Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts

Saturday, 22 November 2014

10 ways to keep your phone charged (that don't work)

1) One word: static. Dress in wool or silk; wear rubber shoes. 

2) Switch off your phone. Turn on only if making or receiving calls. 

3) Alienate your friends and associates. Fewer notifications to drain your power. 

4) Two words: potato batteries. Swap expensive charging gadgets for natural resources and a bit of ingenuity. Four to five potatoes should be good for those ten minutes or so of emergency charge. 


Sustainability AND portability.
Image: Mogans Jaconsen by-nc-nd 2.0

5) Remain within 30ft of a cell tower, so the signal doesn’t have to travel as far. Move in controlled, tactical dashes from tower to tower. 

6) Three words: radioisotope thermoelectric generator. Good enough for NASA; good enough for you. Added bonus: you'll never again be cold (or burdened by a rigid skeleton). 


You won't need to pay for central heating for the next 87.7 years.
Image: Idaho National Laboratory by 2.0

7) Place a ’73%' sticker over the corner of your screen. What the eye can’t see, the mind can't stress over. 

8) Set your brightness to zero. Jab wildly at the screen, and let autocorrect pick up the slack. 

9) Permanently tether your phone to a wall socket; never take it out of the house. It amazes me that no-one’s tried this before. 

10) Buy a Blackberry. You won’t care about your phone. 

Tuesday, 28 October 2014

What I wear

Wearables are the next big leap for personal technology. This is not news; anyone who follows technology news will have seen wearables talked about as the ‘next (next) big thing’. While I think that the hype machine is running with full steam and setting unrealistic expectations (I think it’s hovering somewhere around the ’Trough of Disillusionment’ mark on the Gartner Hype Cycle), I do believe that this is the next big area where consumer technology will make a real, positive difference to our everyday lives.

Jeremy Kemp. - Own work. The underlying concept was conceived by Gartner, Inc.
CC-BY-SA-3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0; Released under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Rather than going on at length around my thoughts on wearables in principle (though perhaps that’s something I will share in the future), I thought I’d take you through my own current set up. This year, for the first time, I think we’re seeing the emergence of wearables as truly useful, consumer-ready devices rather than merely interesting oddities, but they still seem to remain in the territory of the early adopter. A practical example of how they have improved (or, at least, changed) my day-to-day life seems more appealing and illustrative than a discussion of the theory.

My ‘personal area network’ is now made up of three wearable devices, slaved to my phone: my Pebble, my Jawbone UP24, and my LG Tone+ Bluetooth headset. This has grown up over the past month or so particularly in response to having a large phone. I’ve been curious to see the amount of interest it’s received, in sum and by parts, and that it has proved far more useful than I had originally envisioned.

The Pebble smart watch was Kickstarted last year and was, by all accounts, pretty good (the total amount raised at that link rather speaks for the demand...), but it only received the software update that really brought it up to spec earlier this year. The basic idea is simple: it’s a watch (with a bunch of changeable digital faces) which receives all the notifications that come to your phone. When a notification hits your phone, the Pebble lights up, vibrates, and shows some or all of whatever message you’ve received. Notably, it’s currently the only smartwatch that works with iPhones (upcoming 2015 products notwithstanding). It offers a lot more than that, including activity tracker displays, Evernote, vibrating alarms, music controls, and, as of last month, even step tracking through UP. It does most of these things very well, but the notifications aspect is where it really shines.

For some people, the idea of receiving notifications directly on their body is some sort of Borg-esque nightmare. Surely it’s invasive; a way of making our over-connected, over-distracted digital chains even more inescapable. I expected a little of that, but have actually found the opposite. While it might seem counter-intuitive, this more personal means of receiving notifications has actually untethered me a little from my phone, which now lives in a state of near-permanent silence and non-vibration.



Such a personal form of notification-delivery is actually, in my experience, less distracting. The act of checking a notification is changed from taking out your phone and looking it over to just glancing at your wrist. You can decide pretty quickly if it’s worth your time at that particular moment and dismiss it, or take action there and then. When in conversation, meetings, or the like, looking at your watch can still be a little rude, but far less so that glancing at your phone. If you’re expecting an important message or phone call, you know you’re not going to miss it, even if your phone is on silent and buried in a bag. In my flat, I can go one or two rooms over before the signal starts to get a little dicey, so even if I forget to bring my phone, I’ll still not miss what’s coming through.

The only downside right now is not being able to reply directly from the watch. That’s something that the Apple Watch will bring next year, but seemingly at the cost of battery life (I’m not sure those two factors are in strict trade-off against one another, but that’s where the Pebble has the edge—it can go a little over a week before needing a recharge).

The next device that you can see me wearing on a day-to-day basis is the LG Tone+ wireless Bluetooth headset. It is great; I was looking for a device to fulfil this function for a while, and I was finally inspired by @scubbo to properly look into one.

The Tone+ sits rests around your neck in a U-shape with slightly widened ends that house the controls and hold the earbuds, held in the tips by magnets. They’re never really invisible, but are at their least obtrusive when you’re wearing a shirt with a collar they can sit under. You can slip out the earbuds and be connected to a paired device in less than ten seconds.



The big thing for me has been having earphones you can quickly put on or take off with a minimum of fuss and cable-tangling. I’m a serial listener, and the ease of donning these has let me take advantage of downtime I wasn’t even fully aware of to press on with audiobooks and podcasts.

Stepping away from your desk to get some water or go to the loo? I would never bother wiring myself in with headphones just to fill those two minutes, but plugging into something that’s already around my neck makes it worthwhile. I can even leave my phone at my desk. Okay, so you’ll only get in a couple of minutes at a time, but if you’re doing that on every occasion, that’s a reasonable dent in what you’re listening to. Since it’s time you’re not using for anything that’s really productive anyway, it’s essentially ‘free’ time you’ve gained. You can even leave your phone on your desk.

The Tone+ is also a wireless headset, so you can take and make phone calls on it without ever taking your phone out of your pocket (the Pebble being a handy way of checking caller ID). If you’re invested enough in your Siri usage (other Personal Digital Assistants are available), you can accomplish all manner of small tasks without burying your head in your phone while out and about.

The last of my wearable devices doesn’t synergise quite so well as the other two, but I find it useful nonetheless.

My Jawbone UP24 tracks my steps and sleep through the day, sending them to my phone via Bluetooth. Honestly, this has less of an impact on my day-to-day, but I’m enough of a nerd to invest time in tracking these alongside my exercise and calorie intake.

I’m not going to argue that it’s a game-changer or worth the time investment if you’re not interested in that sort of thing, but I find that it’s an easy way to effect positive lifestyle changes. It’s certainly true that measuring or monitoring your own behaviour tends to change it, but tracking your food intake at the very least forces you to confront exactly what you’re eating (there’re how many calories in my Whale Lard Flavoured Crisps?!). It is a time investment to track this sort of thing full time, but there are apps and devices that make it easier. If nothing else, tracking these things periodically for two weeks at a time can be useful.

You on UP. Results not guaranteed.
Photo by BMclvr. License: CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
There has been enough convergence in the last year to make dedicated fitness trackers like the Jawbone Up less necessary. Pebble can now track these things, and iPhones can now track your steps as part of iOS8. I stick with my Jawbone, for a few reasons. Firstly, it’s a lot easier to wear all the time than my Pebble or iPhone, so you’re not missing steps because you don't want to carry a bigger device. Secondly, my rationale is that a dedicated device should, in theory, be better at tracking this sort of thing that devices that have had it enabled through software alone. I have no idea if that’s actually true, but it’s good enough for me.

There’s a paradox here—however much time I’m willing to put into experimenting with these sorts of things to make myself more productive, or my day-to-day life easier, the gains are offset by the time investment to get everything working ‘just right’. So, do me a favour, and if any of these things sound good to you, check them out, and let me know how you get on.

Do you use wearables? Does this sound crazy to you, or just crazy brilliant? Questions? Sound off in the comments below.

Pebble (other colours & Steel edition available)
LG Tone+ (other colours available)
Jawbone Up24 (other colours, sizes, and non-wireless edition available)

Thursday, 2 October 2014

Big Deal - the iPhone Six Plus

I've had my iPhone Six Plus for about two weeks now, and while I've been travelling throughout that time, meaning that my usage pattern has been atypical, it's been attracting a lot of attention everywhere I've been. People want to look at it, talk about it, hold it (yes, the phone) and know whether it lives up to the hype and if really is that big. And some smartarses want to know if I've bent it yet (spoiler warning: I haven't). 

So, even if I can't yet speak within the frame of reference of my normal day-to-day use, I have been travelling with it and working, so surely if it is all that unwieldy, that fact will have revealed itself by now. So here are my key takeaways, in brief (okay, so it didn't turn out that brief). 


Battery Life
This was one of the big draws of the Six Plus for me. The bigger physical body of the phone leaves space for a bigger battery, and while some of that extra power is needed to drive the higher resolution display, it is a net improvement over the Six. Having been on a multiple charges a day routine, I can now go the whole day with Bluetooth running and still have up to fifty percent left by the evening, depending on usage. This is how smartphones should be. 
Verdict: Great


Screen
This is, literally, the big one. It's nice, really nice, but it's not best feature of the phone right now. It looks amazing and having all this space on a device that fits in your pocket (and it does) is fantastic.

There are two big problems. The first one is psychological. I still use an iPhone 4s for work. I've never had problems with it before, but now it feels like driving a clown car. I have to hold it right up to my face, and the keyboard feels like garbage. I'm for the first time seriously considering consolidating my work and personal phones. 

The other is one of ecosystem. Because of the big resolution jump, a lot of apps just haven't caught up yet. I'm typing this in Evernote, which has that crisp, correctly sized look. But when I switch over to Google Chrome or a host of other apps, it zooms the screen to compensate for the older app, and it looks horrible. Sure, this will be fixed in time, but it's not nice for an out-of-the-gate experience, and doesn't really sell the larger-screen phone from the get-go.

Nice-looking, correctly-sized Evernote

Overzoomed Google



Verdict: minor gripes, but fundamentally great. 


Size
I hinted at this when talking about the screen. The phone feels big. People notice when you wap it out. At first. After about four days of use, it seemed normal; not uncomfortable to carry, not even noticeable in your pocket. It was a little clumsy to use one handed, but since I put a back case on it that provides more grip, it's much more comfortable (the sleek aluminium build is nice, but feels precariously slippery). 

That said, it's not necessarily for everyone. I have freakishly extensible thumbs and hands big enough to grip the phone and reach most areas. Someone with smaller hands will probably find the Six more suitable.
Verdict: I love it, but your mileage may vary. 


Camera
Awesome. Okay, so it's never going to be perfect in bad lighting, but apart from when I was taking photos at a concert (yeaahhhhh *rock fingers*), they've come out really sharp with very little effort. The Six Plus has Optical Image Stabilization for video, which is a nice plus (hah), but I'm not sure how often I'll find that coming into play. If you're buying a phone primarily for the camera, I'm sure there are better options out there, but this is the best iPhone for that, and a better all-round phone than most comparable ones.
Verdict: a solid improvement on an already decent phone camera.

I basically wanted a chance to use this picture. Shot hastily on the Six Plus

Worse lighting conditions. Decent, but much lower quality picture.


Keyboard
This was the biggest disappointment for me. I was hoping that the landscape keyboard with this big screen would have so much more to offer. As it is, it keeps the keys the same size, but adds a lot of buttons round the periphery. This is fine, in theory, but the layout is changed in some subtle and awkward ways. I feel like I could learn it and get some good use out of it, but I've found myself sticking with the portrait keyboard for the most part, which is really good. 

The introduction of third party keyboards is interesting, but has some issues. I was itching to try SwiftKey, and was determined to stick with it through the learning curve. That part was fine, but there were stability issues and slow loading times to launch the keyboard, which pretty much screws the whole thing when it comes to very short-fire inputs such as such terms. Waiting that extra second for at those times is really jarring. I'll try this approach again in a few months.
Verdict: disappointing 


Bending
This...isn't even a thing. Seriously. Some guy made a video where he really has to straaiiiin to bend it. It takes something like 90 pounds of force to bend these things - there are all sorts of things you can bend with that kind of force...

If your day-to-day activity involves risking that amount of force on your phone, get a rugged case for it, but, honestly, that kind of thing should be beyond regular operating parameters anyway. 
Verdict: seriously? 


The low-down: should you buy it?
If you're due for an upgrade and are after the larger and more powerful experience I've talked about, then sure, go for it! I absolutely love it. I've found myself able to use my phone for so much more (and seriously, typing on this thing is a huge step up). If you're less keen on those features, it's slightly harder. The Six is still a great phone, and that might be better (or you might find either too unwieldy for eat you want in a phone). 

If you're in doubt, I exhort you to go and grab hold of some in an Apple Store and try them out. The overwhelming reaction has been that it's not as big as people were expecting (*cough*), so you might be surprised.