller in China told me that I'd only have two serious relationships in my life, but I'd be very successful and be in charge of 10,000 people. We'll see how that goes.

 

19. Sometimes I miss the long blond hair I carried around for seven some years but it's *really* nice to have my real hair back again

 

20. I have big feet and tiny hands. I'm right footed but left handed.

 

21. I'm in love, but it's tough.

 

22. I think I've said the following way too often lately: Rad, Solid, Awesome, Nutty, Crazy, "These usecases are driving me crazy!"

 

23. I tend to naturally stay up til 2 or 3 in the morning no matter what.

 

24. I wish I could write well.

 

25. I'm sleepy.

Use case diagram

(from the web)

The prices aren't much more than half of Budget's and Avis's. Interesting. Why? I look in Consumer Reports and see the Pontiac G6 is significantly better than a Chevy Cobalt; so I click on that one.

DoDAF OV-5 - Business Use Case Model.

Notes from AppsWorld Europe 2013 talk "The Services of Things: Unleash the potential of connected life apps" by Danny Lousberg. 'Connected Intelligence' is, I believe, my favorite combo of word heard at the entire conference. :)

 

Creative Commons Attribution. Please credit as: Ann Wuyts (@vintfalken) for www.jini.co - CC By 2.0

I usually start with Budget. I like to rent from Budget for several reasons. First, I stand a good chance of getting a Ford Focus. I like to rent Ford Foci because they're great little cars to drive, have good radios, and (best of all) play MP3 CDs. So I can burn CDs of podcasts and listen on the road. Second, Budget usually has good prices. Third, I have a Fastbreak membership, which lets me avoid waiting at the agency's counter when I arrive. Fastbreak membership should also involve the same kind of time savings here on the website, but it doesn't.

Sure enough, the deal is for a "Ford Focus... or similar." Searls' 4th Law says "No matter what kind of car you want to rent, you'll get a Chevy Cavalier." Only now the Cavalier has been replaced by the Cobalt. Still, same principle.

I like to book cars through the United site, because it usually brings me a few extra miles. What United does, however, is replicate the airport experience in the online environment. Let's say you start with Alamo, get to a point where you see what the deal is, and decide to check out Dollar. Guess what: You lose your Alamo session. Even more than you'd lose it if you walked from one counter to another at the airport. It's @#$% infuriating.

DoDAF OV-5 - Operational Activity Model.

Key Use Cases of Blockchain #Blockchain, #DigitalAssets, #DigitalIdentity, #Remittances, #SmartContracts, #Solutions, #UseCases, #Uses #RecordsKeeper

 

Check out here >> rcrk.in/cf0b6

This time the other two rate choices disappear, and the prices stay the same. And still the high prices, with no choice of a compact car. I give up and move on, this time to Alamo.

I choose none of the upsell premiums, but gag at all the Taxes, Surcharges and Fees. I'll betcha the airports make more off every rental than the agencies do.

Note the "I have a Fastbreak/RapidRez Number". I always fill that out. I always tell it to remember me. It never does.

Here is a use case example in a complexe configuration.

 

Step 1 :

The user click on an existing quote to see it.

  

-------------------------

 

An annotation system had been developped. The following proposition aims to integrate it in a simple way.

 

The anotation system would be valuated as a part of the comment system for the user.

 

Merging a new functionalitiy to an existing one avoid to create more and more complexity on the tool.

I see some decent deals on a bunch of cars. My "favorite", a "compact", should be a "Ford Focus or similar."

Black Saturday +day230

 

Check out Renewin' Strathewen

Check out Work @ Dads

 

Leaders and Followers

Join my Startup. [0] You'll never get rich [1], you'll never find the girl. [2] Follow me. [3]

 

Reference

[0] paulgraham.com, Paul Graham, "How to start a Startup"

paulgraham.com/start.html

[1] paulgraham.com, Paul Graham, "How to make wealth"

paulgraham.com/wealth.html

[2] jzw.org Jamie Zawinski: "Groupware Bad: Your "use case" should be, there's a 22 year old college student living in the dorms. How will this software get him laid? ..."

[3] paulgraham.com, Paul Graham, "Why smart people have bad ideas"

paulgraham.com/bronze.html

 

next >>>

Here I've gone back to try running at the system again from this page's stage. This time it doesn't get past this page to the stage where it tells me I'm "still deciding" even though I've already decided. Now it's looping back to this page here. Totally annoying. So I say "screw it" and try Avis.

Use Cases of Blockchain Technology #Application, #Blockchain, #SaaS, #Usage, #Use, #Usecases #RecordsKeeper

 

Check out here >> rcrk.in/1a5ev

And I have a confirmation. After going through hours of UI and bad-deal hell.

Surprise! It gives me results! But my "favorite car", the choice of a compact, isn't there. Also, the prices are waaay high. Why? Makes no sense. Then I notice that there are a choice of "budget.com rates" and two more with license plate nouns, the second of which is not underlined and probably the rates I'm looking at. So I click on the "budget.com rates".

This is what a .tiff face looks like while writing usecases on the trainride back from her younger sister's graduation.

 

My expression is: "Mreh, I have so much work to do."

 

Now its your turn to take a photo. Everyone is doing it. Even Crap Artist.

I don't have a membership at Alamo, but I fill out the basics. Oddly, it won't let me fill out the arline, though it will let me fill out the flight number. I click CONTINUE.

6 main principles for User Centered Design:

1. The design is based upon an explicit understanding of users, tasks, and environments.

2. Users are involved throughout design and development.

3. The design is driven and refined by user-centered evaluation.

4. The process is iterative.

5. The design addresses the whole user experience.

6. The design team includes multi-disciplinary skills and perspectives.

 

Pilot Design Sessions process:

• Create working personas based on types / roles of users.

• Analyze their tasks and processes.

• Draw on the functional specification, scenarios, and use cases.

• Create wireframes, which use design patterns to represent functions,

• Use contextual inquiry to draw out common needs and work patterns with users to inform design.

• Present wireframes of increasing refinement, and ask team for feedback for improvements.

• Iterate, creating more refined designs, build clickable prototypes.

• Code, test with users, iterate to polish finals, freeze design,

• Build beta version, User Acceptance Testing (UAT), fix bugs, internal review / approve

• Freeze, Ship!

 

#designpatterns #usecase #perspectives #environments #tasks #selfie #process #design #ux #ucd #personas #contextualinquiry #prototypes

Step 4 :

While adding the quote, the box diseapear to let the user select the quote text.

I don't have a club membership with Hertz. But once in awhile their deals are good. And they often have cars when other agencies don't.

Step 5 :

The user validate the comment.

Okay, so now I'm renting a car for next week in San Antonio. Or making an attempt, anyway.

The initial use cases were based on the existing system functionality, then modified to better address the North American audience.

I actually have a Wizard Number. It's one reason Avis is usually my second choice. But I can't remember what it is. No way to look it up, either.

Step 6 :

New configuration of the page after use case.

Interesting. Turns out the Budget session stayed open, even though United usually kills the last agency's session when I go to the next one.

For a long time AR, (augmented reality) MR, (mixed reality) and VR, (virtual reality) were lacking concrete usecases (except porn) and was waved aside as nerds playground galore.

 

Today, with WebGL being a generally accepted 3D web standard, AR becoming accessible within the browser, hardware for displaying VR, AR and 3D applications becoming more affordable, and studios getting better at creating experiences while respecting the technology and its borders, we can finally start enjoying the show.

 

But what makes a good VR journey? What creates an enjoyable immersive AR experience?

 

Frankâs talk will showcase real client use-cases. He will open his (prinzipiell studioâs) cookbook and share his recipes to serve excellent results for clients like Adidas, Porsche, Samsung, Puma and many more.

For a long time AR, (augmented reality) MR, (mixed reality) and VR, (virtual reality) were lacking concrete usecases (except porn) and was waved aside as nerds playground galore.

 

Today, with WebGL being a generally accepted 3D web standard, AR becoming accessible within the browser, hardware for displaying VR, AR and 3D applications becoming more affordable, and studios getting better at creating experiences while respecting the technology and its borders, we can finally start enjoying the show.

 

But what makes a good VR journey? What creates an enjoyable immersive AR experience?

 

Frankâs talk will showcase real client use-cases. He will open his (prinzipiell studioâs) cookbook and share his recipes to serve excellent results for clients like Adidas, Porsche, Samsung, Puma and many more.

Step 3 :

The user want to add a comment and an other quote.

Every time I hit tge "rent my favorite car" button-link in the lower right there, the system brings me to an identical page. Note "status: still deciding" on the left. I *have* decided already. I'm trying to rent a car here. But instead I'm stuck in a time-wasting hell.

Now, at the top it tells me, in Red, "Please select Airline Name". But how? It insists on leaving that space gray. I can't type in it.

Finally I notice that there's this tiny blue "Select" inside a blue bar under the airline formfill space. It's a link to a list of airlines that includes United. So I get to fill that out after all.

Wow. Pretty high prices, but very much in line with Budget's. At least they offer me a compact car. Still, I want to keep looking. So I go to Hertz.

Once again I get to this same stage. Will it actually give me results this time?

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