Author Archive for rob

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iPad – More Than Just Toilet Surfing?

iPad

Why not throw my hat into the ring? A lot have people have been asking me (like you I’m sure), are you going to get an iPad? Why don’t you have one already? Don’t you like children? Think of the children!

At first blush, it appears to be a solution to no problem. The best I could come up with was couch surfing or toilet surfing (admit it, you surf on the can). I have worked on many products in my life that were products that attempted to solve an ill-defined problem, and that resulted in their demise, unsurprisingly. I’m not going to pontificate at length here on a topic that is well discussed elsewhere. Also, interestingly, with Apple’s odd and secretive app store approval processes, the old rich apps / thin client debate is coming to the fore once again, with the pendulum decidedly swinging to the rich apps model right now (everyone has an app store).

What I will say is that Apple is attempting to create another platform so that they can sell you more machines (they are a hardware company, not anything else). Its initial success will be due to its marketing machine. But the real test of this platform will rest on developers to make it the success Apple wants it to be. Enough to convince the masses that their Macbook and iPhone are just not enough.

I personally will be getting one – I write a blog about gadgets, c’mon, and I certainly have had to rationalize it to myself. But here are some key uses I expect to use it for:

  1. Data + USA. This is a biggie for me (and us Canadians). Getting a data plan in a foreign country (say the US) is impossible. And it is unlocked for use in all countries. Now I will have all-you-can eat data for a reasonable cost that is not on a contract.
  2. Comics. I have a Sony Reader and it’s kinda neat; the screen, despite its oddities, is perfect for reading books. Better than the iPad. But comics? That’s gonna be killer. Check this app out (not Marvel).
  3. Fill in the void. Now I’m getting a bit “justify the purchase to myself”, but surfing in bed or around the house and just generally interacting with a machine in a new, intuitive way, should be fun.

What about you? Are you going to get one? Do you buy the fake op-ed?

Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic Mini-Review

So I have an iPhone 3G. And I’d like better headphones. But I love the mic on the packaged earbuds, so it was music to my ears (groan) when Apple said they’d launched these. Despite not being officially supported by Apple, it does work with the 3G.

In-Ear Headphones 2.0

But they had a fatal flaw: you could hear every sound the cable makes as it hits you while walking (possibly because it uses that odd new rubbery material). So, great sound, except I could hear myself sing and breathe. And the bouncy bouncy of the cable. Sadly, I returned them.

Pros:

  • Better sound than stock earbuds
  • Blocks exterior sound well
  • Multiple sizes of earpieces for a good fit
  • Look great, taste great

Cons:

  • Not exactly cheap
  • Insufferable noise when walking, which is when I wear my headphones

Caveat emptor…

Palm Pre Pix

As promised, here are some pictures from the Palm Pre + webOS release. It’s not comprehensive as there is a ton of deep coverage (see the last post), but I thought I’d post unique stuff.

Palm Pre & webOS @ CES – Webkit Powers the Browser

First post in quite a while!!! 

So Palm was very kind to let a nerdy non-reporter into their meeting room today where they were showing off the Pre. It’s a cool machine with a cool UI reminiscent of the Palm OS mating the iPhone.

There are lots of other places with detailed coverage, but I was most interested to learn that the browser is based on Webkit (and a modern build at that). I think that’s a scoop for me as I haven’t seen that anywhere else.

I’ll post pix soon, but in the interim, check out the cool posts:

Google Reader + iPhone – The Right & The Wrong

As part of the iPhone 2.0 / 3G release, Google has updated the Reader interface for iPhone. The hub of my iPhone browsing centered around Google Reader, so it was critical that Google get it right. To my chagrin, the update leans towards the negative.
Pros
  - Feels like the desktop version with AJAX pop-open stories, which saves needless navigation as the last version required you to pop to another “tab” in Safari to read an article
  - The ability to switch between new / all items within a given view, and even mark all as read when browsing by category

Cons
  - The biggest one by far, at least for me, is how difficult it is to browse by tag. I have many feeds and they are grouped by tag. The browsing difference is as follows:

Old UI:
  1. Navigate to my bookmark that shows me all my tags
  2. Browse by tag
  3. When finished, go back to tags
  4. Repeat

New UI:  
  1. Land on All Items page (you cannot easily bookmark the tags page)
  2. Tap Feeds to see your tags
  3. Tap the tag you are interested in
  4. Tap the “tag folder” to see the relevant articles
  5. When finished, go back to tags
  6. Repeat

  - Unless I’m crazy, the iPhone view seems to be sync’ed with your desktop reader such that if you filter by New Items versus All Items, they seem to be remembered across platforms (which may not make sense)

  - It seems that you no longer are directed to a Google-stripped down page to read an article; rather, you are taken to the source site directly, adding up on bandwidth (and in Canada, that can be a bit expensive).

Anyone else bothered by this? Anything else I’ve overlooked?