Saturday, May 22, 2010

iPad innovation

Here’s one really cool thing I have noticed about the iPad. It seems like no big deal, but it is so helpful. And it’s one of those things that nobody would ever think of, but everyone should.

If wherever you are perching the iPad (a dock or stand, etc.) does not accommodate the charging cable, just simply turn the iPad so that the cable is up, and the top of the iPad is down. The screen should rotate with the changes so that it stays readable, and most apps should be readable as well. Simple, yet genius. This is why people are so fiercely loyal to Apple.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Google Voice not intercepting voicemail for iPhone

· http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/voice/thread?tid=06b28869a293df1b&hl=en

· http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/voice/thread?tid=56a6385ce48d6e5d&hl=en

· http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/voice/thread?tid=1cb861553cb65a33&hl=en

· http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/voice/thread?tid=0d3905d1eabcb546&hl=en

· http://www.knowyourcell.com/apple/apple-iphone-3g/iphone-3g-guides/479280/how_to_set_up_google_voice_voicemail_on_the_iphone_3g.html

· http://www.clicksandbits.com/2009/03/21/forward-iphone-to-google-voice/

I’ve had a problem ever since I got the iPhone, whereby sometimes voicemail ended up at Google Voice where I wanted it, but sometimes AT&T intervened, and callers were greeted with a message that I had not set up my mailbox, which I hadn’t. I figured it had something to do with whether the phone was on the network, out of network, powered off, etc. As I have Google Voice answering for two phones potential complications were doubled.

I don’t remember if this problem extends back as far as GrandCentral days. However at some point GrandCentral/Google Voice did something about this. They added some functionality in the Voice settings which walks you through forwarding Voicemail only to Google Voice. So now it doesn’t matter whose voicemail wins the race, they all point to Google Voice. I expect this will be quite a boon for my interpersonal relationships.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

iPad WiFi issues appear to be fixed by changing screen brightness

http://www.engadget.com/2010/05/11/apple-promises-to-fix-ipad-wifi-issues-in-future-software-update/
http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/07/apple-confirms-ipad-issues-with-dual-band-wifi-routers-offers-f/

I have had an iPad WiFi issue since pretty much day 1. That is, WiFi is 1 bar, and very very s l o w. The bars appear to go back up when I drop and re-add the access point, but once out of the control panel app it goes right back down to one bar.

I should note I have 3 access points – two operating in bridge mode (where they use the same SID).

After I found these articles and did some reading up on the issue, I did go to the control panel and push the brightness bar up one click, while leaving it on auto. Since then, as best as I can tell, I have had full bars for WiFi, and speed more like what I am used to and would expect. I need to use it more and keep track of the bars to really be sure, but at this point it seems like there is something to these claims.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

The more things change, the more they remain the same

I had a strange feeling when the Cold War ended. Something like being lost. Sure it was great that we weren’t going to be blown to bits any second, but man what a change.

I had the same feeling as the tech landscape has changed the last couple of years. When I first became aware of the computer industry, the titans were raging - Apple, IBM, Oracle, and Sun and their iconic leaders aligned against Microsoft in a battle royal, an epic struggle. Talk about haters – Sun’s McNealy, Apple’s Jobs, Oracle’s Ellison slung some memorable comments in the press.

But that battle petered out. Microsoft is no longer the feisty newcomer trying to teach big iron how to play their own game. Now the tables have turned and they are the entrenched monolith trying to survive obsolescence, frequently called the “new IBM”. McNealy and Sun have both retired from the game. Ellison has gone underground, Oracle becoming if anything stronger and bigger, but no longer boisterous.

But the quiet was eerie. The tech industry needs personality. It needs drama. It needs events to record passing time against. It’s like how the national news will find a key picture or two of a family or a person and show it over and over, to help everyone identify with a disaster like a flood. Sure tons of people are effected, but that one are two are the landmark we use for remembrance.

Well now all of a sudden we have it once again, and in spades, in the mobile computing space. Mr. Jobs, some would say last man standing from the initial conflicts, is taking all the new kids out behind the woodshed for some schooling. He’s got Adobe over his knee on Flash and dev kits, though some are saying this is pure spite over a slight to the Mac platform from a decade ago. He’s calling his ally Google, who had the best apps on the iPhone and a member on his board at one point , some really nasty names. One of his disgruntled ex-employees has doppelganger-ed Palm and now HP into facing off against him. And he’s even found time to take the battle to juggernaut Amazon’s home turf in the book category with the iPad. It’s the wild wild West.

It’s tough to say what would be best for consumers here, competition or cooperation. I’d really love to see some standards develop around PIM (contacts, calendars, etc.), syncing, mobile web-browsing. On the other hand, these guys are going to duke it out by throwing billions of dollars into one-up-man-ship. Look at the acceleration of development of mobile phones going on right now, and compare it to the years RIM Blackberry and Microsoft CE let the market languish.

I’m going to go pop some popcorn.