FaceTime with @Bennycrime

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I got hold of the iPhone 4 today. I checked the O2 website for stock and saw three phones listed in Western Favell in Northamptonshire. By the time I got there there was one left.

I really did not fancy renewing my O2 contract as I get through way more than the limited 500mb monthly data allowance and already have a really good contract with Vodafone.

Still, i figured as this was the last phone in Northamptonshire and I have 7 days to in which I can take this back I would bite the bullet and fork out the £300 cash and renew an 18 month contract.

The more I think about it the more I feel queasy. 18 months at £30/month is a bloody rip off considering the £19 unlimited data contract I have with Vodafone.

Still, I have it now and although this feels like a painfully expensive handful of tech, it's fully loaded & ready to go.

So far I have only had a chance to use FaceTime with @BennyCrime and it does feel more than just Skype video.

Some folk have been video calling for ages and will wonder what all the fuss is about, especially original subscribers to 3 Mobile. I could never afford the data.

Tomorrow I will have a play with the camera and see if all the hype is deserved.

So far, i think it certainly has a great screen resolution and FaceTime could be really handy. It could also be the beginning of the end for the humble phone call. Imagine every call you got was a video call. Nightmare.

Anyway I'm sat outside watching the sun go down and have a beer to finish. More on the iPhone 4 later no doubt.

I'm @Documentally on Twitter and a little skinter than I was this morning.


Sent from my iPhone4 (but you already know that)

[I must remember to delete that stealth ad.]

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   apple   bennycrime   facetime   iphone   iphone4   phone   tech   technology  

Griffin Technology PowerJolt Micro For iPad Charging

I think I have solved my iPad charging woes with this little dubrey wotsit.

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It's called the Griffin Technology PowerJolt Micro and enables me to get the maximum charge rate of 2.1A from my solar devices/ batteries and my car power socket etc.

Before using it my iPad would say 'not charging' but was in fact charging at the lower speed fed by a 'normal' USB 2.0 connection. It could take some time though. With this the iPad charges at the same rate it would when plugged into the wall.

In the photo below I have my iPad charging with my MiniGorilla. The PowerJolt micro is so 'micro' I had to cut a couple of notches into the cigarette lighter socket that is plugged in to the MiniGorilla battery. I think this is because the socket Powertraveller supplies is deeper than the norm.

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Although I have been able to daisy-chain charge devices from the mains. I'm yet to effectively use the SolarGorilla into the Power or MiniGorilla and simultaneously have them charge the iPad. (I'd love to know if others have got this to work.)

This may be a good thing as it's way safer to leave your battery charging in the sun and recharge the iPad later, than leave the sleek black iPad out in the hot sun. If you do, it shuts down with an over heating icon and won't work till cool again.

At the moment as the battery in the iPad means it will run all day I can charge my batteries in the day and top the iPad up at night.

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Incidentally the PowerJolt Micro comes with a really heavy duty apple lead for iPod/iPhone/iPad connectivity, way better quality than anything Apple have supplied me. I ordered them from Cancom for £11.95 who gave me next day delivery and really great service.

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I'll keep playing and experimenting and let you know what works and what doesn't.

If you have any mobile off-the-grid power experiments with the iPad or suchlike please let me know in the comments below or through my twitter account.

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   griffin   iPad   minigorilla   off grid   power   powergorilla   powertraveller   solar   solargorilla   technology  

The iPad - Initial thoughts

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Thanks firstly to @Ilicco for despite being trapped in New York for a week due to a certain cloud of volcanic dust, he managed to get back to the UK in pretty good time to deliver me a 64gb iPad.

The very same iPad I'm writing on now, as I sit as a passenger in the car with my MiFi on the dashboard providing my Internet connection.

I just wanted to jot a few first thoughts down in a blog post as I have had lots of DM's from enquiring minds asking me what I think of the iPad as a device.

So in a nut..

> I am reading more
> I am charging less
> I am listening more
> I am carrying less
> I am spending a shedload on apps
> I am waiting for more tools to be available
> I am looking forward to the next iPhone and OS

I love browsing news, comics and blogs on the iPad. I am finding the Read Later app indispensable as when on the mac and the iPhone I find myself bookmarking articles for later as the iPad is a pleasure to read from.

I can use the iPad for a whole day and still have power for the next. This is pretty liberating when you think I may have to charge my iPhone at 11am after heavy use.

I am certainly finding it easier to soak up content from friends in my networks as well. As a listening/monitoring tool it's second to none.

The photo above shows you the bag (on the left) I have to carry when 'fully loaded' with MacBook pro etc and on the right, the new bag I carry when travelling light. In the small bag I have my iPad, iPhone 3GS, MiFi, Minigorilla & charge cables, mains charger and a Canon Ixus 120is incase I want to shoot HD for later editing.

If you are a media maker then the iPhone and iPad should be all you need and not having the ability to edit raw files or HD video may actually be a blessing as you may not be tempted when all you have to supply is content for the web. I often over shoot in quality and 'dial it down' for the web. With just an iPhone and iPad you have no choice but to shoot lo-Fi and get innovative.

As far as apps go I resisted signing up for the US iTunes account as there seem to be a few apps in the UK store to keep me going and all I have to do is sync to the mac to install. I am waiting patiently for the app explosion in a few weeks. I did buy my most expensive app yet.. 'Things'. It has a great interface and is a really handy tool. £10,99.

I feel I really need a decent case and screen protector.. Also, just in case I do need decent photos or video or audio, the sd card interface looks like a handy purchase. As i am now, I snap a photo on the iPhone and email it to myself. I do have an app that enables me to live sync my phone camera with the iPad but it's not all that. There will be better options soon.. At least I hope so.

When the new iPhone comes out with it's front facing camera and higher quality photos and video, I feel there won't be a need for me to carry a compact camera at all.

Do I pine for a camera in the iPad? In the front yes. I can see how a camera in the back could come in handy for Augmented Reality and overlaying of info on street views etc but for me as a content creator, I really miss recording video to upload straight into my iSight camera on my mac. There are work-a-rounds with the iPhone but ease of use and accessibility is key here.

The next version of the operation system OS4 is really going to shine. Having already had a play on @Computid's phone I can see how it will really assist ease of mobile computing.

I have yet to see just how mobile this is as I am keen to test the iPad with the Solargorilla and Powertraveller mobile power solutions. Having a MiFi has proven so far to be invaluable even if the wifi signal seems to drop out more than normal. I don't know if having a 3G iPad is going to help with connectivity across all your devices unless some killer 3G sharing apps are released.

So, on the whole I am pretty pleased with the direction Apple-shaped mobile computing is going. This is still really early days and in a way it is fun trying to find file sharing, mobile media making work arounds so I can still move about unhindered by a massive bag of tech. I am certainly liking leaving the house with just a small satchel.

As far as writing this blog post in an email went.. I am still not sure how I make a word into a link. (I had to go in and edit later on the Mac.). I can type as fast as I do on a 'normal' keyboard but I am finding the spacebar getting miss hit more than normal.

Cheers for reading this far and as ever, there are more tests to come.

I am @Documentally on Twitter. http://Twitter.com/Documentally

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   apple   iPad   iphone   ipod   mifi   mobile   tech   technology  

The Future Of Social Networking

This is not science fiction. This technology exists in separate devices now. I know that, you know that, but show this to someone outside of social networking and other such geekery and it would blow their socks off.

I remember earlier this year whilst touring with the GetAmbition team Bill Thompson talked about Augmented Reality enabled contact lenses. Miniature low powered lasers projecting information on the back of the retina. That may well be a future that's closer than we think.

In the original post Mathew Buckland states this technology assumes "amazing resolutions, facial and object recognition, and more accurate GPS" I think this is all possible now. A smart engineer would also work with cross referencing RFID and realtime gps data logged live by our current social networking apps. Mood/expression recognition is in use now. It's just a matter of these different components and features finding their way into the same device.

We have a serious responsibility as the formulators and curators of this technology to do the right thing. Whilst blowing my mind daily it also scares the shit out of me. The moral and ethical implications are massive. Opting out may not be an option at all. In fact a peer pressure focused on data sharing may mean we are even more suspicious of those not participating in revealing all.

There are many more conversations to be had before we even begin to understand the implications of this new way of interfacing technologies we have all began to adopt. I see the usefulness as much as I see the dangers. But only when I pause for a moment to take a step back and look at what we are creating.

If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him.” ~ Cardinal Richelieus

 

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   1984   augmented reality   big brother   orwell   privacy   social networking   technology