Archive

Posts Tagged ‘iphone’

iPad

January 27th, 2010 Comments

hardware-04-20100127The iPad has arrived. It has a name, it has been shown, now we wait and see what the world makes of it. The press event that Apple held today (Wednesday January 27th) was almost entirely focused on this new device. Many of the features and speculation about this iPad (right down to the name) had already been guessed and now that we know for sure what this thing is, it’s time decide if this is a worthwhile product.

Here is my take on some of more important aspects of this product to me.

Hardware

When I first saw the iPad, the first thing I noticed is that it seems like an over sized iPhone. Maybe that is what Apple wanted us to feel, since they are clearly trying to leverage all the knowledge people have over iPhone OS and the iPod Touch on this new platform. They want you to be able to pick this thing up, and know exactly what to do with it.

That being said, the iPad itself rotates and orients itself to the way you are holding it, portrait or landscape, which is expected. You can turn this thing around and around and it will keep adapting the display. One neat trick is that you could flip the iPad end over end to face someone in front of you to show a picture and it will orient itself to show them.

multi_touch_20100127I had a bit of trouble dealing with the rather thick border around the iPad. It seemed distracting and out of place but I see the reason. If you think of how you are going to hold this thing, your thumbs are going to have to use the sides so they are going to need to rest somewhere. This is a minor point and is probably just a shock factor more than anything and really it’s the screen you should be focused on.

That brings me to the screen. So now we have an LED back lit display. I am eager to see how bring and vibrant this is. The iPad has a large 9.7 ” screen which sounds like a good size to me, more than a lot of the netbooks out there. It’s about a half-inch thick so it’s basically the thickness of an iPhone. It weights a pound and a half which from what I’ve read already feels solid and weighty in your hands.

There is a few choices for storage capacity. I like this because it offers more price points (more on price later). You can get 16, 32 and 64 GB sizes.  For me the iPhone I have at 16 GB is sufficient, but I can really see me putting hundreds of songs on this, some video, my picture collections and maybe some documents so I feel that 16 just won’t be big enough and I kind of feel that 64 GB will be the flexibility I need. Chances are I will settle with 32 GB to save the $100.

It’s nice to see an Apple device that supports wireless-N networks. The iPad itself has 2 models, wi-fi only and wi-fi / 3G hybrid. I already pay for data with my iPhone so even if up here in Canada we can get the no-contract prepaid plans for data access, I really feel that wi-fi is all I need since I can picture this as being our home device, and if I travel with it I will likely have what I need right on the iPad. What I would really love to hear is that the iPad can connect via Bluetooth to an iPhone for tethering your 3G connection. I doubt this will happen, but it would go a long way to sell the iPad for me. On Bluetooth, it will pair up with my wireless keyboard for the iMac which I was glad to hear.

There is no camera on the iPad at all. I found this a little disappointing. I never imagined I would be taking photos or video with this, but a front facing camera made sense to me so that you could do video calls with people. Perhaps because of VOIP calls requiring net access, the lack of them currently on the App Store, and the fact you can rotate the iPad however you want were enough for Apple to not put a camera in. We can always hope the next iPhone will have one!

Software

It looks like Apple has built either iPhone OS 4.0 or just iPad OS which is an off shoot of iPhone OS. It’s still unclear on this point. At the presentation nothing was revealed in this regard and we likely won’t hear anything until the Apple developer conference in a couple months.

The built in apps get an iPad refresh here and I must say for the better.

Mail

I like the mail app on the iPhone, and I use it with Google and ActiveSync in order to get push email just like Exchange. This works great and I expect that this will still be supported. This wouldn’t be a deal breaker because I could use Gmail online, but even though they didn’t say anything I don’t think they would leave this out.

gallery-software-mail-20100127In landscape mode you can see your inbox on the left and message on the right, this is my preferred way to view email and is pretty standard in Outlook and Thunderbird, and even Mac OS X’s mail app. It is a nice touch that you can rotate to portrait and then get a full screen view of the message, useful when you get email newsletters or large images.

The compose box is like a smaller new window that appears and a virtual keyboard slides underneath it. When I see this window it is clearly a recycle of the current iPhone compose window, but with a bigger box to type your message. I almost expected the whole screen to be used here for mail composition.

Calendar and Contacts

Amazing! I love the rewrite here. They have a lot more room to play with and they take advantage of it using a full size calendar, and a side bar with current day details. It really looks like a day planner in that regard and it kind of makes me jealous that the OS X iCal doesn’t look this good. For busy and full calendars this looks like it will handle them no problem. Again I hope Exchange support is present here.

The Contacts app looks more like an address book now with a page on the left and contact details on the right. I do like the extra room here to see all the contact details without any scrolling.

Maps

Still using Google maps which is awesome to begin with. On my iPhone I use maps all the time for directions, street view, GPS, etc. What I like here is you can take those maps and see more of them at once, including the satellite gallery-software-maps-20100127pictures. The street view will look amazing as well on a big display. The specs don’t list a GPS chip so I suppose it could use 3G and wi-fi to pin point your location, but really if I can plan my trip at home with wi-fi, and then cache those results when I go on the road, my navigator can easily use the maps there to get us to our destination. Sounds like for this purpose getting the 3G model is the way to go, or simply stick with my iPhone for directions.

iTunes, YouTube, Video, iPod

All of these apps have been designed to take advantage of the bounty of real estate there is to offer. This is great because I find myself always moving through menus and scrolling on the iPhone. When going through the music collection especially this is the case. So iPod having more navigation options up front with little to no page transitions is a plus for me. It seems that the iTunes and App Store interfaces also follow this design. With YouTube it feels more like the YouTube website, where you have the video up front and alternate video and selections all around you.

The video app appears to be the one you see on iPod Touch devices. Not much to say here other than video looked great on my iPhone so having it a higher resolution will be awesome. I did read that the aspect ration was 4:3 so that will mean letterbox and no full wide screen. Not much of a choice I suppose when you can still rotate from portrait to landscape.

Photos

I really like iPhoto on the Mac, and it seems that Apple has taken the best to offer there and put it on the tablet. I can see myself moving over all my photos so that I can have them handy at all times. You can toss up a slideshow to music as easy as you can in iPhoto which is great for showing off. Having all the Faces information come over is cool to. What I’d like to know is if you can do Faces management here, tagging people in photos and having all that sync with iPhoto on the Mac.

iWork

I was hoping something would be announced about the Apple productivity suite and there was: iWork will be on the iPad! This is great, editing documents and spreadsheets on this will be a great feature. Having those sync to your Mac or some online storage will be even better. These are standalone apps for the iPad only it seems at about $10 per app which is something I would pay for Pages and Numbers.

iBooks

As many suspected, the iPad will now have eBooks. This was a logical move for Apple and I can see them dominating this market. Having the colour display of the iPad behind the books and the ease to get at their iBookstore and get new material will be a good sell, it worked for the Kindle and other devices so the advantages here will be the hardware and software powering this.

gallery-software-ibooks-20100127The page turning effects look great and work as you would think, just swipe to turn the page. What I didn’t see is if the pages can go landscape and show 2 at a time like reading a normal book. I like that you can on the fly (and rather smoothly it seemed) change the font and font size. I’m sure there must be some provision for bookmarking as well.

Like how I don’t buy music anymore, I can see myself taking the iPad, finding on the store the new release on the day it comes out, downloading it and reading the first few pages in a couple minutes. I would actually prefer this over the bookstore when I know what I want to buy, I’ll just buy it online and get it now without traveling.

Apps

It appears as though all iPhone OS built apps will work on the iPad. When I first saw this it was a tiny box in the middle of this big display which I had a bad feeling about. Adding the X2 button to double the size was a good idea, but I would have to see how well it does on some apps. The advantage is with the development kit (SDK) going out to developers today they can rewrite their apps to work with the native screen of the iPad. I suppose then they would be filtered out of the App Store that iPhone and iPod Touch owners would see.

Price and Availability

Apple has broken the iPad into 2 groups, those with wi-fi only and those that are hybrid with optional 3G connectivity.

The wi-fi only ones, which I suspect will be the most popular and replace a lot of those iPod Touch devices out there, are priced at $499, $599 and $699 for 16, 32 and 64 GB sizes respectively.

The hybrid ones come in the same sizes, but priced at $629, $729 and $829.

I think the $599 wi-fi only version will be pretty popular and I think it is the choice I would go with. Of course these prices are in US dollars, and I am hoping that here in Canada we will get the same price but with consumer electronics we always end up paying more. Since this won’t be sold by carriers it’s hard to say. I don’t know how the 3G versions will work, they take the micro SIM cards so maybe you can buy it from the telco or Apple and then get a chip from the telco? It sounded like the devices are sold unlocked so you can take them where you want to. It’s unclear how the packaging_20100127arrangement is going to work outside of the US.

In the US, the data plans for 3G is going to be handled by AT&T and as an interesting note they are offering a contract free prepaid usage of either $15 for up to 250 MB in a month or $30 for unlimited use, you can cancel when you want and activate it right from the iPad! Now if only phone where that easy!

The wi-fi only versions were said to be shipped in 60 days worldwide, so likely by April. The 3G models in 90 days.  Until 3G deals are worked out it is hard to say when anyone outside the US will get those models, but for me looking at the wi-fi only model I could be visiting an Apple store this spring to play!

Conclusion

Apple was very eager to share their new creation, and the industry demanded that they give up something. I get the feeling that there may be more to the iPad experience coming as Apple has more time to work on the final version of the OS and finalize a possible iPhone 4.0.

It seems like all the core functionality is there and the hardware is nailed down so its just a matter of working out any kinks, finishing whatever needs to be finished, making deals with more publishers, phone companies, etc.

I have been debating on a laptop for a while now to supplement our computer compliment at the house. I have tried to take stock of what I think the laptop would do for me, and I find I’m answering more and more internet based apps and activities. traveling with movies, sharing pictures, etc. All of these things as Steve Jobs put it today the iPad does extremely well. So it’s cheaper than the laptop, does the things I want to do, and is in a form factor I prefer.

I really need to sit with the news and wait over the coming months but I feel that when I’m ready for that laptop, the iPad may make more sense then shelling out money for a generic PC or even a MacBook.

iPhone: Tethering With iMac Over Bluetooth

August 10th, 2009 Comments

iphone-plus-imac1I covered in a 2 part series the new MMS and tethering capabilities built into iPhone 3.0. You can find them here:

iPhone 3.0 MMS & Tethering: Part 1

iPhone 3.0 MMS & Tethering: Part 2

In this article I wanted to get more specific and focus on my experience tethering my 3.0 enabled iPhone 3G (note not the 3G S) with my recently purchased iMac (running OS 10 Leopard).

First thing I had to do was turn on Bluetooth on the iPhone. I normally don’t deal with Bluetooth devices so I leave the radio off. Plus it’s a good idea to save on battery life by turning it off. The iMac (which wonderfully has Bluetooth available) wasn’t listed on the devices list, even after I made it discoverable (the iMac that is).

I decided then to go through the device setup wizard available through the Bluetooth configuration icon in the status bar.

setupbluetoothdevice

On the second page of the wizard there was an option for “Mobile Phone”. I chose that to proceed.

A search page then appeared as it tried to locate (from 2 feet away mind you) my iPhone. It took a moment but it showed up and I was able to select the device to continue. The iMac said that it needed to gather some bits of data about my device (no idea what) but after that I had a code popup on my iPhone which matched a code appearing the iMac screen.

The popup display on the iPhone indicated that a paring was occurring and I had to click OK to permit this. I did. However the pairing came up unsuccessful.

I tried a couple combinations of turning off Bluetooth and back on, switching the discover mode on the iMac to restarting the wizard but I wasn’t having much luck.

I eventually stumbled on the solution (no stopping for directions for this guy!). I had to be on the Bluetooth settings page on the iPhone with it scanning for devices. I then let the wizard attempt to pair with the phone. When the wizard came up with the code, I clicked the OK to permit prompt on the iPhone and then went back to the wizard to click continue.

Success! I could then setup a network connection through the iPhone.

In the Bluetooth settings page (use the Open Bluetooth Preferences from the status bar icon) you will see your paired device and details about it:

bluetooth connect

All you have to do is click the device and connect! (click the little settings cog wheel next to the minus sign).

So really this is a simple process, and a wireless one at that, much better solution that having to carry around a dock connector.

I did a few connection speed tests to measure the performance (excuse my lousy net speed!)

dsl speed test

This is my broadband DSL connection (above)

tether speed test

And here is the tethered test.

About 100 kb/s off on the download, but significantly bad on the download. That is OK with me, since if I was using my iPhone for net access, I would likely really only care about the download speed.

iPhone 3.0 MMS & Tethering: Part 2

August 3rd, 2009 Comments

iphone-tetherOn my last post I talked about the new MMS features with regards to sending pictures in the iPhone 3.0 software update. In this article, I will document my experience trying out the tethering capabilities built right into the iPhone. Now like MMS, tethering technologies have been available on other platforms for years, and without jail-breaking your iPhone, you couldn’t do it previously.

The iPhone is only available on 2 carriers in Canada: Fido and Rogers. I am with Rogers and at launch of the 3.0 update they were one of the carriers that were ready to support tethering. I had to dig a bit to find out what were the conditions of tethering, can I do it now? Will I be charged a ton of money to do it? Do I need some kind of tethering enabled plan?

I managed to find this blurb on the Rogers web site:

rogers-30-blurb

So lucky me I already have a 1 GB data plan so I wasn’t worried about incurring charges. And it seems that I have until the end of the year to enjoy this. I haven’t seen anything yet as to what happens in 2010, but I’ll keep digging. A good resource for this is the forums at iphoneincanada.ca where they have a thread on iPhone plans that people can post.

Tethering

This is incredibly easy to do. My first test was with connecting the iPhone to my Windows Vista PC using the dock connector cable that comes with the phone. I made sure wireless was off and the ethernet cable was unplugged and that I had no internet access.

First up is you go to Settings, General and then Network to see this screen:

IMG_0285

Click into Internet Tethering to get this screen:

IMG_0286

You toggle the ON/OFF and almost immediately are are setup, when you go back to the home screen a nice little blue bar indicates that tethering is enabled:

IMG_0287

It’s very similar to when you exit a call to go to the home screen, only not green but blue. When you think about it, it makes sense and is handy to know so that you don’t leave it on and suck up all the bandwidth on your account.

When charging and the phone is locked, you still get the blue indicator:

IMG_0288

When I went back to my Vista PC, a new prompt came up:

Untitled1

I choose Home just to get rid of this screen and that was it. I fired up my browser and hit my first web page on tethering:

IMG_0289

On the final part I will show the Bluetooth connection with my new iMac and visit a speed testing web site.

iPhone 3.0 MMS & Tethering: Part 1

July 26th, 2009 Comments

iPhone_OS_3_0_Messages_Icon_by_johnsjobergOne of the exciting additions to the iPhone in the recent firmware update is the ability to send multi-media messages (pictures and video) the same as text messages. This is nothing new to the mobile phone market, as these features have been staples in products for many years. Could be that these things were left off the release table for Apple until now because it was too much work for them to get it in the phone, or they were planning ahead for future firmware releases and didn’t want to use up everything on their feature list!

Regardless, it is here on the iPhone and it is amazing! Also coming along with the update is the Internet tethering capability which had not been available to non jail-broken phones.

MMS

Unfortunately I wish that I had a 3G S phone so that I could test the video side of this, but alas I only have the 3G, so I will only cover my experience with pictures taken by the camera on the phone.

First thing you will see when you open the Messages app (used to be called a speech bubble called SMS but that wouldn’t make sense now would it!) you will notice near the text bar a small camera. Clicking on that little icon will bring up 2 options:

IMG_0273IMG_0274

You can click “Take Photo” and jump right into the Camera app, or click “Choose Existing” and head into the Camera Roll and find the picture you want to send.

IMG_0275

When you take the picture, you can optionally choose to Retake the photo, or click Use to have it go into your message.

IMG_0277

You can type your text right in the speech bubble. I really like how the image is shrunk down and appears with the message. When you click send, it ends up in its own little speech bubble and the text gets separated into its own bubble:

IMG_0279

You will notice a nice addition in 3.0 is that the screen isn’t locked with the sending progress bar anymore. The progress shows up at the top so you are free to start typing the next message, or go back and send a message in a different message thread.

I couldn’t make it happen, but when I first started using this feature I would have failed messages. I am with Rogers up here in Canada so shortly after 3.0 came out I imagine they were a bit overloaded with MMS going everywhere. When failures occur, 3.0 now shows them with a red exclamation point beside them. All you have to do is click that and hit the Retry button when it prompts. This is great because it leaves your messages there, so if it was network congestion with Rogers, I can easily leave the Messages app and come back in later and retry them.

You will notice as I did that with the image bubbles, you lose a lot of real estate in landscape mode trying to read other messages:

IMG_0280

Of course if someone sends you a picture, it is easy to grab it. Just click on the image (it will appear as a bubble on the left, just like the senders messages) and you will get a full screen preview of the image. In the bottom left is a little icon that lets you easily save that image into your camera roll for safe keeping:

IMG_0282

Speaking of camera roll, if you happen to be in there and looking at images and see something you want to share, there is a new option along with the Email to to send via MMS:

IMG_0283

In the next part, I will share my experience with the tethering options found in 3.0.