Updates from January, 2010 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Joe 09:02 on January 28, 2010 Permalink
    Tags: apple, ebook, ipad, itouch, slate, web tablet, webtablet   

    iPad, first thoughts 

    SAN FRANCISCO - JANUARY 27:  Apple Inc. CEO St...
    Image by Getty Images via Daylife

    My first thought about the iPad, triggered by Tim Bray: Nothing Creative.

    At the first glance I could not agree more with Tim. There’s nothing revolutionary about this whole iPad thing, it just let’s you “consume the web”.

    At the other hand, this looks like the perfect execution of the whole “web tablet” idea which surfaced ten years ago (2000, 2001) and then almost vanished. I think the iPad is the culmination of evolutionary innovation, helped by Moore’s law.

    For geeks there’s not much fun, no way to tinker and extend. Then, as soon as you see it as a nice consumer device and have it lying around your coffee table this might be a very nice gadget (at a pretty hefty price).

    For me there are also a lot of unanswered questions, like why would I want to have this lying on the coffee table, operating under my identity? Security and privacy anyone? Or is it not meant to share after all?

    Finally, why do we (yes, including me) always have such a strong opinion about Apple products? They must be doing something right in marketing (remember: HP launched a very neat tablet, the Slate, only a week ago). Some introspection: why are we disappointed when we get the perfect version of something wished for 10 years ago? Is it because it’s too late and we’re already way beyond with our thoughts?

    Update: Mark Pilgrim describes his disappointment about the closed nature of the iPad as Tinkerer’s Sunset – be sure to read this excellent writeup!

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    • Jens de Smit 09:35 on January 28, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      I think we’re disappointed because there’s nothing revolutionary new here. We’ve seen many a tablet computer fail and the iPad does not seem to have that “something extra” the iPhone had when it was released. Back then, iPods were hot, mobile phones had become a necessity and Apps were something we wanted even when we didn’t know they existed. The iPhone combined them all into a package too small and handsome for most people to imagine. The iPad on the other hand just looks like an overgrown iPhone with the ambition to take over your laptop’s function but without the technical specs to do so.

      Still, we should not forget that the device that delivered Apple its current status, the iPod, was just as unrevolutionary. MP3 players in all sorts and sizes were a hot item in the eraly 2000′s, but manufacturers were struggling with the price of flash memory, the problem of user interfaces on tiny displays and the then still geeky image of downloading music of the internet. At the right time, when music downloading was becoming much more mainstream, Apple introduced an MP3 player with massive storage, a very good user interface and the right marketing. It wasn’t anything particularly new, just executed so well that it set the standard for portable music players for years to come. When more and more people get their hands on the iPad, we’ll see if Apple pulled off the same quality with the iPad.

      • Joe 10:11 on January 28, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        @Jens thanks for your comment! I do agree that the iPod was not a (technical) innovation at all, but the interface was revolutionary and caused me to expect that as a minimum. So when my iPod died and I was left with only my Sony Ericsson “walkman” phone, I just stopped listening to music and podcasts, just because the bad interface became prohibitive to use the device.

        Now on Android the music player is just decent and even usable.

        Maybe we’re already used to the whole concept of (multi-)touch interface on a small portable device to see the iPad as something revolutionary. Let’s see how this will fly and if Apple indeed keeps the lead here (I’m expecting big things from the Android powered netbooks, not in the least because of the more open ecosystem where third parties like Layar have much more possibilities to innovate).

  • Joe 11:42 on February 20, 2009 Permalink
    Tags: , Camera, , HTC G1, IPhoto, Memory card, T-Mobile G1   

    How to make iPhoto recognize your Android G1 

    T-Mobile G1 Google Android

    Image by netzkobold via Flickr

    Making photo’s with the Android powered HTC G1 is nothing special, but the recorded GPS postion in the images is a really nice feature when you import them in iPhoto ’09 (note: you need to tell the G1′s camera application to record the GPS location, which is off by default).

    I had just one minor annoyance with the process: after mounting the Flash card over USB, the card shows up under finder as expected, but iPhoto does not recognize it as a camera device or media card with images.

    Now Hackszine has a nice blog post with a potential solution: Get your T-Mobile G1 to show up correctly in iPhoto. It all boils down that you have to rename the directory dcim at the root level of the Flash card to DCIM (all capitalized).

    Update: Hackszine deleted their older blog entries (why the heck would they do that? It’s for sure uncool). Here a quote from the original post:

    Every time I plug my G1 phone into my Mac to download photos, iPhoto shows me only the videos that are on the phone, and I have to manually drag the photos from the Finder to iPhoto. It’s only a minor annoyance,but fortunately the fix is very simple. If you navigate to your G1 in the Mac OS X Finder, you’ll see that the DCIM folder (the usual home of photos on a digital camera) is titled “dcim” (lowercase). I made it uppercase, unmounted and remounted it, and iPhoto popped up with a list of the photos on the phone, ready to import.

    Posted by Brian Jepson | Jan 6, 2009 05:49 AM

    To my frustration this was not working for me. Just one more step solved the issue: inside the directory dcim is a sub-directory called camera. Just symlink this directory to some well-known camera manufactor’s default images directory name, and you’re set.

    Commands, in Terminal (let’s say you named the phone’s Flash card G1):

    $ cd /Volumes/G1
    $ mv dcim DCIM
    $ cd DCIM
    $ ln -s camera 100NIKON
    $ cd

    Next, take some pictures with the phone. Then start iPhoto and mount the phone’s Flash card; you will get the “import pictures” screen as you would expect.

    Note: based on Dutch release version of T-Mobile G1 (first edition) and iLife ’09, YMMV!

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    • lmjabreu 19:55 on February 24, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Is your sdcard ext3-formatted?

    • Joe 21:18 on February 24, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Hi @lmjabreu,

      The volume appears to be “msdos” formatted (what is that, FAT 16?), according to Disktool:

      disktool -l
      ***Disk Appeared ('disk2s1',Mountpoint = '/Volumes/JOE G1', fsType = 'msdos', volName = 'JOE G1')

      Does this matter in your experience?

      (I wasn’t aware that you could format the card in ext3 format, might be interesting though).

  • Joe 17:06 on February 9, 2009 Permalink
    Tags: , , , , sqlite, sqlite3   

    sqlite3 db in Firefox: SQLite Manager Add-on! 

    The :en:SQLite logo as of 2007-12-15

    Image via Wikipedia

    So you want to peek under the hood of all those mysterious Firefox 3.x databases? Easy does it: just install SQLite Manager in… Firefox itself (for easy installation visit SQLite Manager on the AMO site).

    This add-on can be activated from the Tool menu and opens in a separate window. By default, a shortcut to your profile directory is provided, but there is nothing preventing you from opening other sqlite3 databases when you’re done staring at the places.sqlite database.

    On Mac OSX there is lots to explore about your Mail.app settings in your ~/Library/Mail directory, e.g to optimize mail performance. Just be careful that you don’t make any changes on the live database (you work on a back-up copy, right?).

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  • Joe 21:26 on January 23, 2009 Permalink
    Tags: Address Book, Calendar, fruux, ICal, , sync   

    Fruux: sync addresses and calendars between macs 

    fruuxIf you want to keep your contacts and your calendar synchronized between macs, you had the only option to subscribe to mobile me. For me that was not really an option, as I don’t use any of the other services and then $99,- p/a is a bit hefty.

    But now there is Fruux, just a single preference pane addition, which keeps all of your addresses (Address Book) and calendars (iCal) and even your safari bookmarks in perfect sync. Best of all, it is in active development and there are some really nice features ahead, like online access to your data and “social sync”, whatever that may be (yes, I’m curious, maybe a replacement for Plaxo?).

    Your data is stored at the Fruux servers, securely transported using https (that’s what they claim). You still need to trust the Fruux team with your contacts and calendars.

    A quote:

    fruux is a lightweight and convenient system preference pane, that syncs your Address Book, Calendars, Tasks and Bookmarks between different Macs. fruux supports sync conflict resolution which will help you when you changed a record on more than one machine. fruux is currently localized in dutch, english, french, german, italian, spanish and romanian.

    Oh, and the app is free (as in beer) and still in beta (all warnings apply, but for me it just works as promised for over a week now). The Dutch localization has one mislabeled button (version 0.9), that’s just a minor issue I found.

    Highly recommended!

    Update: I sent the folks at Fruux more details about the Dutch localization issue and they corrected it right away, it will be fixed in the next release!

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  • Joe 22:17 on February 11, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: , , , update   

    OSX Updates! 

    Finally, the long awaited Leopard update is here, bringing the current Mac OSX version number to 10.5.2. Hopefully, a lot of annoyances of one of the worst OSX releases will have been fixed.

    It’s still too early to tell, I just upgraded a few minutes ago. First impressions are not bad, but I’m not seeing a lot of difference either.

    Other good news from the update front: only a few days or so ago, Shirt Pocket released their Leopard compatible update of SuperDuper! (see also my post on “Forced Features” in OSX).

    Feeling much more secure to upgrade OSX on a fully backed-up system, so reverting is as easy as attaching my external USB drive. I’m a happy camper now, let’s see the coming days…


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  • Joe 14:37 on January 4, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: , search field   

    Leopard Image Capture does 16 bits tiffs 

    imagecapture-16bitThe upgrade to Mac OS-X Leopard has not been all joy, there are some annoying bugs (e.g. the search field of keychain access becomes unusable after loss of focus), and new features like spaces and time machine are very disappointing.

    At the other hand, there are lots of small improvements (almost bug fixes), to name a few:

    • Safari’s XMLHttpRequest supports now other methods than GET and POST as well (e.g. PUT and DELETE).
    • The default action for entering your password to open a keychain item is “allow once” (was: none, you had to click a button)
    • Terminal.app now has tabs (try CMD-T)

    And a very nice one: Image Capture now supports 16 bit tiff output for my Epson Perfection 1670 scanner!
    If only the Gimp starts supporting 16 bit per channel images…

    On a side note: Gimpshop for OS-X appears dead, it was never updated after the first universal binary release and filters never worked for me on Intel. The original, X11 version of Gimp.app (2.4.3) works fine, provided that you install a patched version of X11.
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