Technology: June 2010 Archives

I took a trip to Boston yesterday, and decided to let the Garmin StreetPilot C340 and my iPhone 3GS with iOS4 and MotionX GPS Drive 5.0 go head to head.

MotionX GPS Drive features spoken turn by turn directions, but you must pay a fee to access them. The $3 per month or $25 per year access charge from FullPower is quite reasonable, considering the $10 per month from AT&T (discounted to $6.99 recently). The cost of the app is also quite reasonable, at $2.99 for iPad and $.99 for iPhone.

My Garmin requires periodic map updates, and I had purchased the NüMaps Lifetime Maps package over a year ago. I strongly recommend that to anyone who has a Garmin device. I had updated my device a few weeks ago, so I am confident that its maps are as current as they can be.

MotionX GPS Drive pulls its maps from the air via 3G or WiFi (if it has a connection), so if you have a 2GB data plan, you might want to watch your data usage come the end of the month if you rely on MotionX GPS Drive. Relying on cloud-based maps, though, make its maps theoretically more accurate than the Garmin's, especially as you near the end of the quarterly update cycle for the Garmin.

Operationally, Drive's interface is reasonable if a bit crowded. It has more options than the Garmin, and it features walking as well as driving directions. Other Garmin devices feature walking directions, but the C340 is intended as a driving only device. Drive can operate in Portrait or Landscape mode, and I recommend a window mount for anyone who will use Drive as a daily GPS device. I propped the iPhone on the dashboard near the Garmin, which has a dedicated charging stand.
MotionX GPS Drive 1MotionX GPS Drive 2MotionX GPS Drive 3

The two systems began chatting at me almost simultaneously once I got moving, and provided similar instructions. While Drive gave me "get ready to turn" followed by "Turn now" instructions, the Garmin lets me know long in advance what's coming up, and then reminds me to "Turn right onto xxx Street" when it's time to turn. Since I was doing some in-town driving first, the "prepare to turn" messages from Drive got to be a little annoying, but they would be welcome in unfamiliar surroundings.

I intentionally left the programmed route to see how the devices would respond, and they both gave the same instructions to return to the desired route.

On the highway, I noticed that my iPhone battery was getting low. I had the iPhone plugged into my charger, and when I turned off Drive, the iPhone charged as expected. Hmm. This morning, I fired up Drive, set a route, and plugged the iPhone into my computer. Although I wasn't going anywhere, Drive gave me periodic reminders to get moving. While attached to the computer, however, the battery charged as expected. I will need to investigate this further, or get another charger. It could also be that the car 12V port can't push as much current as the computer can while charging, resulting in a net loss of charge in the battery in the car.

The position of the iPhone matters when driving. I put it in different positions on the dashboard and on the passenger's seat, and found that not all locations were favorable to GPS reception. While pulled over to take a call, for instance, the iPhone lost signal, but the Garmin kept right on tracking.

Background operation in iOS 4 is also nice. Rather than using the built-in iPod interface, you can use iPod to control your music. I am an audiobook listener, so I like having access to the chapter list in the built-in interface. Also, since Mail runs in the background, I was able to know when emails arrived that were pertinent to my trip.

Assuming that I can resolve the charging issue with the car, I believe that I could use Drive while traveling. The Garmin is certainly more battery-efficient, but toting two devices while traveling is a drag. I can't forget that I got the iPhone so I could combine my Palm T5 and my Motorola flip phone into one unit. I don't believe, however, that I'll toss the Garmin just yet. 

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One of the missing links in the Adobe production workflow on a Mac is professional audio editing software. Today, Adobe announced that Audition would be available on a Mac in a future release. #AdobeCP

Visit the Audition page on Adobe Labs.

The prerelease is scheduled to open in the Winter of 2010. According to the page, Audition for Mac will offer:
  • Powerful audio editing and multitrack mixing views
  • Superior noise reduction capabilities
  • Native 5.1 Surround support and multi-channel effects, plus other new effects
  • Optimized audio post-production workflows
  • Fast start-up, high performance multi-threaded processing, and parallel workflows
It's about time that Apple's Logic has some competition. Of course, Audition has been on Windows for years.
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I tried out the new Photos app on my iPhone 3GS with its new iOS 4. Wow! It used to seem like an eternity between pushing the shutter button and the camera being ready for the next image. I was trying to take some photos of my son during dinner, and now, the camera resets very, very quickly. I surely wasn't expecting how responsive the camera is, but it is like having a whole new device. Good job on this part, Apple!
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After the iOS 4 update, I received several calls today that went to voice mail, but I wasn't notified of the voicemail. When I went to Phone, then selected Voicemail, I was prompted to enter my voicemail password. Not thinking anything of it, I skipped that step and moved on to something else. I got an email message from a client much later in the day saying that she had left me a voicemail in the morning, but I had gotten no notification on the phone. Yikes!

I returned to Phone this evening and then entered my voicemail password. There were two unheard messages from today, about which I was very unhappy. Moral of the story: be sure to visit Voicemail immediately after updating the iPhone, or you'll never know it when you get a message.
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Took a hike with the boys this afternoon and tried out MotionX GPS on the iPhone 3GS and its new background Track Recording capability. In previous versions, one needed to turn on the GPS and leave the app running in order to track. If you hit the power button or opened another app, it would stop background tracking. In order to use it, therefore, you would turn down the screen brightness when it was tracking. Regardless, the iPhone would warm up considerably when tracking. This led to some pretty poor battery performance when using the app.

Today, we went out for a 40 minute hike with about 42% of battery life remaining.

I was able to switch to email (which pinged every 15 minutes with new emails on the hike) and other apps while hiking, and the Track Recorder never missed a beat. I was able to hit the power button with no loss of tracking as well. We took some photos and uploaded to Facebook, surfed the web, and sent some email as well. When we returned to the house, I had about 22% of battery life left. Looking in the app tray, I discovered that I had 16(!) apps in there, which could be a contributing factor to the giant power suck. Based on this rate of consumption, though, we should be able to go gout for several hours and get decent tracking data before having to recharge the phone.

Well done, MotionX. I finally feel like I can use the GPS the way it was intended.


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Adobe announced the availability of Flash Player 10.1 for mobile platforms such as Android and WebOS. #AdobeCP

http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/pressroom/pressreleases/201006/06222010FlashPlayerAvailability.html

When we talk about web events and web meetings, more and more we are asked about how mobile customers can participate. While there is a Connect app for iPhone, other platforms have been lagging. Now, with FP 10.1, many of the other platforms suddenly become viable web event viewers, and the reach of web events has just exploded.

I just finished delivering a Connect session on Connect for Web Events (Recording: Webinars that Wow! with Adobe Connect), and when I mentioned that Flash Player 10.1 was announced and that smartphones would be able to participate in Connect meetings (Connect is a Flash-based platform), there was a very positive reaction. 

"THIS IS HUGE!" says one attendee (his capitals). 

"Did you REALLY say that smartphones could attend Connect meetings?" asked another. "Yes, I did," was my reply. "WOW!" came the response.

Other responses were equally enthusiastic. While the Connect app for iPhone has been available for months, there is a huge pent-up demand for other smartphones to be able to attend web meetings, and with Flash Player 10.1 in the mobile marketplace, Adobe Connect becomes more relevant than ever before.
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Adobe is expected to post better than expected numbers for Q2 on the strength of strong CS5 sales. #AdobeCP

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gS1sMma-MF0sB24LEgoId8zWO2vwD9GFRKTO0

The article states that "Creative Suite is used by small businesses such as design firms and advertising agencies." The analysts seem to miss the fact that Creative Suite is also used by giant media companies, global publishers, architectural firms, engineering companies, manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, research institutes, film and television studios, web designers, desktop and mobile application developers and more. It is also used by Fortune 100 businesses to create portals and manage access to business critical data. I assume that savvy financial researchers look at these other verticals when making their predictions.

This will be welcome news, as CS4 results weren't as strong as Adobe had hoped. I know that I still see a lot of CS3 and CS2 out there, but new hardware and operating systems will require a software update for many, many people and companies. The CS2 and CS3 users who held off will now be able to take advantage of 64 bit versions of Photoshop and the video tools, for instance, which increase productivity substantially on large files. As video moves to very high resolution capture, it is essential to have 64 bit apps and tons of RAM, and CS5 makes those hardware investments pay off in short order.
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Photos
I have been a fan of the iPhone camera since I first bought the phone. While its resolution isn't great and it has a lousy dynamic range, it's great for getting that quick shot for later reference. Also, the Photos app is very easy to use, and even little Zeke "got it" within seconds of first touching the phone over a year ago.

Photos in iOS 4 adds a new tab called places. While the iPhone has been quietly adding location tags to my photos all along, it now can display a map that shows me where my photos were taken. See the three screen shots below to see how the number of pins grows as you zoom in on the map.
iphone-places.png
When you start the camera for the first time, it asks whether to enable location tagging for new images. I turned it on, and started snapping new photos.

Skype
Eager to try the multitasking, I turned on Skype and was greeted with an unexpected warning that Skype wasn't supported in modified iPhone OS 3. OK, I thought, and continued.

Skype, while seeming to run in the background, only logs in when it's the foreground app. As a result, although I was logged in, I was unable to take a call while using another app. I am sure this is a minor delay, but am eager to see what they do with iOS 4.

MotionX GPS
I am a long-time MotionX GPS customer, and was excited to see an update after installing iOS 4. The update to version 12. In addition to background operation, it allows you to shut off the screen while recording tracks, background voice coaching, and a Wifi/Triangulation mode to estimate position when GPS signals are unavailable. I'm looking forward to my next outing.
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I installed iOS 4 on my iPhone 3GS this afternoon. The installation took longer than I had anticipates (over 1.5 hrs), but a big chunk of that time was taken up by photo optimization. This tells me that although the photos had been optimized for iPhone OS 3, there must be some more sophisticated photo optimization going on now. Or, iTunes just forgot and re-optimized the photos.

My first task was to stack some apps. Stacking allows us to group apps into a single icon that you can organize any way you like. I made some stacks in iTunes, and found myself frustrated by how hard it is to actually get apps to stack. Dragging an app on top of another one is supposed to highlight the target app (or stack), and when I release the app, it joins the other apps in the stack or creates a new stack. I found that dragging the app near a stack or another app caused the target to move out of the way. Some apps always accepted another app, while others just wouldn't join, no matter what I did. This drag and drop works better on the iPhone itself, but it is easier to select multiple apps and move them around in iTunes. I hope this improves.

Apps don't quit when you hit the home button anymore. Now, they drop into a tray that you can see when you double-tap the home button. The tray only shows four apps at a time, so you may need to slide it to the left or right to see the hidden apps. Unfortunately, apps now don't close. They collapse into the tray, and in order to quit them, you must open the tray and then press and hold one of the apps, then click the minus sign that will appear when they all start to shake. This makes me a little nervous, as it feels like force-quitting rather than an orderly shutdown.

I enabled notifications for email, and told email to run every 15 minutes. gMail doesn't push (or, perhaps it needs to be configured to push), so I have turned off push notifications for email. I like getting the email notice like my colleagues get on their Blackberries. Other apps are receiving push notifications just fine.

It is unclear to me what the impact of multitasking will be on my battery life. I will ramp my email notifications back to 30 minutes or an hour most likely once I understand the battery life situation.

I do appreciate the unified email boxes. I have two email accounts, and used to spend a lot of time switching between the two in Mail. Now, I can choose to look at each account separately or together. In addition, when replying to a message, I can select from which account I want to reply. This is super useful for me, since I often get mail on one account that I want to respond to from the other account.

I'll report more impressions as I use the phone over the next couple of days. So far, so good...
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One of the glaring deficiencies with Facebook Mobile on iPhone has been its lack of support for playing video. Video linked through youtube would usually play correctly, but video posted to Facebook wouldn't. Interestingly, you could upload video from your iPhone, but you couldn't watch it again until you got back to your desktop or laptop computer.

Facebook Mobile 3.1.3 now supports playing video, as well as allowing larger photos and other bug fixes. The notes report that photos now upload at 720 pixels wide, which allows for more detailed images portrait mode.

I am now more likely to use the mobile app than before because of the improved video support.
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Adobe announced the availability of Flash Player 10.1  and AIR2. #AdobeCP

While closing a recently revealed security hole in Flash Player, this release also paves the way for easier application development for multiple devices. Prior to 10.1, multiple screen development required multiple versions of applications to target different versions of Flash players. Flash Player 10.1 unifies the player across desktop and mobile platforms, making it possible to create one application that will work on desktop and mobile platforms.

This version of Flash Player will be the last version that will play on a PowerPC G3 with MacOSX 10.4. 

Wow. 

It amazes me that while Apple abandoned the G3 years ago, Adobe has continued to keep it in mind for its Flash Player. While it is amazing that the G3 remains on Adobe's radar, it is more amazing to me that there must be enough of them still operating in the world that Adobe has maintained support for it in the Flash Player. 

It's been 1999 since a G3 PowerMac was made by Apple, but it continued to use the G3 in the iMac and iBook line until 2003. Flash Player 10.1 requires a 500 MHz G3, so that excludes all of the PowerMac towers and desktops. Knowing that in my kids' schools, they were using G3 iBooks until a couple of years ago and also that the schools sell them at rock bottom prices, it's not surprising that there's still enough users out there for one more go at Flash Player.

The story for AIR2 isn't so far reaching, though. It requires at least an Intel Mac and MacOSX 10.5. Along the develop once, deploy anywhere model, there is also an AIR prerelease program for Android. With Android in the mix, developers can create AIR applications that will run on both desktop and mobile devices.

Flash Player and AIR represent a tremendous opportunity for companies to reduce development time and costs by removing complexity in the development process.
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About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries in the Technology category from June 2010.

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