On mobile phones

1. A couple of months back I was talking about the iPod touch, and how I wanted one, and how I didn’t want an iPhone. I now have an iPod touch, and I’ve been using it for the last couple of weeks, and what do I think? Well, Iku thinks it’s my new girlfriend, that’s how much I’ve been using it.

2. The interface is far better than I had expected, it’s just magic. Well, 90% of the time. The other 10%? That’ll be the times when you want to change the volume one handed, or whilst walking, or trying to scrub ahead in a podcast or video. Those slider bars are insanely hard to use unless you use both hands, and are wildly inaccurate — I’ve accidentally blasted myself a few times already. But wait — why is that stuff only 10% of your time? It’s a media player, shouldn’t that account for more?

3. Well, yes. If it didn’t also have WiFi and a web browser.

4. Honestly, the touch has become my main internet device, something I can use pretty much anywhere (who knew there were so many WiFi access points in this city?) Safari works wonderfully, the “flick” method of scrolling feels so much more organic than using a mouse and a scroll bar. The whole device has a lovely heft to it, and it balances well in one hand, so I can pretty much read the morning news on the touch in my left hand, using my left thumb to scroll and click on links. And, just as importantly, the internet looks good on the touch. Compare the New York Times mobile site on my touch, compared to my Nokia N73:

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5. Which one would you rather use?

6. The font on my N73 is perfectly legible, if a bit small. But the font rendering is fantastic on the touch, and it raises the legibility of mobile devices to the point where I would actually prefer it to the computer. Look again at those photos, a single column of text is about the same size (perhaps a bit bigger) as a column of text in a newspaper. There are about five to seven words per line, so it’s easy to follow from line to line — unlike blocks of text on computer screens where you could, depending on the width of your screen, have twenty to thirty words per line. Having too many words per line makes it more difficult to find the next line in the text. Just think, how many times have you gotten lost in a passage because of this?

7. What has this to do with the iPhone? I was adamant about not getting one because I didn’t want to get locked in to a carrier, I hated that Apple makes this amazing platform but shuts it off to developers. But using the touch just brings home just how much better it is than my Nokia, which is a pretty sweet phone as it is. But there’s no comparison, despite the very many failings of the iPhone, for 90% of what it does, it does it waaaay better than the competition.

8. And I’d rather have a great user experience 90% of the time, than having a passable experience 100% of the time.

iHave Entitlement Issues

1. From CNET:

“Some commended Jobs and the company for what they considered a humble and fair response to the iPhone price flap. Others, however such as CNET News.com reader Jake Kushner, president of JK Media, said Apple’s response didn’t go far enough to satisfy those who bought a 4GB iPhone for $499, only to see the 8GB model become $100 cheaper. They should get a free upgrade to an 8GB model or a $200 rebate, he said.”

“I feel wronged and misled by Apple. Such a quick price reduction indicates that Apple premeditated this reduction before the initial release,” Kushner wrote, addressing Jobs. “I read your public response on Apple.com to this issue, but I still feel that the solution you are offering is not adequate.”

2. Pfffft. The only thing inadequate is your ability to control yourself… twice. Once for being a cheap bastard and buying a 4gb iPhone, and once for telling the world about it. Fake Steve has a tshirt for you, have you heard of him?

The only question now is…

1. …the 8gb iPod touch, or the 16gb?

2. I’ve been betting quietly that one of these would come out, and even without WIFI I would’ve bought one. Why? That kickarse interface. I’m an interface geek, a holdover from my design days, and that multi-touch interface is just mind-bogglingly awesome. I don’t really want an iPhone, ’cause while it might be thin, it’s not a small phone, and if I’m out on the piss the last thing I want is to break that screen by being drunkenly over-enthusiastic. Or by dropping it. And how can you have a smartphone where you can’t even cut-and-paste text? Here’s hoping for iPhone 2.0.

3. But this… all the best features of the iPhone, and I can still leave it home when I don’t need it. And, lets face it, it’s really an 8mm thick computer. You just know that this thing will get the crap hacked out of it, and by Christmas there’ll be a bunch of 3rd party apps available — who knows, even Apple might get in on the act, since the only excuse they gave for the lack of 3rd party app support in the iPhone was because of “stability issues”.

4. Now if you can plug in a foldable keyboard and run third party apps, I’ll never need a laptop, ever again.

5. (Anyone who whinges about the lack of storage should look at an Archos 605, equally drool-worthy, 160gb storage, and matches the iPod touch in pretty much every regard except OSX and thinness. So quit it with the damn whinging.)

Running. I don’t do it. Normally.

1. I recently spoke to a close friend online. I mentioned to her that I’ve recently started running, to which she responded:

TB: BULLSHIT!!!

2. …which neatly sums up my attitude towards running, and excercise in general, since about Year 11 of High School (AKA Some Years Ago). But, I’m not getting any younger, although the way I spend my weekends here suggests that I am, mentally at least, regressing, and I promised myself that when the weather warmed I would start excercising. So, the weather warmed, and I went to the shoe store and bought a pair of NikeFree shoes.

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3. They’re wicked! Super light, super comfortable, and super flexible which lets my feet flex the way they’re supposed to. The whole upper material is mesh, and on a cold night you can actually feel the cold air come in, but it means I’m not assaulted by foot-sweat-smell when I take my shoes off after a run. Extra points for that.

4. I also bought the Nike+iPod sensor kit, which is basically a pedometer and transmits information to my iPod, where it calculates things like distance, pace, calories used and the like and puts it on display. At the press of a button a voiceover will tell you those stats, and when you sync the iPod it will transfer that info to a Nike website when you can track your runs. The website lets you create goals (time spent running, pace, distance etc) and you can compare your results with other people online. I’m really diggin’ it, makes the whol excercising thing fun — something I ‘d never thought I’d say.

5. (And before I get accused of being an Apple/Nike whore — if anyone can point out a $30 device that does all that, I’ll look into it.)

6. Anyway, the sensor kit is really nice, and you don’t need to buy a pair of Nike+ shoes to use them either. I taped my sensor to the top of the tounge of my left shoe, it doesn’t get in the way at all.

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7. Maybe I’ll post monthly updates of my running stats — maybe. When they’re not so embarassing.

iPhone

1. Look, I’m not going to talk too much about it, and besides wanting one bad, what else is there to say that won’t be said by the rest of the internets? But, I have to say, I wrote this in 2004:

Imagine an all aluminium iPod, around the same dimensions of the current iPod. On the outside there is the black and white display, the scroll wheel and navigation buttons, with the hinge on one side, and the release catch on the other (which magnetically retracts, a la PowerBook). Press the release catch and the iPod unfolds like a clamshell, revealing the colour touch screen on one side and a thumb board on the other. Nestled in the hinge is the stylus.

Running the PDA side of things is a mobile version of OS X, ported to run on Embedded Linux. Included is cut down versions of basic OS X productivity programs — Mail, Safari, Address Book and iCal — all of which ties in perfectly with the full calorie versions.

Bluetooth is enabled automatically when it is opened, and at the click of a button it’ll hook up with your phone and connect to the internet. mac.com you can synchronise your contacts and iCal. With iSync all your personal info would be transferred across, including all the Safari bookmarks. With a special cable into the dock connector you could plug in your digital camera and import new photos using mobile iPhoto, sort them into a new album, plug in the TV cable and show the day’s shots at a friends house. Including that short video shot with your digital camera. And in the morning it’ll make you coffee just how you like it too.

2. How ace was that? While my imagination failed with the form factor, an awful lot of functionality that I was lusting in 2004 has materialised in 2007. I wrote that around the time the project started, so maybe I was cosmically channelling an Apple engineer, or maybe the other way around; either way I don’t care, I just can’t wait to get my hands on one. If, and a big if at that, it’s ever sold in Japan.

WWDC ‘06

1. I don’t write much about Apple anymore, but with an event like WWDC and the new toys Apple has released, how could I resist?

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WriteRoom / Dark Room

1. I never realised how much visual clutter there was on my desktop, and how much it affected my writing, until now: thanks to a great bit of software called WriteRoom (OS X only, Windows users can try Dark Room, which does pretty much the same thing. I use it on my VAIO.) Such a simple idea — remove everything that could cause distraction, leave only the most important things behind. In this case, it’s just you and the words. Nothing else. It’s brilliant! It basically turns your computer into a typewriter, albeit one which lets you edit as well as type. You have a blank background with nothing but type. You choose the colour, the font, the size of the font and the length of a line. That’s it. The rest is up to you.

2. What’s even better is that WriteRoom also lets you install scripts and plugins that extend it’s features. I have scripts that, with the appropriate keyboard command (which you can choose), will do a word count, or send it to my email client. The company keeps a section of the forum for users to submit their own scripts, so other users can use and abuse as they see fit. And, best of all, the program is freeware.

3. This is what I love most about using a Mac. It’s not just the shiny hardware and pretty software from Apple, but the great user and developer community. I’m sure there are great programs for Windows as well, but they’re really hard to find. Most programs I find useful on Windows has a user interface that doesn’t just look like an afterthought, but rather a no-thought. But Mac developers seem to care about what their software looks like as well as how it functions. I like that. Aesthetics matter an awful lot in UI design — people work better in nice looking places.

4. Anyway, rant over, have a look for yourself — I’ll bet you’ll dig it as much as I do.

Apple Legal and the Nine Year Old Girl

1. Now that’s embarassing… a nine year old girl writes Steve Jobs letter with a suggestion to improve the iPod only to get a stinging rebuke from Apple Legal complete with a link to Apple’s legal policies online. Apparently the lawyer responsible had a very high opinion of this nine year old — why else would he think that she would be able to understand the language it was written in? Is it possible he printed off a template and sent that without due regard to the recipient? Surely not…

2. Anyway, this attracted the attention of the local TV station, which promptly produced a minor PR issue for Apple and no doubt a very red-faced Apple lawyer (who later called and apologised profusely).

3. I wonder how many letters from children Steve Jobs receives in a year? Surely not so many that he couldn’t sign the odd reply….

MacBook Pro Update

1. A few points about my MacBook Pro:

  1. Hooooooot. And that’s hot, not hoot. I’ve read some people bitching that the MagSafe power connecter blows because you knock it and it comes off (duh!), but no one ever mentions that the computer would cook your knees if you had it charging on your lap.

  2. It’s faaaast. That’s a hoot. I put another 512mb RAM in mine (bringing it up to a total of 1Gb) and it’s snappy. And fast. Wow.

  3. That. Screen. Damn, it’s a nice screen. Hurt-your-eyes bright, no dead pixels, crystal clear.

  4. A few nice touches that I didn’t have on my old PowerBook: there are two volume settings, one for internal speakers and another for headphones, which is nice considering how many times I’ve had my ears blasted because I’ve got the speakers cranked and plugged some headphones in. And it no longer burns your palms when typing like my old PowerBook did, so ventilation under the front part of the laptop (by that I mean the part closest to you when you’re using it) has been improved dramatically.

  5. Few things I’m not liking: the Superdrive is slow. It’s less super, more like an okdrive. I know they couldn’t fit the faster drive because it’s 12mm thick rather than 9mm think like this is, but I’d still like a faster drive. This drive also seems a bit twitchy, a couple of DVDs have turned coaster because of some unknown reason. And, lastly, there seems to be an issue with copying from one firewire drive to another firewire drive; for some reason it copies really slowly, but if I turn one of the processor cores off it copies normally. I have yet to really dig into this, I don’t know if this is an Apple bug or whether I’m doing something weird.

  6. Photo Booth is the best program evar. Seriously, there’s nothing funnier than a bunch of pissed guys making stupid faces in front of this program.

Update 10/3/06

1. Oh my, there’s less than two weeks to go and thing are getting very hectic. I’ve finished up at work, which I am glad about because that was one of my milestones (to use a bit of jargon), but I will be missing the people I work with. And today I picked up my visa, so I’ve got all the paper work I need to go.

2. While all the official stuff might be all organised, I still haven’t packed. Or moved anything back to my parents yet. I guess you never realise how much stuff you have until you have to move it all, but the sheer amount of junk I’ve acumulated is truly staggering. Happily most can be thrown away, and the rest fit in boxes. And since I’ll be gone for so long I’ve started cateloging some of my stuff, like my books and CDs and what not, with an awesome program called Delicious Library. if you’re a Mac person you would proabably have heard all about it already; if you haven’t, you should read the ArsTechnica review of Delicious Library, it’ll give you some insight as to why Apple has such devoted fans (and why it’s such a kick-arse program).

3. I’ll be writing a bit more about Delicious Library, and my MacBook Pro, and a bunch of other subjects when things quieten down. Which would probably be months away, but try I must. Until next time then….