I love productivity but I’m not being productive…why?

I started the night off by writing a post about why I wasn’t going to buy any new Apple products this year but I deleted it once I realized that there were more important things that I really should writing and working on (don’t include this post in what I’m saying). Over a week ago I felt a prompting to do something that I’ve always wanted and felt led to do. That’s start an organization with some of my fellow geeks and nerds that gave back to each of our own communities. What’s kept me from doing this so far? Well, lots of things. The easy answers are the obvious excuses of course: wife, kids, work and social responsibilities, but all of those things are the motivators for what the heart is of what I’m wanting to do. If you’re still reading this hang with me for a little bit longer. I picture myself, my wife, friends, artists, programmers and people of all kinds of talents, using those talents to not just teach what they know to someone else but to use the passion that keeps them doing it to maybe create that passion in someone else. You know, the people that are the same kind of different as me. I registered the domain nerdsgiveback.org and it’s my dream. I see awesome things happening through and from it but only from those willing. I’m willing. Really nervous, but willing.


They’re looking for Nemo

Ethan and Peyton are looking for Nemo! http://bit.ly/byz6PT


What really happened with Steve Jobs….

Alright, after talking to my sources and much research, I was able to find out what actually happened with Steve Job’s visit to Japan and this whole ninja shurikens business. Hopefully this puts all this nonsense to bed.


In The Stacks!

Here’s the link to the In The Stacks podcast that I got to be a part of last week!


WordPress Camp 2010 the play by play

Approx 8:30 a.m. Steven and I arrived to the conference after many turns on Bay St. Savannah is much too pretty to not get lost in.

8:45 a.m. We’re hanging out downstairs waiting on coffee.  I grabbed a tea (Passion) and people watch!

9:00 a.m. The “Keynote” begins. Co-Founder of WordPress, Matt Mullenweg (ma.tt) is talking. The projector doesn’t seem to be working, but he’s carrying the crowd very well.

Sites to check out:
Brazilian Ministry of culture
Kanye West (This one raised my eyebrows)
Express and Star – Newspaper
Wired.com
Wall street Journal Magazine
42Below (vodka)
Stop Design
Kodingen (web hosted IDE)
clouds365

9:45 a.m. We move downstairs to start the Developer track were the next speaker is Shayne Sanderson (9seeds.com, @shaynesanderson)

Shayne gave us a tutorial on PHP/CSS

10:13 a.m. Mark Jaquith – Writing your first Word Press plugin
Author URI: http://coveredwebservices.com/
http://txfx.net/s/3q

10:45 a.m. WordPress 3.0 (2010) – Matt Thomas
Design for today’s browsers
**(Make font size in apps at 16px)**
Use colors to make things easier to read

11:15 a.m. Sara Cannon – Customizing Themes/Child Themes
@saracannon
http://themeshaper.com/modify-wordpress-themes/
http://codex.wordpress.org/child_themes

11:55 a.m. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle Themes (Matt Mullenweg – Cofounder)
Facebook.com/matt.mullenweg
@photomatt

Noon – We break for lunch. Bar-B-Q, turnips, mac & cheese and beans with a few grapes. Being a nerd is the good life.

1:30 p.m. Automating Your Plugins with WP-Cron
Dan Cannon Nicasio Design @nicasiodesign
Using Cron jobs to handle schedules
http://codex.wordpress.org/Main_Page
WebCron.org (site will ping the site for you)

2:00 p.m. Contributing to WordPress
Andrew Nacin @nacin

2:30 p.m. Daryl Koopersmith on jQuery
@darylkoop
darylkoop.com

We got a pretty nice bag of swag too, my first! I’ll be sporting my wordpress t-shirt tomorrow for the ride home, with pictures to follow. All in all, I had a great time at my first developer conference. Special thanks to my buddy Steven Miller, the yoda of social media (@agentsmiller) for inviting me down! I’ll definitely be back next year.


You kids stay off my phone!

Smart Lock gives parents the ability to “lock” certain apps on their phone, while at the same time quite possibly locking the parents out as well. Just kidding on that last part.


Google sticking it to Apple? Or the other way around?

Gizmodo seems to think so…

By the Numbers

Down to Earth


Long over due iPad review!

A few months ago, I posted a blog with my “I’ll happily give Apple my $600 dollars if the iPad is this…”  wish list. The list was small because I honestly had high intentions of the product that Apple would release. I’ll say that I haven’t been disappointed at all, with the reasons coming later. So, about a month and a half into owing an iPad, what are Joel’s thoughts? Well, I’ll start by telling you guys what I actually use my iPad for besides watching The Big Bang Theory and Office Space.

1. Productivity

I’d be lying if I said I solely bought the iPad to use it as a productivity machine. However, using applications such as Evernote paired with a stand (twelve south’s Book Arc) and a bluetooth keyboard, the iPad transforms into a netbook/laptop hybrid. Those combination of accessories alone are enough to sell me on the device but add to that the fact that I presently am without a laptop and I’m quickly finding that I really don’t need a laptop to be mobile.

As a person that is trying to get a consulting company off the ground, I’m learning that using the iPad as a business tool is super easy. With the iPad, I’ve been able to do demos of software we’ve written using Citrix’s GoToMeeting, which allows clients the ability to see my screen and vice versa. That is huge for me, huge! Apple themselves offer a suite of productivity apps branded with their known iWork programs, though I haven’t used them personally. I’ll say this about everything that I point out in this review, once developers have more time to really focus on apps for this thing, the sky is the limit. Revision 2, year 2 will be the real indicator of where it stands.

2. Entertainment

The first apps that I downloaded the day the iPad came out was the ABC and Netflix video players. What these two companies have done is hit homeruns on what video on mobile devices should be like. The quality of video on both players is stunning, though the Netflix app does decrease quality based off of your network connection, which is understandable. Watching Lost and Modern Family while doing anything at home or being anywhere in range of WI-FI is awesome. Did I mention the quality is great?!?

Now those are third party apps, so what about the apps that come pre-installed on the device? Just like using the aforementioned video apps, Apple has done an excellent job with their Videos player. I’ve personally encoded all of my videos into 1080p H.264 rips scaled down to 1024×576 resolution. For those that don’t understand last sentence, it basically means that the videos that I’m syncing with my iPad are of the highest quality that it’ll allow.

Next are books. Apple really should have just built their Books app into the iPad directly (though it is in a way) without having to download it, but I’m guessing the reason for doing this was to brag about the number of users that did download it. Ok, off that soapbox and onto the actual experience. Back in February, I bought Rebecca a Nook for her birthday and a few days later I bought one for myself because it was so easy to use and read on. Then the iPad came out. Now, the Nook is still a great E-book reader but reading on it isn’t fun. The UI (user experience) for the iPad is pretty incredible but add the new forms of content that publishers are putting into traditional books and you have something completely new in your hands. I was afraid that reading on an LCD screen with be difficult on my eyes but that isn’t the case at all. One drawback however is weight. The iPad comes in at 1.5lbs and after reading for an hour or so, you will start to feel the “nerd burn” in your forearms if you’re holding it up. I grant all of you permission to use nerd burn also, enjoy.

Last but not least are games. Like I said at the end of number 1, this is a first gen device at a still, very early stage. Developers have already put out some amazing apps but my hope for gaming on the iPad is in the future of what we will see. I’ve played some RPG’s (role playing games), bowling, air hockey and others and all of them are nice. A quick note of some of my favorites are, 10 Pin Shuffle (bowling), Dragon – The Bruce Lee Story (think Tekken but with BRUCE LEE!!!) and Scrabble. The latter is probably my most played. The guys who published it really understood the potential of the iPad and the game is gorgeous.

3. Social Media/Web Content

This post is getting long so I wanted to combine these two. Like I said in books, reading on the iPad is a treat. So often, I would graze over articles on my iPhone or save them to Instapaper to read later when I was in front of my desktop due to the size of the iPhone’s screen. That’s not the case any longer. I’m tempted to say that the screen size on the iPad is perfect but that would make me sound like a fanboy and you all know that isn’t true. However, if it isn’t perfect, it’s very close. I find myself reading A LOT more than I use to. Most of the popular newspapers (USA Today, NY Times, Wall Street Journal) are still free in the app store and using them are a piece of cake.

True to the rumors, you don’t get the full web on the iPad and any Mac Head that disagrees is an idiot. The absence of Adobe’s flash is a big disappoint (I would really like HULU) but from experience, flash is slow and buggy and it causes Safari on my iMac to lock up too many times to ever say a nice word about it. If polled, a lot of people would say that no flash on a device is a deal breaker. To them I say, well don’t buy it then. No one is twisting anyone’s arm to spend $500 – $830 if they choose not to. Boy that felt good to say. Ok, so as far as social media goes, Twitter is a big winner. There are some really good twitter clients available in the app store and they work very well. I personally use Twitterific & TweetDeck as I was use to both of them on the iPhone. There isn’t a true app for Facebook yet, but the web version works great for me, though some may complain over not having Facebook’s chat.

Those are really my main focus points and what I use my iPad for daily. I opted for the WI-FI version because I felt that an extra $30 on top of my already expensive iPhone plan wasn’t worth it. I sit in front of a computer all day, so information is readily there when I choose to get it. There are those however, that have commutes on buses or in carpools that would benefit more from having 3G wherever they are. Another point not to be excluded is how amazing the battery life is. (Did I end that sentence with a preposition?!?) The battery in the iPad is a huge win for Apple. There have been spans of days, with normal to heavy use, that I’ve gone without charges. It really is reasons like the battery, portability, user interface/experience and content that shows why Apple has already sold over a million iPads.

And my stock keeps going up too 🙂


The iPad Will Rule the World…I Think

I’m starting to come around on the iPad. Don’t ask me for a list of reasons right now because I don’t have them until I can get my physical hands on one, but I’m beginning to believe that a tablet with this type of interface will be the standard of how people use personal computers. The following article is a great read, though, if you’re an Apple fanboy, like I am sometimes accused of being, you will need to look at it from a purely ease of use standpoint. I can honestly see this replacing the need for multiple computers in a family home based off what the average user uses a computer for.


I’ll go to YOUR meeting!

Yesterday I had a web demo for a software application that I’m currently working on for a new client. I’ve never done a web demo before but in one of my favorite podcasts, MacBreak Weekly, Leo Laporte recommends the software package, goto my pc. I thought I’d give it a try, so i signed up for gotoMeeting and it worked awesomely. I have a month for the trial so hopefully I’ll get to use it a few more times but it just may be one of my yearly software purchases.