Technology


Sigh…you know, you’d have thought, by now, that Apple would have learned it’s bloody lesson: stop forcing your customers to go to AT&T! First, they “lose” a bunch of iPad customers’ data to Goatse Security hackers (including stuff from government people that should damned well know better than to be doing things on an unsecured network…), now they can’t even keep their network afloat to take pre-orders for the iPhone 4.

Maybe looking into unlocking the iPhone and the iPad wpould be a good idea, Apple, because AT&T’s networks seem a bit…crappy…to me.  I was an AT&T customer back 6 years ago.  For a few years before that, they were a fantastic phone service.  Then they teamed up with Cingular and turned to unadulterated $#!t.  And they haven’t improved — especially if you want to make a phone call — that I’ve seen.  Apparently, in some cities, the strain on the bandwidth from the Apple devices alone is killing service for customers in New York and San Francisco.

But the Jobs, apparently, can’t be bothered to give his customers freedom (as witnessed by the crappy content of the iBooks store — I’m downloading Guttenberg stuff on the iBooks store; I’m spending money where I can get the books I want…from Amazon’s Kindle on the iPad app.  Then there’s the Flash issue:  thanks for making half the web content unavailable to me Uncle Steve.  (This, by the way, is why — until the iPad — I’ve avoided Apple products.  I have their corporate culture.)

Here was my initial impression of the new iPad.  So now I’ve had the thing for two weeks, and have been using the hell out of it.  Not what I expected to do; I figured it would be a cute toy I’d use occasionally, but I’m finding that for quick internet and email checks, I prefer to use the iPad over my laptop.  For certain things, the laptop is much easier and faster — using WordPress for one.  The software WordPress has out for the iPad is atrocious: it was impossible for me to upload content, the ability to choose categories, etc. was nil, and in Safari, it was worse — requiring me to go to HTML to do any work.  It was barely workable.  And Apple won’t allow Flash, so some sites are useless to the user.

However…battery life has proven to be staggeringly good.  I’ve squeezed 17 hours out of it (with 7% left) with the screen always at half brightness, and the wifi running much of the time.  I turned off the 3G, since I’m not subscribed to see if I can eek out a bit more.

Sound and video quality is very good for the 9″ screen.  I downlaoded a few hours of Cato Institute talks from iTunes for free and that sucked up 2gb only.  Loaded a few movies for a trip would be nothing.  I’ve downloaded a few dozen free Gutenberg Project books from iBooks, the Craig Ferguson bio (well worth a read), a sci fi novel.  From Kindle I stocked up on a bunch of stuff on the Progressive era and libertarianism.  Total of 38 books, 3 hours of movies, 300 pics, and about 400 songs, and a bunch of free apps…I’ve still got 26.3GB left.

Apps:  I found free chess, checkers, go, poker, blackjack, solitaire, and Need for Speed (but no free backgammon!  Damn!)  All work well, and NFS has been like crack to me.  I am however, enjoying running my Aston Martin DB9R through the streets at breakneck pace.  I’ve got a weather app, word processor that I’ve done up a nice resume, some RPG adventures, and works on dissertation notes while out and about.  Occasionally, the memory (I think it’s .5GB RAM) will fill and the machine will kick you out to the main menu.  But I haven’t lost work when it does, so I’m okay with it.  It’s still less twitchy than my Palm Tungsten C could get.

Typing on the iPad can be a pain if you’re doing heavy typing.  The dockable or wireless keyboard is eventually a must if you’re using this as a road warrior machine.  But I find the screen keyboard works well for quick missives and some light work.  the auto spell check is a pain in the ass, if you’re not paying attention and has a habit of swapping word on you, if you stop paying attention.  It’s easy to miss the space bar and hit the frame around the usable face.  Otherwise, I find it easier to use than most thumb keyboards.  Funnily, typing one handed while holding the iPad is easier than doing the traditional two handed hunt and peck.

I bought the dock adapters for USB gear and SD cards.  It pulled the phots from my camera card immediately without issues.  I haven’t tried the USB adapter yet.  I haven’t tried the earphones yet, so I can’t comment on the sound quality on headphones yet.  Apple does need to add the ability to use SD cards through the adapter for extra storage.

Verdict hasn’t changed — this thing is slicker than snot, looks incredible (although a strongly suggest the Apple cover or an aftermarket case or you’ll scratch the hell out of the pretty aluminum body and the face.  Yes, it gets fingerprints on it; I have a wee microfiber wipe I keep with it to occasionally clean the screen.  It is sexy and I’ve already convinced two friends they need one,.

Functionality:  this is a good on the road machine.  The wifi is solid, connects easily (save in my house, where I suspect the router is dying after 6 years), and I haven’t tried the 3G, yet.  (I intend to while in Scotland, but that looks like it might be an adventure in itself, as I might need to swap out my Micro SIM card for one by Vodaphone, O2, or Orange once I hit Edinburgh.  On that Apple gets a big fail — enough with the AT&T shit!)  Music selections from the iPod program will play while you are doing other things, I found out by accident the other day.

Typing email, surfing the net, doing spreadsheets in Numbers, or docs in Pages (it will import and export .pdf and .doc), getting directions — it’s very easy and with 3G, would be more so, I suspect.  (Although I hear AT&T’s networks are seriously clogged from iPhone usage in places like San Fran and LA.)  Watching TV or movies, listening to music — all easy.

Now…as a gaming machine.  It’s great for driver games thanks to the accelerometers, but as an RPG device:  you can have your .pdfs of books and characters it.  There’s no multitasking (yet, but iPhone4 has it, so the iPad will soon enough) so you need to swap between files, but it does remember where you were last in a book.  iBook will have native pdf capability in a few weeks, but there are plenty of free pdf readers.  There’s Diceshaker — a free die program for RPGs that will do any of the standard and a few non-standard die rolls.  Put the program icons next to each other, it’s as simple as hitting the home button and tapping the appropriate button and you can swap back and forth.  Have all your characters, dice, rules, etc… with you, plus internet capability for answering obscure questions.  I was able to use the iPad as a picture and map device for the players tonight, to give them an idea of the interior layout and look of a British airship from the 1930s.

Is it useful as a gamer tool?  Oh, yeah.

FastMac is advertising their U-Socket, a standard AC power plug with a twist — two USB ports to power up devices that use those cables for power — iPhones, iPads, etc.

I used to have a Palm Tungsten C PDA that I carried with me everywhere.  Wasn’t quite a smartphone (back then you had to have a Blackberry to have all the bells and whistles), but it was a damned useful device.  I could email, surf the web with some imitations on a small 3″ screen (if that), I could write notes or — indeed — my 130 page master’s thesis, among other things.  It was wifi enabled and I loved the thing.

That’s what the iPad is:  a big PDA.  But infinitely more useful.  It’s not quite a netbook, but it’s more than a smartphone (without the phone.)  Initially, I saw no use for the thing until I played with one.  I’ve changed my mind, enough so I bought a 32gb version with the wifi and 3G (on the off chance I’d need it while traveling.

After 24 hours of use (actually, more like 11 hours, but I still have a 20% battery charge!), here’s the verdict so far:

Battery life — stunning.  I have the screen at about 50% brightness and it’s been more than enough, even in indirect sunlight.  I downloaded a bunch of free and a few pay apps for chat engines, a few card games and a few racing games.  The graphics are fast and it’s fun.  The contacts list was imported from my laptop without issue and is set up so you can click into the maps function to find their location, if you need, and get driving direction from where you are (the iPad can give your current location and directions.  Very slick.), or you can go to a website or email straight out of your contacts list.  I downloaded a bunch of free ebooks and bought one (Craig Frerguson’s biography — quite good.)

Graphics are fast and smooth, it’s easy to pinch/zoom for the internet, the memory doesn’t appear to be taxed with steady use, and with all the garbage I’ve thrown on it, including some pics bu no music or video yet, I’ve only used a gig of the SSD drive.

The main downside is the speed of synching the iPad with the computer.  I suspect this is due to having to go through iTunes, and formats that aren’t Apple-exclusive I’m sure get the usual Steve Jobs middle finger.  Apps and books download/synch fast, but pics seem to take forever.  With pics selected for synching, it took the iPad almost an hour to complete its task; without it’s a minute or two.  As good as the battery is (and it really is!), recharging takes a bit of time.  At 20% charge, it looks to be on target for a 2 hour recharge time (it’s been an 1:15 hours and it’s up to 60%.

The wifi is solid and quickly finds you connections, but often you have to drop to the email program to get it to go looking.  Haven’t tried the 3G yet.

Overall, style: 5 out of 5, substance/function 4 out of 5.  It’s a bit pricey, but for someone traveling a lot that needs a small machine to keep them entertained and connected, it’s a good choice.

Your ISP and people on your network won’t see what you’re searching for, but Google can still be subpoenaed by law enforcement.  Here’s the announcement.

Here’s a link:

MOntage of ICRA 2010:

New for 2015:  the Holo 2.0 has a holographic display, powered by the movement of your arm.

Wired has the story.  I understand that Facebook is an expensive proposition to run and maintain, and that the need to monetize its use was something that Zuckerberg could not avoid (welcome reality, open source folks!)  However, the sudden assault on privacy of the users of the service are creating a backlash.  Matt MacKeon of IBM has created an interactive chart showing the changes of the privacy policy and what information is exposed to friends, networks, and the internet.

Several of the people I have reconnected with on the service are bailing out, and I’m already thinking of bailing, as I did on MySpace.  This service might be the way to go.  Their project, Diaspora, is already funded and in the early stages of development.

Here’s a look at the changes from 2005…

…to today…

Wired has a piece on the new bionic hand from Touch Bionics, the i-Limb Pulse (OK…the iShit is getting out of hand…)  Thew new prosthetic is stronger (capable of lifting 200 lbs. if you can), it has greater sensitivity, allowing it to be used for fine motor work, and looks bloody cool.

Square Trade, a group working from warranty data from 30,000 machines, has put together an interesting paper on the reliability of nine models of computers and netbooks.  At the three-year mark, about 31% of laptops will fail.  The worst offender:  HP.  The best?  Asus, with Toshiba right behind.

How this fits with my experience:  our Dell desktops have never failed, and my five year old Dell Inspiron 710m suffered a hard drive crash, but was recoverable.  Even with .5GB memory…it’s running Win7 with only trouble in the graphics accelerator.  My Sonys:  no failures over four years.  My Toshiba died a month into operation.  The current Dell is running like a top.  The HP tablet before it burned out its motherboard at 2 years (of intensely heavy use.)

Netbooks fail 20% more often.  Apple is only slightly more reliable than Dell.

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