Archive

Archive for the ‘tech bits’ Category

Droid *almost* does…

About a month ago I got so fed up with AT&T’s crap network I decided to try a Verizon/Motorola Droid for 30 days. I knew it wouldn’t deliver the same experience as an iPhone, but I had never used Andriod or been on the Verizon network, and quite frankly poking yourself in the eye with a hot knife is more fun than using the AT&T network, so I was very curious.

I’ll skip all of the standard unboxing, first impressions stuff that’s been well covered by my friends at Engadget and the like. I’ll even save you the drama of reading this whole post if you just want the summary.

Bottom Line: Droid is an interesting, powerful smartphone that is probably the most powerful option on Verizon, but the hardware, software, and overall user experience is no where close to an iPhone. After 30 days of playing with it, my Droid is going back and I’m going to continue suffering like a dog on AT&T for the duration. I’m a “Mac” and the differences in the software UX between Android and iPhone OS are too significant for me to live with for the next 2 years.

I spent the last 30 days with my iPhone number forwarded to the Droid so I could make and receive calls like normal. I was on the road in several locations, and tried to use every ounce of its functionality during the time I had. I’m going to discuss the hardware and software separately because, well, I think there are probably other Android 2.0 phones that are better form-factors than the Droid.

Hardware: There are both serious pros and cons to this hardware platform, but in the end Motorola rushed this device to market, and it lacks refinement. Most notably, many of the things that are supposed to be advantages of the HW platform really work against the phone.

Camera: Its great that it has a 5mp camera with a flash, but the camera’s stills aren’t much better than my iPhone (not an “S”), and night time shots with the flash suck and are generally discolored. I found that the camera trigger button on the outside of the case was actually a problem because as you fumble to get the shot lined up if you move your hand it takes the picture. The camera is slow to save the image to memory (yeah, I can go get a fast card to speed that up, right?) so you mis-fire, then wait forever while your friends get annoyed. The flash was a tease, because I got all excited I could take night pix now, but really none of them were usable or facebook-worthy.

Battery: It has a removable battery, yay, right? The battery-cover plate actually slid of more than once in my trial. Once in the car while the Droid was on the center island in the car. I hit the brakes and the phone slid but the back-side battery cover stayed put. Another few times retrieving the phone from my pocket. As far as battery-life, about the same as an iPhone. Play with it all day and its dead before you know it. Leave it alone and its a champ. Ever since getting a Mophie JuicePack, the iPhone battery issue isn’t a show-stopper. I guess I could buy an extra battery for the Droid or use an external charging device, but that kills portability.

Audio: There was something very different about the Droid’s phone-call audio. I think the difference is that the iPhone does NOT loop the mic back thru the speaker, but the Droid does. I was hearing myself talk, and it was loud so it took some getting used to. Then I’d turn the speaker down but couldn’t hear the other party as well. Being on the BT headset got rid of this issue, so I am assuming its as I suspect but I was not a fan. Voice quality was generally excellent and even when the signal got choppy I could still make out what they were saying. Very different call-handling behavior on the Verizon network for “lost packets”.

Physical device: The Droid seems to have something in common with its Star-Wars ancestors. Its functional but rough around the edges. Having a real keyboard was supposed to be a nice addition, but Motorola make a huge mistake by not making the keyboard have separate, raised buttons like a Blackberry or even the Palm Pre. The buttons are hard to use and I could never get used to it. I gave up using the physical keyboard after a week. Its got a thumb -pad that I thought would be like a trackpad but its not. Android 2.0 supports multi-touch gestures, but this phone doesn’t. Double tap to zoom, etc. I bought a case for it, but that made the phone way to bulky for the pocket, and its a 2-piece cover to handle the sliding front. No one but Motorola makes covers yet it seemed from what I could tell. Too new? I also scratched the metal case surrounding the glass on the 2nd day I had it. Having painted aluminum that is not covered by the plastic screen protector means the front end is going to get pretty dinged up. Its heavier than the iPhone, something you notice but do get used to.

The virtual keyboard posed an additional learning curve. The screen is taller than the iPhone but a tad narrower, and thus the keys are closer together just enough to require some re-learning. Typing was slower and I made more mistakes. The auto-correct is more aggressive and I spent more time backing up and retyping.

The Droid has a nice fast processor, and jumping between apps and functions is almost instant. There is no lag like there is with the iPhone. I know the 3GS is faster than my 3G, and the # of apps probably has something to do with it but I could definitely tell a difference in speed of the device. I might end up buying a 3GS so I get the faster CPU and Video support as a result of all of this testing.

Software: This is the #1 reason the iPhone wins, and will continue to dominate the smartphone market for years to come. It’s all about the software. Ease-of-use, intuitiveness, less-is-more, etc. Oh, and the Apps. The apps ARE better, there are more of them. There is a certain reality to the apps now. App developers can make more money by focusing on the iPhone apps, and it shows. The Android apps seem comparatively thin and incomplete. Many Android apps are on their first generation, where iPhone apps have been getting refined for a few years now.

Android 2.0: The background -app support is huge. This does give the device a great advantage. Its most notable when you are in the middle of a drive and using the turn-by-turn Google navigation (works GREAT, audio voice is awkward and can’t be changed AFAIK) and you need to do something else and come back to the nav. The notification service is also nice and you have a quick way to jump into various services/apps that have new messages/events for you. Overall the OS and the apps feel very “beta” across the board. I often had apps crash, or the OS tell me the app was running slow and was suspended, etc. The apps lack polish in general and are not nearly as intuitive as iPhone apps. I found myself spending way more time going in circles looking for features that weren’t there or hoping to be able to change behavior to be more natural. I’m not going to review app-by-app, I’d be here for a week. One thing that really highlighted some of the challenges that come with an “open” platform is the fact that Visual Voicemail is a separate app from the Phone functionality. Its odd that way. Also, the VV won’t work with bluetooth headsets. Went into the Verizon store and everyone in there looked at me like I was speaking french and talking about my poodle. On the flip side, Andriod 2.0 has nice social network & content sharing integrations built-in. When you are taking pictures/video, sharing content, etc you get a pop-up to post the item to any of the installed 3rd party social networks.

Syncing: As long as you just have one Gmail account, and do everything in Google-land, you would be pretty happy. Mail/Calendar/Address sync is super easy on Andriod 2.0. Just add your account as a sync-service and bam, its all there. But if you have regular email and Gmail, you now have to open two apps. Same thing with corporate/Exchange calendars and google calendars, etc. However, what really killed my buzz with the Droid was the fact I had to USB-mount the SD card manually and drag files onto it to get music or images on the device. Not only is it more work, but then you have the added complexity of handpicking your data out of iTunes or iPhoto and moving it over, etc. The good news is that when you connect the device to a Mac, it thinks its a camera and helps you import pictures. One of the greatest things about the iPhone is the iTunes store, the super-easy syncing, and the ability to purchase content on either the mobile or the laptop and get it back and forth w/o really doing anything more than plugging the device in. I just couldn’t see myself downgrading to this manual file/folder compare process and realized I’d probably end up with the same songs and pictures on the phone for long periods of time. Also, I cannot properly sync my work calendars with the Droid through google because we don’t use google’s hosted mail service.

Verizon: Its true, Verizon seems way better of a network than AT&T. Apparently my house is a cell-coverage vortex, and even Verizon/Droid would have swings in coverage. The difference? Droid would get a tiny bit choppy for a few seconds, but hold the call. AT&T/iPhone would drop the call within a minute or two, even when it showed 5 bars. One good thing I’ve learned is that my house is a tough spot, but my wife’s on T-Mobile (jailbroken 1st G iPhone) that works GREAT at our house. Hmm. I was in the bay area for a week and managed to hold calls up and down 101 and 280 w/o dropping on the Droid. Only dropped one call while coming up Sand Hill Road at 280.

Google Navigation: Google has done a great job with this first pass at real turn-by-turn navigation. It works, its fast, and the automatic street-view when you arrive at the destination is very cool (and useful!). Google did a good job taking advantage of their strengths here. But…A few downsides hamper what would be the killer app of the Driod. One biggie is that Nav cannot start if you are on a call, because either Motorola, Droid, or Verizon don’t allow voice and data at the same time. This is pretty weak sauce, I thought the whole point of 3G was exactly this? I had to drop my call, get nav started, and call the person back. Things like route-recalualtion and street view pop-up won’t work if you are on a call. The other thing is the fidelity and quality of the voice commands are pretty bad, its sounds more like Mrs. Steven Hawking rather than Ms. Moneypenny. I kept looking for a way to upload some better voice but didn’t seen anything online about that. Still, its FREE with the Droid and the Nav platforms on the iPhone are going to be $100. Given that the Droid is only $120 now, its pretty compelling, Hawking-esque voice and all.

So, in the end the Droid goes back on Monday and I’ll likely pick up a 3GS to address the speed and lack of video support that are actual issues for me since I like to be able to grab pics and video of the kids in a flash. I may end up also trying a signal booster at the house to try to stabilize the AT&T signal. It wavers from 3G 5 bars to “no signal”, even when the phone is just sitting on the counter. I’m actually kind of disappointed I couldn’t fall in love with the Droid enough to switch. I’ve been a vocal complainer about AT&T lately and I wanted to put my $$ where my mouth is. Sadly, I feel like I’m giving up too much of the power and functionality I’ve come to rely on.

Thanks to Engadget for the images!

iphone, tech bits , , , ,

what’s old is new again; RSS & toolbars

Dave Winer had it right when he said the internet is cyclical. We seem to be in an interesting cycle here where what’s old is new again. Two cases emerged for me today.

1) rssCloud – a 2002-era concept re-tooled for today as an alternate to the “company-owned” content pub/sub models (think Twitter). This is interesting, but I’m wondering what is going to happen around scalablity. I really like the idea; it allows publishers and consumers to get more real-time and its opt-in, and doesn’t require any retooling (maybe a plugin or a few SW updates). Wordpress just announced support for it on the WP.com platform. I just installed the plugin on this blog so I can push updates to an rssCloud too. No idea WTF I’m talking about? Read the primer here and here.

The whole intent, according to DW>  “The idea is to deliver news faster, without relying on a single company to do all the work.” This is a good idea, and holds to the democratic intent of the free internet, but at the end of the day its going to be companies (ok, maybe not a single one) that will likely foot the bill for the cloud servers that power a large-scale rssCloud. DW has set up one up graciously, but he’s paying for it. Wordpress will run one but they’ve probably got a few hundred extra servers lying around at this point. Google may jump over from pubsubhubbub or whatever and put up an infinitely scalable rssCloud server. Once again, we have a content ecosystem dependent on one (or a few) companies. Its in these companies best interest to provide the server component, but then its not truly democratic as those who own the servers has the data and can, potentially, control the traffic (which was part of the problem rssCloud was looking to address).

Ironically, the reason this is old/new is that this is all coming on the heels of the “RSS is dead” meme that is running rampant currently. People, RSS is NOT dead, not by a long shot. RSS-based business models may be dead, but RSS was never really meant to be more than what its namesake describes it as – a content syndication protocol. It was not a market or a business onto itself (big props to Feedburner for proving otherwise!).

2) Toolbars – After noticing a nice toolbar on feld.com, I started poking around a bit and have now been made aware of at least two companies who have site/blog toolbars in beta. The one on feld.com is Wibya, and another is extendy. I’ve got the latter installed here for a week to test it out. I’ll run wibya also once I get an invite. Both of these are footer-based toolbars that provide some nice functionally and stay out of your way. Let me know what you think or of there are others out there. Customization will be key, but so will overall usability and elegance. No one wants to put an ugly toolbar they can’t modify onto their site.

At Filtrbox, we added an article-sharing toolbar (think diggbar or facebook sharing bar) a few months ago to better facilitate content sharing and I’m seeing more and more of these pop up. Why are they coming back? Well, thanks to Twitter, Facebook, link-shortening services, and the like there is more and more value in providing quick access to sharing good content. Plugins, sidebars, etc are getting more and more clunky, crowded and require more space. It will be interesting to see if this round of toolbars stick around. Browser-based ones are tough, but site-based ones may be a more elegant solution and more interesting from a business standpoint. (Why? It’s the data, stupid!)

Next thing you know, desktop apps will be coming back. Oh snap – they just did!

info overload, startups, tech bits , ,

My favorite Twitter services

twitter_logo_sAlmost every day it seems a new service or mashup for Twitter comes out. Some will stick, others won’t. That’s the great thing about the internet is that everyone gets to try!  Twitter has reached a point of critical mass now where mining the data and the trends around what’s happening on Twitter is as valuable as the messages themselves. I use twitter for both business and personal pursuits, and have tried a ton of the apps and services that have come out. Here are my favorites;

  • Twhirl – AIR based desktop client – there are lots of other desktop clients but I like this the best because it includes URL shortening, retweet, finding users, etc. Its the most feature rich. Tweetdeck is cool too but is short on some of the key features. Since I like to have at least two accounts open at once (arinewman and filtrbox)
  • search.twitter.com – a great way to find mentions of anything specific in the twitter stream. At Filtrbox, we’ve taken the twitter search API and integrated it into our media monitoring service so you can set up the searches once and receive daily emails with any new mentions from ANY twitter user (as long as their stream is public). You can also turn these searches into RSS feeds in Filtrbox, but I digress…
  • Tweetie – the best iPhone client I’ve used so far. I’ve tried twittelator, twitterific and others and found this new entrant to be superior for a few reasons. Its fast, stable, simple, supports location/photos, multiple accounts, following others, trending topics and saved searches. tweetie menuTotally worth the 3 bucks. Here’s one of the menus… 
  •  

  • Monitter – a cool web UI for search.twitter.com – its pretty basic but enables you to set up a bunch of searches and see the stream of tweets. I don’t use it that much because its an app that requires constant attention, which is impossible. Its on this list because its a great demonstration of the value of the twitter search API.
  • Filtrbox(disclaimer – I’m a founder and President) – a powerful and cost-effective online news and media monitoring service that does keyword-based persistent search across online news, the blogosphere and social networks (twitter and Friendfeed). If you want to track brands, companies, people, hot trends, or any specific topic across all types of online media, Filtrbox is awesome. It supports twitter via the search API, and you can receive emails every day listing all of the mentions on Twitter. You can also post articles the system finds directly to Twitter from the web dashboard. Rather than checking search.twitter.com all the time or running manual searches, its sort of a set-it-and-forget-it thing…if there’s a mention, you’ll see it. With its trending and coverage reports, you can keep track of who on twitter is talking about things you care about. 
  • MediaOnTwitter  - a wiki, and overall good resource that identifies what media outlets are on twitter and how to find them. Check out the US page to get an idea…http://mediaontwitter.pbwiki.com/United States

There are a ton of others out there, but these are my faves and what I rely on. Let me know what I missed or what you like better!

filtrbox, info overload, iphone, tech bits , , , , ,

NoHardware.com :: Your Servers Will Melt in the Rack…Not in the Cloud

I think the Tumblr experiment is almost over

I’ve been trying to use to tumblr as my primary personal blog for awhile now and the party’s over. Its simplicity is great but ultimately I found I want more control over the posts and formatting than what I can get here. I end up posting less and thinking about posting less because I feel like the format is limiting. 

Trying to manage a tumblog and and another blog is too much for this guy…so I’ll be moving back to a wordpress based blog soon.

tech bits

Apple store impressed me yesterday

It feels like I got a bit lucky perhaps, but the folks at the Genius Bar at the Boulder, CO 29th st Apple Store earned rockstar status yesterday. 

My MBP started acting strange on Saturday morning out of no where. The keyboard and trackpad started intermittently repsonding, or not responding at all. I even got two kernel panics after hitting keys repeatedly. It was pretty odd and I figured it was a firmware problem so I rebooted a few times, zapped the PRAM, etc. Nothing worked so I gave up for a few hours. 

I managed to get a 3PM Genius Bar appt and within 20 minutes of sitting down we figured out it was either hardware or firmware but the firmware could not be upgraded or flashed cause it was already up to date. I left the laptop with them and they replaced my top deck (the top of the laptop that has the trackpad built in). Luckily they had a spare at the store…and the root problem wasn’t the keyboard (which they didn’t have in stock).

 I got a call around 7pm that it was fixed. Same day fix, a few hours really. The person I was working with knew I couldn’t be w/o this ‘puter for even a day so she made it happen. Cost me $0 since the MBP is under warranty. 

As a bonus, I brought in my leopard DVD which wasn’t reading properly in a few machines and they replaced the DVD with new media w/o hassle.  

 Awesomeness…

Uncategorized, tech bits

Google astonishes themselves…

“Google on Wednesday said it has seen 50 times more search requests coming from Apple iPhones than any other mobile handset — a revelation so astonishing that the company originally suspected it had made an error culling its own data.”

AppleInsider | Google iPhone usage shocks search giant

Note: This is significant for a few reasons. One it confirms a long running suspicion that the gatekeeper to explosive mobile internet usage is the USER EXPERIENCE, not the network or access speed.  The fact there is a real browser in there, and google search is the default search engine has a lot to do with it. Jut wait until the 3G phones come out. The other big thing here is that it validates mobile search and mobile commerce will happen as soon as the UX catches up on more platforms.

Uncategorized, filtrbox, iphone, startups, tech bits, the bike , ,