The fate of the original iPad

-   Oct 01, 2012 -   Hardware -  

Marco wrote some thoughts on iPad 1 and reasons why Apple decided not to include it in the iOS 6 upgrades. I remember being a tad upset about this at the iOS 6 announcement many months back.  I remember thinking “isn’t the iPhone 3GS even older” and looking up the release dates. Shortly after the announcement, I listed my iPad 1 on craigslist and picked up an iPad 3 with a Verizon connection.  The upgrade was a huge improvement and we use the iPad more now than we did before.

 Fitness, pushups, and the Nike+ Sportband

-   Aug 09, 2008 -   Hardware, Personal -   , ,

I guess it all started this spring when I realized that I was old, slow, flabby, and incomprehensibly out of shape.  After dealing with the denial of such a development in my life, I decided to do something about it.  At first, it was all great.  I was running a bit and not feeling too bad.  Developer legend, Justice Gray made his fitness proclamation to the masses and I was encouraged that I was on the right track.  It was around this time I picked up the Nike+ Sportband to track my running progress.  However, not long after all this, Justice Gray fell off the fitness train and I injured my leg playing some ultimate frisbee. A few weeks back however, I felt sufficiently healed to begin my training again.  I picked up the running, added in the 100 pushups program, and scheduled a 5 mile road race with some college friends.  I've been thinking about writing it a bit, and was encouraged to see Rob Conery write about his fitness revelation earlier today.  So here is my post with a few thoughts on these programs. Running with the Nike+ Sportband The Nike+ system is excellent for the geek.  We get a usb device to wear on our wrist while we run.  I'm not sure a gadget guy could ask for anything more.  After my run, I can plug it into my PC and have it update my progress.  It is nice enough to tell me how slow I ran and to let me know that even though it felt like I must have ran 5 miles, it was only 3.5.  It tracks estimated calories if you care about such things, but mainly just gives chart of your running and it is a encouragement to see the mileage increase. The Nike+ web site is not all it could be but not too horrible.  It is all flash based and while it does make nice looking charts, it is a slow.  I wish it was more ajax, less flash, but Nike has not hired me to clean it up so I'll have to deal with it.  One thing I wish it had is an easy way to make a note about the run I made.  I run some a jogging stroller sometime and I'd like to mark which days I use it.  (When you have 4 kids ages 6 and down, you usually take at least one with you when you leave the house.) The Nike+ Sportband device is good overall.  It is simply a usb device with a plastic wristband to hold it.  The wristband is fine.  It is a flexible plastic that can be easily cleaned up and it is sturdy enough to hold up.  The usb device has a simple monochrome display with 2 buttons.  The display is heard to read unless the lighting is right.  At night, you can't see it at all.  It reminds me of the old digital watch display.  It could really use a light button. The kit also comes with the shoe insert.  I don't have the right Nike running shoes for the device, but my wife made me a little bag to attach it to the laces of my sneaker.  It works great. The functionality is simple enough.  Hold the main button for 3 seconds, it will tell you to walk (and it will sync with the little shoe attachment) and then it will flash at 0:00.  You press the button once when you start running.  You press it again when you stop.  When you are all done, you hold the button for 3 seconds to tell it to stop tracking your running shoes.  The secondary button just move the display from time, pace, etc.  It is useless while I'm running as I rarely have the light or desire to know the time, pace, or anything it could tell me.  Maybe in the race next month, I'll check the pace or something. I put one of the lame Nike+ widgets on a running page on my blog.  I've found that the widget works only about half the time I check it.  If you are interested in my world class running stats or more likely want to see what the widget looks like, check it out.  There are many widget options, but they all look the same, just showing different data. 100 pushups? Now, on to the pushups.  I started the "6 week" plan, 3 weeks back and I can safely say that after my first progress test last week, I see no way I'll be done with the program in 6 weeks.  To be honest, I could care less about being able to actually do 100 push ups, but I could really use the upper body exercise and I just don't have the time to get to the gym.  I'd much prefer to be home with my kids than make an extra stop away from home.  Push ups seem like an ideal fit to my lifestyle. The program focuses on 5 sets of pushups 3 times a week.  I think it is a bit optimistic overall, but the principles of sets of pushups seems good.  The numbers just might need to be tweaked or certain weeks might need to be done over to build up the strength for the next level.  Since I really don't have the same end goal, I don't mind the program.  If you are hoping to be doing 100 pushups in 6 weeks, I hope you can knock out a bunch to start with.  If all goes well for me, I'll be able to keep doing some push ups through the fall and winter and make it a regular part of my home exercise program and someday along the way, I'll be able to hit 100 push ups. I'm not going to go so far to report my push ups has Rob has done, but my mileage and runs will be on my running page if you desire to check in on my progress.

 My iPhone Thoughts

-   Oct 21, 2007 -   Hardware -   ,

I picked up an iPhone a few weeks back, right after the price drop.  At the time, I was hunting for a new phone as my Audiovox SMT5600 had finally died and I needed a something.  I thought the iPhone might work for me since I was already an AT&T customer and I had a nice plan with them already. Once the price drop was announced, I jumped.  I was really excited as I had been carrying my iPod and phone together everywhere so this seems like a great opportunity to move to a single device. I decided to write up my thoughts on the product now that the newness and wow factor have worn off a bit.  I see the iPhone as having 5 functions for me.  Phone, iPod, Web browser, PDA, and everything else.  As a phone, the iPhone has been surprisingly great.  This was the part that scared me the most going in and it really has been superb.  The reception is as good or better than my Audiovox (which was good by the way.)  The visual voice mail is really, really nice.  It would be a pain to go back to standard voice mail.  The contacts setup is also just fantastic.  Also, I just love the headphone click button for answering calls.  Just wonderful.  I can't say enough good things about the phone part of the product. Contrary to Steve Jobs, this is not the best iPod ever.  There are improvements and things that are much worse.  If I was using this just as an iPod, I'd switch back to my iPod video.  I spend most of my listening time listening to audiobooks and podcasts with some music mixed in as well.  The audiobook support is very weak.  It seems the iPhone is always losing my place in the book while the iPod video rarely did.  Also, the iPhone shows the progress of book differently treating the chapter breaks as their own tracks.  Instead of seeing one long 6 hour track, I might see 6 one hour tracks.  At first thought, it seems good, but in practice it is not, especially with the fact that I keep losing my place in the book.  Now, not only do I have to make a mental note of the minute I'm on in the book, I also have to remember the chapter.  Podcasts suffer from the same issue, except that here they are shorter and don't have chapter breaks. My other issues are minor.  The coverflow is bothersome and I can't find a way to turn it off.  Moving to a part of an audio track is not very precise, especially on the longer audiobook tracks. The good on the iPod though is that it does work.  Finding artist and tracks is easy.  Again, the headphone click for pause and double click for skip is brilliant.  I just love these headphones. The web browser as you might guess is great.  It could be 3G, but I've never had it in a mobile so I don't really know what I'm missing.  The zoom functionality makes most any page work well in the iPhone browser.  I've found myself using it much more than I expected. As a PDA, it works good.  Not great, but simply good.  I sync the calendar and contacts with my outlook and since all my email is in gmail, I've got that coming across ok as well.  The email support could be better, but since I mainly use my phone for reading email and glancing at subject lines, it is ok.  If I was a power emailer, I'd be disappointed with the setup I have.  I'm missing something to sync and read word docs or pdfs, but I personally wouldn't use this too much. The other pieces and parts of the iPhone are nice, but aren't the greatest.  I use the weather sometimes, but I prefer more details and often use a web bookmark to lookup weather.  I sometimes look through photos on the iPhone, take pictures, or watch a YouTube video.  It is very rarely though so far.  I've used the Maps once or twice, much less than I expected.  (I think maps could really use GPS, but I doubt that would make me use it that much more.)  The calculator, clock and notes are nice, but the stocks are worthless to me. Overall, I still am very happy with the device.  It really works well for my situation.  It is easily the best phone I've had and very close on the rest of the functions, all wrapped in a small sleek package.

 USB Flash Drive unrecognized but lives again

-   Feb 02, 2007 -   Hardware -  

My mini USB flash keychain died today. It was a painful death as the device was no longer recognizable to my PC. I tried on another at the office and got the same scary error. Over lunch, I mentioned to a friend (John) how sad I was to have my OCZ 2 GB Mini Kart die after just a few months, especially since I keep my personal wiki there with my notes. In the afternoon, my friend sent a link with some software that he found in a web search. (It was very nice of him to think of my plight and look for some recovery software for me.) I had quit looking at software after a few minutes since the device was not recognized by the OS. Anyway, I decided to give the software a try, but I wasn't willing to try it out on my main PC. So I fired up an old PC to install the software. When I plugged the drive in... it worked!!! It gave me a message at the bottom of the screen that I was plugging in a usb 2.0 device and I would get better speed using a 2.0 port. Looking back, I remember John mentioning to try a 1.1 port in his ideas over lunch too. I had forgotten about that very great suggestion, and was lucky to pick an older PC to try it on. So now I have a flash drive that I'm guessing works only in usb 1.1 ports. I picked up a new SanDisk Micro 2 GB on the way home to replace the OCZ. Good Bye my tiny OCZ USB drive. It was fun. Update: I get a few messages a month asking me what software I used to recover my drive.  While it is not clear from my entry, I never actually ran the recovery software.  The drive simply worked on an older USB port.  My drive was a USB 2.0 drive and the port was a 1.1 port.  The older port recognized the drive and I was able to get my data.

 Charge your iPod via USB while using it

-   Jan 27, 2007 -   Audio, Hardware -  

Maybe I'm a bit slow, but it took me a little while to learn the trick of charging your iPod via my USB port and listen to it at the same time. I usually don't need to charge it and listen at the same time and rarely do, but sometimes I forget to charge it up and find myself at work with an almost dead iPod. Here are the steps that work for me: 1. Connect iPod to the PC. 2. Eject from iTunes (if you have iTunes installed) 3. Open Windows Explorer find your removable drive (iPod). 4. Right click the iPod drive and click Eject. 5. Wait a moment and the iPod menu should appear on your iPod.