Monthly Archives: April 2010

Mind blown

Another early adopter.

Dropped by the city today on a glorious spring day to pick up some slippers from the nice people in the Allen Edmonds store (America’s finest shoe maker) and was not only amazed by the profusion of iPod advertisements but by the number of people talking about it on the street as I ambled along. If you think this device has buzz, you are right.

Early adopter

This chap bought one the day it came out this past Saturday and, as you can see, his mind has been blown ever since.

On a related note I wrote the Macworld people asking, now that the iPad is here, why I should renew my print subscription? I’m not holding my breath for a reply, but then neither do I propose to renew.

iPad application issues

Fast fixes.

Two of the applications I find are essential on a mobile device, be it iPhone or iPad, are NetNewsWire and 1Password.

Both come in iPad versions at $10 and $9 respectively and both started crashing on startup after a brief period of functioning properly.

NetNewsWire on the iPad

1Password on the iPad

A quick email to the authors, a quick resubmission to Apple who equally speedily approved the revised versions into the App Store and a fresh download saw everything working fine by yesterday afternoon. Impressive.

This week the iPhone gets an upgraded multitasking system which should migrate to the iPad quickly. At that point I expect the 1Password folks should be able to integrate their application into mobile Safari for one click access to protected sites much as is currently possible with the desktop version. That will greatly speed up the use of the iPad.

As regards iPhoto, my experimentation has been limited to syncing a few albums from my desktop to the iPad and I must say the interface is to die for. A simple un-pinching motion magically expands an album on the screen. Another touch and a slideshow starts, with your choice of music from the iPod on the iPad:

Un-pinching ….

There are no processing controls at present and the only way to get photos onto the iPad is by syncing with your desktop. The SDHC card reader I have on order shows shipping as “late April”, so more practical use to preview and cull RAW images form my DSLRs will have to wait until then.

It’s obvious why nerds hate the iPad. By opening computing with a friendly user interface to a whole new population of technophobes, the nerd’s very existence is threatened, just as the existence of paid photographers is under fire. Why? Because now “anyone can do it”.

Adobe Ideas

A photo and drawing app for the iPad.

Adobe deserve congratulation for being one of the first to release a drawing and photo app for the iPad.

Named Ideas tools like this will become de rigeur for creative types. Certainly, no storyboard artist in the movie industry will be able to live without one.

Adobe Ideas – today’s Etch-a-Sketch

It took me two minutes, using a finger, to sketch a design for a variable inclination device which my son and I will build to illustrate some basic concepts in physics – friction (as the roll is moved the angle of the incline changes), tension (the rubber band holds the roll in place), and elevation (the roll is an elevation adjuster). Using an electrostatic stylus the sketch would be far better, of course. Ideas permits the insertion of background layer photographs from the iPhoto album on the iPad thus:

The exported file takes the size of the largest component (in this case the photo) and when your email is sent it is in PDF format (well, we are talking Adobe here), but do you get my drift? Need to annotate, create, draw, illustrate? This is the tip of the iceberg and lays low the unthinking statements that the iPad is purely a retrieval device. A related tool in Adobe Stylus allows you to generate a color palette showing the dominant colors in an image – imagine that for interior designers, decorators, anyone who thinks about colors and their arrangements and harmonies.

I have a Pogo stylus on order, in silver to match the back of the iPad, natch! I hope mine arrives before all the photographers and art directors at Vogue and Harpers’ snap them up for illustrating how they want studio photographs manipulated.

Breakfast

Welcome to the new paradigm.

The Mac disrupted computing.

The iPod disrupted music.

The iPhone disrupted cell phones.

The iPad disrupts everything else.

Supplies of my luxe German hand crafted iPad stand are now zero, having sold out almost as fast as the iPad, though at $1,950 a pop they all went to Wall Street types. I had to limit sales to two per buyer, just like Apple did with the iPad.

Reading on the iPad

Extraordinary.

As a matter of course, at bedtime we read a book with our eight year old. And can there be a more charming children’s book than Winnie the Pooh? A great story and the most delightful drawings make this book, first published in 1926, a classic for all time.

Now by a stroke of what can only be described as genius, Apple has decided to include a free copy of Winnie the Pooh with the iPad – at least with the one sold in the US. So when it came to reading to our Winnie (named after the great Englishman, not the bear!) I can report that Winnie was among a handful of kids in the whole wide world enjoying the magic of reading on an iPad. Only New Yorkers beat us Californians to it (no one reads in between).

And magic it assuredly is. He was endlessly fascinated with the page turning using a finger. While you can turn them by simply touching the screen, the romantic in us had us turning pages with a gentle swipe, playfully moving the part turned page to and fro. Insanely complex programming hidden away inside, the result is simply Magic.

Our son loves books but his is the last generation in the Western hemisphere which will be turning physical pages. When a jumbo iPad appears soon, art and photography books will migrate to it and much as I will miss the smell and touch of beautiful books they do take up an unconscionable amount of space. Certainly, all the literature will be the first to go to the thrift shop. I no longer have a single LP, CD or DVD in the home and it looks like books will be the next to go. And if getting rid of my books allows me to move to a smaller space, everyone wins – my pocket book, the environment, etc. Of course, a transilluminated image on an LCD screen renders far more dynamic range and color vibrancy than any reproduction viewed by reflected light ever will.

Finally, on an amusing note, the profiteers at Greenpeace, who so ably jumped on the trumped up global warming bandwagon, have lost what little credibility remained through their most recent pronouncement. You see, they have stated that Apple’s creation of a server farm in North Carolina will contribute significantly to carbon output. It doesn’t take an especially high IQ or a spreadsheet to realize that driving your 15mpg V8 to the cinema or cutting down forests to make books is just a tad more polluting than storing an electronic copy of either medium. Duh!