28th December 2010

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RIM thought iPhone was impossible in 2007 | Electronista

This is very telling about RIM.

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Tagged: AppleBlackberryiPhoneRIM

22nd December 2010

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iOS printing via CUPS - Mac OS X Hints

IOS printing via CUPS

Haven’t tried this, but it looks interesting, especially for folks who’d like a free printing solution until Apple includes it in a future update.

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Tagged: AvahiCUPSiOS 4iPadiPhoneprinting

4th December 2010

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DrinksOnTap #7 – Holiday edition – Drinks On Tap

Beer and mobile apps… two of my favorite things. ;-)

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Tagged: AndroidiOSiPadiPhone

2nd December 2010

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Viber For iPhone Aims To Rival Skype’s App, Is Amazingly Amazing

Viber For iPhone Aims To Rival Skype’s App, Is Amazingly Amazing

Just installed this; slick and very well done from what I can see in the short time I’ve had it installed.

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Tagged: iPhoneVoIP

11th July 2010

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BOSPDAUG MEETING, July 13th@MIT 3-133

On Tuesday July 13th at 7pm, MIT room (3-133, but possibly TBD), the Boston PDA User’s Group presents a discussion of general andunexpected PDA topics. The meeting is free, and open to all users of

handheld and PDA technology.

At the July meeting we will be following all the latest news and developments with ‘iOS’ devices, the rise of Android, the death of the Danger-inspired ‘Kin’ and many other topics of interest to you. 

We should be in 3-133 now, but if not, there will be a room move notice left on the door at 3-133.

The Boston PDA User’s Group is an organization made up of those who choose to walk freely among us with handheld, palmtop and wireless computers. Formed in 1992, its goal is to connect with the newest and coolest mobile computer technology.  BOSPDAUG meets on the second Tuesday evening of each month at MIT in Cambridge MA in MIT room 3-133 at 7pm, and welcomes users of all PDA platforms for lively discussions of handheld and PDA technologies.

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Tagged: AndroidbospdaughandheldiPadiPhoneKindlemeetingmit

7th June 2010

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WWDC Analysis at BOSPDAUG MEETING Tuesday June 8th@MIT 3-133

On Tuesday June 8th at 7pm, MIT room (3-133, but possibly TBD), the Boston PDA User’s Group presents a discussion of general and unexpected PDA topics. The meeting is free, and open to all users of handheld and PDA technology.
With the Apple WWDC keynote happening on Monday, the 7th, there just may be something interesting to talk about during the meeting Tuesday night.  Bospdaug, as always will cover this completely and try to make some sense of it all.
 
The Boston PDA User’s Group is an organization made up of those who choose to walk freely among us with handheld, palmtop and wireless computers. Formed in 1992, its goal is to connect with the newest and coolest mobile computer technology.  BOSPDAUG meets on the second Tuesday evening of each month at MIT in Cambridge MA in MIT room 3-133 at 7pm, and welcomes users of all PDA platforms for lively discussions of handheld and PDA technologies

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Tagged: bospdaugiPadiPhoneWWDC

6th May 2010

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My iPhone seems to be shrinking in my hand as we speak

Yes, I am now the owner of a new iPad 64GB 3g as of last Friday, the 30th, 6:30pm. 

I have had almost a week with it now, and here is my story (so far).

My good friend Dr. Wu (her father taught Donald Fagen Kung Fu in Ohio back in the 70’s and she claims the song is named after him) and I decided to buy our iPads together— but we did not pre-order.  We intended to become part of the ‘scene’ at the local Apple Store. 

When we arrived at the store in Chestnut Hill MA at 6:30pm on Friday there was indeed a velvet rope line running about 150’ back from the door to the store… except there were no people actually in that line. 

Where were the lawn chairs? The people selling their spots in line for $1000?  The giddy fanboys? Camera crews, the funny hats?

What happened to ‘The Scene’?

Two Apple store employees at the door insured us that there had indeed been a ‘scene’ at 5pm— the line ran outside into the parking lot…  but that had all passed and was done (I guess at that point we were the scene).

The Apple store prides themselves on providing personalized, friendly service— and there was plenty of that, but also something a little more subtle— an easygoing but firm ‘hard sell’ to try and convince you to buy additional things.  

I got the hard press on MobileMe— even when I told them I had my own servers online, and indeed I run my own mail service they asked “How many servers do you have?” before finally giving up.

I suppose I prefer this kind of thing to going to a big box electronics store where the employees are untrained and clueless— but to some extent I found the whole experience just a little intrusive.  They did convince me that it would be a better ‘deal’ to buy the keyboard today ($30 off bought with the iPad— is Apple a little worried about the screen keyboard?).

It was not all bad— the good side of all this was that they activated the device for me, walked me through adding the 3g service, and our devices had a full 100% charge when we walked out the door. 

We were happy. Wallets lighter, but happy.

The iPad is everything that everyone else has said up to this point— I won’t beabor the point that it’s fast— very fast, slick, easy to use,and just the best personal web browsing experience you’ve ever had while lounging around your home.

3g adds to the iPad the extra benefit of providing the best Google maps experience you’ve ever had— a portable road atlas in a readable size.

In fact, anything with a map— weather, road, air traffic, package tracking is really, really slick on an iPad.

The first instinct you have after syncing your iPad to iTunes for the first time is to figure out which ‘iPhone’ apps you can update to ‘iPad size’ — as the compatibility is great— but the upscaling experience, not unlike watching standard definition TV on an HD set.

Here is my list of ‘must have’ apps for the iPad:

  • At Bat 2010 — ($14.99)  In game baseball stats, radio, and video highlights for every game, every team on a big, big screen.
  • Goodreader for iPad — ($0.99) read all your PDFs on the iPad.  This is pretty awesome.
  • Netflix — (Free) If you have a Netflix account, Netflix on Demand on your iPad!  (Columbo never looked this good)
  • iSSH — ($9.99) full sized ssh terminal client.   The iPad keyboard needs a ‘ctrl’ key in the right place!
  • BBC News — (Free!) I find myself leaving this up during the day, and listening to the included ‘BBC World Service’ radio feed (in fact, I am listening to the BBC right now)
  • Wundermap — (Free!) Weather underground full screen google mashup for iPad.
  • Weather Bug Elite for iPad — (Free) weather maps, video forecasts.
  • Weather Channel HD for iPad — (Free) data and video content from the weather Channel.
  • Delivery Status Touch — ($4.99) full iPad sized package tracking.  Cloud syncing of data for your mac, iPhone, and now iPad.
  • Filterstorm — (Free) iPad sized photo editing app, and free too!
  • Chess Wise Free — chess is great on a large screen.
  • Marvel Comics - (Free) Andy Inhatko was right— comics are a killer app on the iPad!
  • Night Stand HD — ($0.99) full screen clock and alarm for your iPad in its dock at night.
  • iSip — ($5.99, but a free version that does not use your phone book) This is an ‘iPhone’ sized app… but if you have a SIP voip service account, you can make phone calls from your iPad (even on 3g).  Google bought my favorite SIP provider— Gizmo5.  Expect at some point that there will be SIP credentials you could use here.

There’s a whole class of apps to do flight tracking, air traffic, even shipping traffic in the harbor near you that I have spent time with as well, but are of not things you’d generally use, unless you were looking for that specific type of information.  I think this class of app, truly delivering contextual data in real time, out in the field with a readily available, standardized hardware will be very important on this device.

The most interesting thing about having an iPad—  As if I’ve been somehow irradiated by aliens in a bad 50’s Sci-Fi movie, my iPhone suddenly seems to be shrinking. When I take it out of my pocket and look at it, it is tiny in my hand. 

It shockingly seems to shrinking perceptively smaller seemingly every time I use it. 

How odd is that?

 

 

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Tagged: 3gAppleapple storeiPadiPhone

19th March 2010

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Acela WiFi = Epic Fail

First, as a disclaimer, let me say that I love Amtrak, and Acela.  In fact there’s probably no other way I’d like to travel in the northeast corridor, and I am a regular, happy rider for many years.  The crews, trains, experience are all cool, and to boot, I get a lot of work done onboard, with power conveniently available at my seat.  In fact, I am on Acela right now, enjoying a train travel mile upgrade to first class.  Riding the train for me harkens back to an earlier, perhaps more elegant way to travel. 

So you can imagine how happy I was to hear that Acela would soon be offering free WiFi on all their Northeast trains. Free, as linux folks like to say, as in beer. This is likely in response to competitors like the Bolt Bus who provide free WiFi to riders, at a much lower overall price. They even came up with a cool little logo, and if you go into any Amtrak station, the signs are everywhere.

I can even use it on my iPhone, awesome. What could be wrong with that?

Turns out, a lot. 

I was sent a survey by Amtrak back in February by Amtrak asking me what I thought of various options— would I be interested in various movie rental options, paid downloads, etc., while on board. 

No, I answered— don’t try to sell me crap I don’t want, I’d just like the free, reliable internet access, thanks.  I’d even pay a little, if it was reliable, but free, much nicer. 

So it looks like they partially heard me—once the service launched,  there are no paid services, but they also didn’t hear my plea for reasonable, reliable service— because, to put it in a phrase that my 12yr. old would understand… 

Acela wireless = epic fail.

I actually rode Acela to NYC just a few days after they started the service, and there were a number of problems.  Here I am a few weeks in (March 19th) and things are not much better. 

Truly, this service is not good for much else than reading mail, and (waiting a long time to) view some commonly used news and information sites.  3G on my 3Gs iPhone outperforms this by a huge factor. 

For anything else, it’s not happening. 

To give you some metrics on how bad this is, check out this graphc of the speakeasy speed test: 

What you say, there are no results— that is exactly, and precisely my point… the speed test never ran, after waiting about 10 minutes. 

Even worse— when I tried to view a ‘twitpic’ from someone I follow (actually a new friend whose iPhone I charged at SXSW (I am still the most interesting nerd in the world)) I was greeted with this page: 

Banned for a download? Download? I was trying to view an image.  There is indeed a disclaimer on the free signup page when you first load the service that says something to the effect of “this service is not for watching streaming videos” but banning photos seems a bit egregious.  I wasn’t planning on running bittorrent, but this is a bit much. 

That for me, was the last straw.  Luckily, I have a borrowed AT&T 3g wireless card from my business partner, and that is how I am writing this review… and viewing photos and some youtube videos (Weird Al just posted his home movies to YouTube, awesome stuff). 

As I am a postive person— I am hoping that we are still in the ‘startup’ phase of this project, and Amtrak gets this right, but you’d have to imagine they tested this out a bit beforehand, so something has gone not quite right. 

But at the moment… Acela Wireless = epic fail. 

 

 

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Tagged: 3gAcelaepic failiPhonetrainwifiwireless