17 December 2008

One Appstore developer's tale--Appcubby

David Barnard, the Head Honcho over at Appcubby, has put together a great article on his firm's experiences with marketing and income as a small developer on the Appstore. Apart from being fascinating, it's also a fine example of the sort of openness and honesty that characterises, or ought to characterise 'Web two point oh'. Check it out here.

16 December 2008

How my old Windows phone still beats my iPhone

Don't get me wrong. I love so many things about my iPhone, but I am not a deluded fanboy that believes it's perfect in every way, and the ways it falls short are all part of Apple's master plan for global domination. I freely admit that there are many areas in which the iPhone pales behind Windows and Blackberry offerings. Indeed, my iPhone journey is still trails my former Windows Mobile experience on a Samsung Blackjack smartphone in several areas:
  • The native iPhone Calendar and Contacts functions trail 3rd party apps on Windows smartphones by a large margin, and we have no built in To Do functionality at all. Sure the windows native calendar was equally primitive, but we had been spoilt by apps such as Pocket Informant, AgendaFusion and AgendaOne, that had powerful Calendar, To Do and Contact management equal to or better than desktop apps
  • There's still no true Microsoft Office compatibility on the iPhone. The third party app Documents to Go had provided the ability to view, edit and even creat office docs on the smartphone for years
  • Powerful email fucntionality was at hand through the application Flexmail. I still don't believe it was a match for the Blackberry, but it was eons ahead of the basic mail apps built into Windows Mobile or the iPhone
  • On the Windows phone I could customise my start screen with applications such as SBSH's Facade, in order to have all my Calendar and ToDos display on the home screen, without having to dig to find out the rudimentary things I needed to know for the day
  • Profiles let me set volume, ringtone, and system characteristics quickly, a basic function of phones on other platforms for years. Instead I know have to dig into settings every time I get in and out of the car to adjust brightness, screen locking, etc. A veritable pain
  • Windows phones have file systems that can be accessed, like any computer should have. Another "Doh" to Apple there
  • On my Windows Mobile phone I could sensibly organise my apps into folders on the home screen for ease of access. On my iPhone I have 8.5 screens of icons which can't be put in folders, and life just isn't long enough to organise anything beyond screen 2. Apple's thinking here might have seemed good at the time, but that was before the AppStore encouraged us to run 150 different apps
  • My Windows smartphone could do true multitasking. I could run Palringo in the background and be alerted in real time to incoming messages. I could keep my GPS running all the time or have a web page load in the background. I can't do these things on my newer, faster, more advanced iPhone.
  • To be a serious road warrior, you need to be able to type without restriction. That's why I own a wonderful Think Outside Bluetooth Folding Keyboard. Only it won't work with the iPhone. Neither will my stabd alone BT GPS unit, because Apple chose to give us crippled Bluetooth. Can I say "Doh" again?
The good news is, solutions to at least some of these functions are coming, they're just taking their time. PocketInformant is coming to iPhone, and the developers, though they seem to have been pushing the delivery date back for some time, are hoping to deliver before MacWorld in early Jan. Documents to Go is also under development for the iPhone and I anticipate will give excellent MS Office support if my Windows smartphone experience was anything to go by.

As for customising your start start screen to dpsplay agenda items, that is already possible through a third party app on the iPhone, but only if you jailbreak. That's close to a killer functionality for me, and if such an app isn't mooted soon through Apple-approved channels, I will probably go down the jailbreaking path as well.

As for Profiles, I have not heard of anyone working on this functionality. Does anyone know of a solution in the wings?

So many people complain about the absence of Copy&Paste on the iPhone, as if that's earth shattering functionality. It would be nice, but it is far less important that multi-tasking, a file system, folders for organising icons, a decent Bluetooth implementation and profiles. If Apple would address these issues, or allow 3rd party developers to do so, then maybe the world's leading smartphone would be as smart as those dumbass Windows smarphones have been for years.

15 December 2008

10,000 apps. 9,000 are crap! It's the crap app rap!

The iphonosphere is has been sizzling with celebration over the fact that the Appstore has reached 10,000. I don't want to be Scrooge at Christmas time, but frankly, what's to celebrate? If there were 10,000 intelligent, well-tested and useful applications, that might be something to write home about, but the vast majority of the programs available are rubbish, and not worth paying even 99 cents for (or $1.19 here in Australia).

And no, I am not being so petty as to classify Zippo Lighter or Lightsaber as useless--these are clearly applications that belong on every iPhone. I refer instead to the myriad of half-baked shopping list applications, to do lists, wikipedia apps, time managers, iPhone interfaces to other websites that don't need them, weak games, Christmas trivia, the list goes on. Of course, there are good apps in almost every category, but the vast number of mediocre apps gives the Appstore a very low signal to noise ratio, and makes it hard to find the apps worth having.

This situation will only get worse, of course. If there are two or three apps worth looking at and only one worth keeping for every 10 uploaded (as I would contest) the noise levels are rising interminably day after day. Does Apple have a mechanism for dealing with the chaos yet to come? I doubt it.

Of course, more and more professional developers are seeing the potential of the iPhone so we can expect continued growth of quality merchandise, but will that be drowned out by the noise of the crap apps?

What do you think? Is this a problem of my own imagining? Will the Appstore market self-regulate and get rid of the crap apps, or do they need to be liberated into a separate store or even into a world not regulated by Apple? Should the iPhone world create a model similar to free/shareware that can be distributed through sites such as Handango with the Appstore just focused on more commercial offerings? I look forward to your comments (though I've been blogging for long enough not to hold my breath in anticipation :-)

02 December 2008

Forget Android and Storm. Here's the real iPhone killer!

Oh dear, my shiny new iPhone is about to be knocked off its perch as the smartest smartphone. This isn't out yet, but I want one!



Click here to learn more.

26 November 2008

Google mobile voice search review. Much ado about not very much, but you'll use it anyway

Judging by the amount of noise on iPhone sites, you'd think that the voice search function in the latest version of Google's iPhone application was the greatest thing since sliced bread. Let me tell you why it isn't.

Do you have voice recognition on your computer? Of so, do you use it to browse the web? For most people the answer is probably "no". Sure the software and hardware exists and is probably even built into your operating system, but most people have come to the conclusion that it's not a good idea.

Ah, but the iPhone is a mobile device, I hear you say! Voice recognition saves all that typing, and is surely much safer in the car. And here you would be right, assuming it worked really well, but in my experience, it only works 'okay' rather than 'really well'. And you'll look an idiot in public talking into your search engine, especially after spending all that time telling everyone how easy it is type on the iPhone virtual keyboard.

As for safety in the car, you still have to unlock the iPhone (one touch), go to the home screen to find the app (two touches), launch the app (three touches), look at the screen long enough to find the small 'Voice Search' button, touch it (four touches), speak, wait, look at the search field to see whether it has recognised your voice correctly, and if not, look at the prompts to touch the screen again and try again. Then you have to read the tiny text in the google page that opens. If my phone is mounted on my car holder, I can't read the text on this screen, nor even see the Voice Search button, so I'd have to hold the phone closer to my face to execute the search and comprehend the results. And bear in mind that voice recognition will work far less well due to background noise in the car.

Bottom line is, there is no way this process could be considered safe in the car, and certainly in South Australia it would (rightly, I think) be illegal.



But how well does the voice recognition even work? I tested a few words and phrases at a distance of about 40 cm and here is a sample of my results:

I said "supermarket". It heard "chicago".
I said "supermarket" in an American accent. It heard correctly.
I said "podiatrist". It heard correctly.
I said "newsagent". It heard "mutations".
I said "newsagent" again. It heard "musicians".
I said "paper shop". It heard correctly.
I said "chemist". It heard "tennis".

I said "drugstore". It heard correctly.
I said "chiropractor". It heard correctly.

I said "pharmacist". It heard correctly.

I said "I feel like a massage" in an American accent. It heard "flexamerica".

I said "where did I put my car keys". It heard "when does my car keys".
I said "where did I put my car keys" in an American accent. It heard "where to put my car keys".

I said "the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog". It heard correctly.
I said "google voicemail". It heard "google boise idaho".
I said "shall I compare thee to a summer's day". It heard correctly.

On that evidence the voice recognition works well enough to be entertaining but only moderately useful; it responds better to Americaan accents  than my Anglo-Australian, but more than that, it seems to respond better to American vocabulary; and it seems to like Shakespeare.

Is it safe for use in the car? No. Is it all that useful? Not really. Will I use it anyway? Yes, because it's fun. And like so many applications on the iPhone it's an example of clever technology only partially solving a problem no-one had in the first place. And that's kind of cool in a geeky way. Just like the Lightsaber or Zippo Lighter iPhone apps, no-one who actually 'gets' the iPhone should have to ask why.

24 November 2008

What's in iPhone 2.2? Documented and undocumented features

There's a great discussion thread over at Mac Rumours discussing the finer points of the features in firmware update 2.2. Check it out:

iPhone 2.2 Update, new & undocumented features/fixes screenshots (Updated constantly) - Mac Forums

23 November 2008

How to use Google Streetview on the iPhone

Nice to know we have Street View on Google Maps in the iPhone 2.2 update, but how does one use it? I zoomed around my district unable to see any streets marked with the tell-tale blue which indicates Street View is available, although I know that it is in my area. I then tried my current GPS location, again to no avail. Colour me stupid, but it took my quite a while before I twigged.

The secret is, you need to search for somewhere. Once you do, that location is marked with a red pin, and if Street View is available, the label on that pin will have an icon on the left of a little white man in a red circle. God knows why a man indicates Street View, but ours is not to question why. It will look like this:



Then when you touch the icon for the little red man, you'll be taken to Street View, with your screen rotating accordingly. You'll see your place on the map in the bottom right corner, even indicating your direction of virtual travel, which is pretty cool:

22 November 2008

Quick thoughts on iPhone 2.2 firmware update

I suffer from a disease known as 'early adoption'. Knowing that iPhone firmware 2.2 was due out yesterday I connected my iPhone to iTunes and periodically hit the update button all day until I got a result. Of course, I had read all the rumours beforehand as to what was in it, so there were no surprises. But my first reaction was still one of being underwhelmed.



Let's be frank, for most people there's nothing earth-shattering in this update. None of the major flaws of the phone are addressed. So there's still no multitasking for 3rd party apps, no cut and paste, no decent folder organisation for all your applications, the diary functionality is still pretty poor and the email app still won't open mime attachments. But all of that was to be expected. That said, I am immediately struck by a few improvements that really do make life easier.

The first is the new feature where clicking the home button on any home screen takes you back to the first home screen. This may not seem like much, but I find it a major time saver that also lets me get back to my primary applications without having to look at the screen, a major failing of touchscreen devices as a whole.

Other neat additions include some major changes to the App Store which make it much more usable and in-line with the iTunes version. For example, whereas you could previously only see one screen shot of an app, you can now view and zoom in on all of them. The categories screen now has icons which make navigation easier, and you can break down your view by "Top Free", "Top Paid" and "Release Date" like you can on iTunes. The Updates screen now has an "Update All" button which fixes a major annoyance and time waster. All in all the App Store is a much nicer place to be now.

The mail app has several claimed improvements. The only one I've noticed so far is that wide HTML emails now seem to wrap to the screen better. The claim that "isolated issues with scheduled fetching of email" have been fixed remains to be tested. Since the update my iPhone still does that random thing where it downloads heaps of old email, and forgets the most recent ones. A very annoying bug and I think it hasn't been fixed. Anyone else experiencing this?

There are also claimed improvements to the stability of Safari, and if that's true then they're much needed. I also haven't had a chance to test the new features in Google Maps. Further reports as I play more.

The first iPhone in space?

Remember children, do not try this at home, at least not with your own phone!

MAKE: Blog: The iPhone rocket: The story (and data) of how an iPhone hit 1300ft

Welcome to Clive's iPhone blog

Great, another site about the iPhone. Just what the web needs. But wait...this one is different. It's the opinionated, entirely subjective ranting of a bald, grumpy tech writer in Oz who is actually using his iPhone on a daily basis in his quest to fight evil, save the adverb and generally make his world a better place to be.

In my search for the ultimate pocket pal, I have owned Palm Pilots, Windows Mobile devices and used Blackberrys, so I know what's good and bad about all of them. Whilst I love my 3G iPhone and believe it to be the best of all of them, I am not an iPhone fanboy. I recognise that all such devices are compromises which may work better for some people than others. As they say on the web, your kilometreage may differ.

Thanks for visiting on your iPhone journey and sharing some of mine. Feel free to share, comment, criticise, praise (preferred).

Let the games begin!