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iCloud

16 Oct

One thing about Apple that amazes me is how often they hit a new product out of the park — iPod, iPhone, iPad; all phenomenally well-received — but with Internet services consistently no matter how hard they try, they fall down. When he announced iCloud Jobs joked: why should you trust us? We’re the ones that brought you MobileMe.

iCloud shows early signs of being a MobileMe. Which is unfortunate. It’s not the hands-down launch disaster MobileMe was, and sitting through more MMO launches that I’d care to remember, I know bad things happen several million people hit a service at once. In Apple’s case, it was a couple-hundred million.

The Mail Issue

Nothing puts a public face on a service issue like email going down. I’m not likely to notice if an iCloud backup failed, or my bookmarks don’t sync. I may not notice, or care, that Photo Stream didn’t sync. An error message that pops up on my Mac or iOS device that says it can’t connect to the mail servers is very in your face.

Mail went down for 3-4 hours Thursday and about an hour today. It’s not the end of the world. Other than the pop ups, no mail was delayed getting to me. The problem is, while my me.com address sees very low volume, that volume is very high priority. It’s an e-mail address I only give out to very close and personal friends. When I see that e-mail light up with an unread message, I know it’s important to me.

Again, the MobileMe problems were greater. However, because back then MobileMe was a paid service I wasn’t using it didn’t affect me. I started subscribing about a year ago and use it a lot now. So, the load issues are troublesome.

Documents in the Cloud

When I complain about Documents in the Cloud I have to take a step back and remember that with this Apple has build the framing of a house. It’s not quite ready for you to move into yet, but you can see it take shape and let different trades to their work. Documents in the Cloud does a fantastic job at syncing data across my iOS devices. The problem is needing to use a web app to upload and download my documents to my Mac seems like totally the wrong solution to the problem.

Apple not having iWork apps on the OS X ready to go on day one is a big letdown. I have a feeling that getting an OS X app to work with iCloud’s sandbox is a bit of a hurdle. Given the nature of Apple’s inter-department security, I’m not sure the iWork team knew much about iCloud before WWDC. That’s speculation on my part, though. My belief right now is that since Apple is mum on this, and at no point during any of the WWDC or iPhone 4 announcement is there even a glimpse of iWork on OS X working with iCloud I think this is a long time coming.

The big problem I see is being able to group a mishmash of documents. Many times a project will have PDFs, Word and Excel files. With each app having its own sandbox, there’s no way I can just look through all of them at once.

Backups and PC-Free

I’m lumping this into the same header because to me, they are the same. iOS 5 lets you never attach your iOS device to a computer. This is a life-saver. I set my girl friend up with it and it’s nice to know whenever she plugs her iPad in overnight it’s gonna get backed up. Hell, it’s nice knowing when I plug it in it’s getting backed up.

The bad part is, right now the only way to restore is to reset the device. I’m not sure if this is something Apple will eventually let you grab selective bits, but I doubt it. iCloud backups are for when you need to restore the entire system when you get a new device or you need to start over. I’m ok with this.

PC-free is, well, interesting.

I think for most people, this is true. If I got my Mom an iPad for Christmas I’d take it out of the box, set it up with her email account already, and then when I hand it to her, add it to her home network and get her set up with apps. She’ll never, ever need to sync the device. When I know an important software update has been released either see or I can take care of it. She’ll never know iTunes exists.

For my iPad, it’s likely it won’t sync to iTunes, or at least often. My iPhone will due to my music library on there. Maybe after iTunes Match comes out I will, but until I can manage playlists on my iPhone and have them get beamed to my iPad, it’s of limited value. I don’t often sync music to my iPad, but when I do, I want my playlists to follow.

Documents is likely to be where my iPad gets connected. I side load books to my Kindle and Kindle.app and I need to use a cord to do that. I don’t do that often, since its mostly legacy ebooks I’m side loading; future Amazon purchases will be synced via Whispersync.

Do I like it?

Overall, yeah. The Documents in the Cloud thing is a major pain right now, but it’s rare I need to round a trip a file with any regularity. It’ll be great when I can sync in the background, but for now it’s inconvenient rather than aggravating. That said, I do see myself using Dropbox more, since I can set up sync folders in Goodreader. I’m doing a contract negotiation for some personal stuff and I just dumped the folder of documents on Dropbox if I need them.

Elements for iPad Updated with Folders, Markdown Support

4 Nov

Two iPad apps that have been very near and dear to my writer’s heart: Elements and PlainText. They are two simple apps, that let me edit plain text files on a Dropbox folder — each app uses its own Dropbox folder, named Elements and Plaintext respectively. I’ve loved both, but PlainText was winning because it supported subfolders in its folder, which Elements lacked before this update.

Another writing tool I often take advantage of is Markdown, a sort of formatting shortcut language created by John Gruber. The lack of native support wasn’t a big deal for me. I already know most of the formatting commands so I could just enter them in by hand and preview them when I exported them.

The Markdown implementation is a little tricky. If you’ve created a file on the iPad, you’ll need to change the extension to .md, .markdown, .mdown or .mdwn. That will activate the Markdown preview button. It doesn’t appear to add any shortcuts for common Markdown elements, like #. It’s too bad since the need to access the secondary or tertiary on-screen keyboards can slow you down. If you are a heavy Markdown user, I recommend the excellent Edito iPad app.

Now that Elements supports both subfolders and Markdown in version 1.5, it just might become my iPad plain text editor of choice

 

WWDC 2010 Predictions

24 May

iPhone News

  • New iPhone and OS 4.0 shipping imminently. It appears they are already ramping up production. I might even go out on a limb and say 4.0 will ship within a week of WWDC
  • AT&T to allow tethering
  • More tech details of 4.0

iPad News

  • Sales update
  • OS 4.0 new announcements: better file management, better iCal. Bluetooth tethering and greater bluetooth connectivity options, including 3rd party presenters tools, ability to manipulate Photo library, removal of iTunes initial sync requirement. Apple will begin marketing the iPad as a stand alone device.

Mac news

  • Sales update
  • Mac Pro refresh
  • No OS/X 10.7 details except “we’ve got great new things planned”

Cloud news

  • Apple will roll iWork.com out of beta with better collaboration tools
  • MobileMe syncing and cloud backup will be free for iDevices. Possible free MobileMe for Mail/Calendar. iDisk to remain premium.
  • Apple will begin to focus more on cloud storage and syncing.

App News:

  • Possible: new iWork and iLife with cloud storage.

Thoughts on Mobile Me

4 May

My e-mail is hosted on Google Apps, as is my calendar. I also use Google Reader for my RSS feeds. I’ve also been a serial abuser of Mobile Me trial. My blog is hosted on WordPress. I use Dropbox for cloud storage.

I don’t generally get political about my technology choices. I use Apple gear because it works the best for my workflow. Over time, I’ve become very integrated into the Apple infrastructure, and while every computer I use has the Apple logo on it, — and I write about Apple professionally — I don’t really consider myself an Apple fanboy. Apple for me is the best choice for me. It may not be the best choice for you. I’m not going to judge.

The one holdout for me as been Mobile Me. I try it and cancel it. I try it and cancel it. There just never seemed to be a hole in my life Mobile Me would fill.

That’s starting to change.

The Google buzz fiasco has started change how I view Google. I’ve been leery of Google’s motivation; they are in the search business and probably know more about what I do on the Internet than the NSA. I’m starting to have qualms about entrusting my email, calendar, etc to Google.

I’m very happy with Dropbox and have considered upgrading to the 50g plan. However, there is one problem with Dropbox: it’s an all-or-nothing sync. Without putting too fine a point on it, there are things I’m ok with syncing to my work computer and things I am not. However, living as a digital nomad and needing to get access to certain documents when I need them, and not just when I’m at home is crucial. As an example, I told a friend if mime I’d send her something I wrote. Now I have to remember to email it. If the file was in the cloud, I could have just shared it with her.

Now that I own an iPad, iPhone and my Mac, simple things like bookmark syncing become important. I don’t usually bookmark — I use Instapaper and Evernote for a lot of my read later needs. I’ll still run across a site I want to bookmark for later on a mobile device.

Which has lead to yet another Mobile Me trial, only this time I think it’s going to stick. For the short term, it’ll let me have a work-pc-friendly cloud storage device without worrying about my freelance writing stuff getting synced over.

I’m not sure what to do about the e-mail thing. I love that Mobile Me lets me have up to five aliases, which is great for creating throwaway accounts. I can’t, however, host the writersmark e-mail there. One alternative is to simply find a place to park the MX record for writersmark and forward it over. For now, I’m just going to keep it hosted at Google until I give it more thought.

Twitter Updates for 2009-07-29

29 Jul
  • Apple releases iDisk app for iPhone. #

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Twitter Updates for 2009-07-28

28 Jul
  • Self flogging: Using Drafts to Easily Get Text To and From Your iPhone — http://is.gd/1Rep3 #
  • holy shit. Lifehacker reblogged one of my articles #
  • William Shatner reads Palin's resignation speech as poetry http://bit.ly/ajVXl #

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I've switched from Nuevasync to Google Sync

18 Feb

Up until last week, I was still using nuevasync for Google Calendar push notifications. Last week, Google introduced Google Sync, and I immediately switched.

Because I use Google Apps for Domains, there were a few extra steps involved — I had to enable Google Sync in my site’s dashboard. After that setting it up was very easy. I followed the instructions on Google’s site, and under username typed in “myrealemail@myrealdomain.com” and it worked perfectly.

After a week, I haven’t noticed any issues on battery life.

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