Saturday, December 12, 2009

Emerging Technologies Presentation

First, I would like to commend everyone on a superb job for our last project! I saw some really cool technologies that people found and I would say walking around to each presentation Friday was really interesting. There were incredibly medical advancements, like a bionic arm that moves itself naturally like a real arm. There was Twitter for toddlers, called Twoddler. This technology was a little odd to think about. The child has a board that they play with and what they decide to play with indicates the twitter message they send. So if they press on the picture of their mom, their Twoddler is updated to say, "[Insert name] misses their mom!" Another person presented on a 3D laptop! She made it sound like it was pretty exciting for avid gamers because it would completely revolutionize how people game online, but it is a pretty incredible technological advancement in itself. You have 3D glasses that you put on and your screen instantly becomes 3D-pretty standard. The cool thing is that when you take off the glasses you do not have the blue and red fuzzy lines that you usually would with a 3D screen. The laptop looks and operates like a normal laptop. My favorite technology that I saw was the bluetooth spying tool. The bluetooth set it so small you do not even notice it in a person's ear. This spy tool has a two way radio so you can hear what your other party is saying, but talk back to them as well. The girl presenting used the example of going on a blind date. Have the spy tool in your ear and your friends can tell you what to say and, if you want to, you can talk back to them. Your date will be none the wiser!

Apple TV

For my final project in Com 435, I decided to choose the Apple TV as my technology. Apple TV sparked my interest when my younger brother told me about how it was number one on his Christmas list. He commuted to high school everyday and as a result had a bunch of movies, television shows, and music videos on his iPod that he would watch on the train. The only place he could watch these movies were on his iPod or on his computer, but if he wanted to watch them anywhere else or share them with anyone else he couldn't. Then Apple devised Apple TV to solve this problem. Even though my little brother will have to wait a little bit until the price of Apple TV goes down, the idea of Apple TV is very cool! Apple TV looks similar to a tiny cable box and only needs an HDMI cable cord to hook into the box and the TV to work. It works with Ethernet or Wifi to give you access to iTunes, Youtube, Flickr, or your Mobileme on your television. You can rent or buy movies on demand or access your library of movies from iTunes. If you plug in the Apple TV into your computer, as you would your iPod, you can sync it up to work like an external hard drive to save all your media from your Mac onto Apple TV. If you have an iPhone or iPod touch you can download the Remote app to control your Apple TV. This Remote app even allows you to control say your iTunes from anywhere in your house! This technology is an example of convergence of technologies. Internet, television, and computer are all converging into one technology to give the viewer more control over what they watch. Will Apple TV affect the business of Cable, Satellite, and normal television stations programming? It might have a slight affect, but television providers should not be too worried. The fact that people have to pay to watch their shows does give free television programming and DVR an advantage. But Apple always seems to find a way to revolutionize technology, especially their own, so only time will tell!

Presenting...The Magic Mouse

Sometimes there are some technologies that no one thinks of needing improvement. How can you revolutionize something like a mouse? Who was even thinking that it needed to be revolutionized? Apple was thinking! If you are familiar with the touch screen capabilities of an iPhone then you can imagine what the new Magic Mouse is like to control. It is not necessarily that the new Magic Mouse has new options that you cannot find with an ordinary mouse. The Magic Mouse just makes all the movements and options of a regular computer mouse easier and quicker. So what can it do? Well you can right click and left click by just tapping or clicking on the right and left side of the mouse. The updated capabilities come when you scroll or sift through things on your desktop. Scrolling on the new Magic Mouse just takes two fingers and a swipe down or across the mouse. No clicking furiously to get to the bottom or side of an article. If you can't see something clearly, the Magic Mouse allows you to enlarge the image. People raving about this mouse say that the controls just feel more natural and that it is easier to manipulate than a regular mouse. Below is the link to the Apple website and to a video of what the mouse does. Check it out!


http://www.apple.com/magicmouse/

iPhone's Apps That Aid Geocaching

Remember earlier in the semester when we completed the geocaching activity? We were told to bring in any technology-laptop, phone, camera-to record our findings and to help in our findings. Well if you're a fan of convergence and lightweight technology, then for the geocaching you should have just downloaded some iPhone apps to help you search for the clues. Two ways to track where you were going and to let the lead reporters know where you were going are by using the MotionX GPS app or the Trails app. MotionX GPS tracks the route that you take and records the amount of time you've been walking, how fast, and how far. If you chart your course and then export it using the Trails app, the lead reporters could see what course you took and follow you. If you want something a bit quicker to keep the reporters in the loop, you could use the Maps app. You find your location on a map, tap it, and then send it to whoever you need to and they instantly know your location. This is probably the most interesting, creative app I have seen. Think about not only the geocaching activity, but also the amount of time you will not waste with calling and texting your location. Someone could find you instantly and avoid the confusion and stress of questions like, "Where are you?!" or "Is there any signs around you?" The iPhone has apps for taking notes, voice recordings, and shooting video if you needed some other aids in your search. The last app, however, would be best overall, I think, for this activity (not to mention it's incredible that a phone can actually have this capability). It is a 360* panoramic camera app. Snap away in a full circle and then use the Panorama app. It will take these images and mesh them together to make one full image! So instead of lugging around a laptop or just texting and picture messaging back and forth with the lead reporter, you could have just brought your iPhone to give the lead reporter a full range of information about your location and the location of the clues.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

iPhone Offers Opportunity

I remember specifically from speaker Ron Companelli presentation a comparison between our time and when he graduated from college. He was facing a bad economy with a high unemployment rate when he graduated from college. He said that in these times comes the best innovations. If you are looking for an opportunity and have a great idea for something that you think people need, perhaps check out apple.com and their step by step instructions on how to create iPhone apps. They even have an iPhone Developer Program, taking web 2.0 to a whole new level. The consumers can control the product. Apple also has a video on their which is posted below that gives the stories of all of the iPhone app creators. Notice that all of them are not Apple employees, but still are creating work for themselves through Apple.

iPhone app creators' stories:
http://developer.apple.com/profiles/

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Go to Class at Stanford With the Help of Apple

Ever since the success of the Apple iPhone and their apps, Apple has surreptitiously started a program that universities can apply to that will give them license to teach an iPhone app making class. An article from USAToday. com, says that many universities are participating in this Apple program, but remain unknown because Apple will not comment. Two known universities to have the class are Stanford and NJIT. The Stanford app making class is the most famous of the two universities not only because two Apple engineers are the professors, but also because their classes are being videotaped and uploaded to iTunes, available free to view on iTunes. To look at this from a marketing standpoint, this is a brilliant move by Apple. This class is a low cost advertisement for the iPhone and its apps. Those who take the class will generate buzz, a free and most efficient way to advertise, on their campus. Apple, whether out of the goodness of their hearts or the minds of their marketers, are helping out college students and possible future entrepreneurs by teaching them how to make an app and giving them the opportunity to make money from those apps. If you are on iTunes U look up Stanford University: iPhone Application Programming.

USA Today article on iPhone app making courses:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2009-07-20-iphoneapps_N.htm


Thursday, October 15, 2009

iPhone Apps for the Parental Demographic

For probably all of Com 435 students, being a parent is five (Ok, ten) years away. But I found all of the options for parents out there on their iPhone to be incredibly fascinating. If you have younger brothers and sisters or took that nanny job for the summer, here are a few options for you.

The doctor's office is notorious for long waits and long delays. Those books and magazines in the waiting room seem to scream germs and disease. The Kindle app will download children's books, chapter books, and for the arms folded, anxious tween, Twilight. Read them while you are waiting. Use the white board application to allow kids to draw without making a mess. If the children are preoccupied, moms can use Remember the Milk to make and manage a to do list while they wait.

If you decide to treat your kids to a food or a day out, there's an app for that. GoodFoodNearYou just need a zip code or current location to be able to direct you to the nearest health restaurant options in the area. For the more indecisive of families, Allrecipes.com has an app that let's you choose what ingredients you have and the amount of time you have to prepare your meal, then shake your phone, and it will spit out a recipe for you. The same idea applies for Kidtivities. Kidtivities gives suggestions for indoor and outdoor activities for children and directs you to places that will be kid friendly.

Finally, for the new parents of today, there's an app for you. If you forgot your baby monitor at home, place your phone near your sleeping baby. When the baby wakes up, your iPhone will call the phone number you choose to alert you. The iPhone has a number of teaching tools for toddlers who are just learning simple math, reading, and even sign language. And just in case your little one throws a tantrum in the middle of the supermarket or won't try vegetables, iPhone will give you the advice you need. There is an app to give on the spot parenting advice when it comes to preschoolers.

The Microsoft Surface the table top iPhone?

It is funny to think that years ago if you had a Mac you were considered a chump. Microsoft reigned supreme in the PC dominated world. Now, Microsoft is seeing a decline in their financial earnings and aren't making news headlines with many innovations. The revamping of Macintosh's company and the creation of iPods and iPhones has certainly catapulted the company into the technological media spotlight. But two years ago, billions of years ago in technology terms, Microsoft sounded like they were really on to something. It seemed like they had created a product that might revolutionize the way we dine and shop. In 2007, Microsoft Surface previewed its innovation.

When a friend of mine chose Microsoft Surface as the topic of her Com 114 speech, I was enthralled. What a cool invention! Microsoft Surface was a table top computer with multi-touchpoints. You could lay your credit card on the table at a restaurant and pay your bill. Or for the stingy who hate to split a bill in half, you could lay everyone's credit card on the table. If you had the cheesecake and the steak dinner, tiny pictures would come up from your digitilized bill and you could drag those pictures to your card, allowing your friends to deduct what food was their own. You could lay a digital camera on the Surface and watch as it spit out all of the pictures on your memory card. You could share pictures with friends or send them off to relatives with a message on the back. The Surface could allow bar and restaurant patrons to play games or put their glass of wine on the table and have the Surface say what dish would compliment it. There seemed to be a million things you could do with the Surface. In the beginning only retail stores, restaurants, and hotels bought the $10,000 Surface to use. Then, the hype about this new product seemed to fade away. Who wants a $10,000 interactive table when they could buy a computer for less than half that?

Then Macintosh's iPhone took off like wildfire. People were willing to be a still expensive, but more reasonable, $600 for basically the phone version of the Surface. Of course, there are pros to the Surface and some capabilities it has that iPhone hasn't developed yet (I mean will we ever be able to rest a wine glass on an iPhone to hear what dish would go best with it?). But, there are too many cons when weighed against the iPhone. It might be comforting for Microsoft to know that Macintosh was in their same shoes years ago and now look at them! We'll see what Microsoft innovators come up with next to combat the Macintosh empire.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Zipcars? Of course there's an app for that!

Walking down my street in Chicago I saw a curious sign for a zipcar. My brother explained its basically a car borrowing program that started in Boston and is now expanding to major cities across the country. Had I been in West Lafayette too long? This seemed to be the most original idea I had heard in a very long time.

So how does this all work? If you go to the zipcar website they break it all down in four steps. First, you join. There are a couple of payment plans you can choose from depending how frequent of a user you will be of the cars. Gas, the first 180 miles, insurance, and parking is all free for the user. The first question people may ask at this point is, "Is this really cheaper than buying a car?" In the city? It's incredibly cheaper. Living in the city makes everything from groceries to movies to gyms within a block or two from your place. With cabs, trains, and buses all circulating the city, there is no need to have a car to get from place to place. If you needed to go visit your sister in the suburbs or want to go on a road trip somewhere outside of the city, just get a zipcar and return it when you are done. No having to buy your own car for those few trips out of the city. No having to drive around your block for hours waiting for a parking space on the street to open up.

What about those who have cars and a parking space in their building? They are the lucky city dwellers, but not by much. The average parking space in buildings are $30,000. Yes, there are four zeroes. Did I mention you pay taxes on that spot, too? A parking space is its own form of real estate in the city! A zipcar sounds expensive at about 60$ a day with an annual fee of 50$, but its actually a bargain. You won't have to use the car everyday and even if you did, its cheaper than buying a car, buying a parking space, and paying for insurance and gas.

So what is the next step after joining on the zipcar website? You receive your zipcar card and then decide when you want to use it. When you decide you need a car, simply reserve the car of your choice online or over the phone. Here is where your iPhone comes in! The zipcar app is just as novel of an idea as the zipcar. Your iPhone can check the availability of the car you want to drive. It can show, make, or extend your reservation. Your iPhone even turns into the car keys, unlocking and locking the doors or honking the horn in case you cannot find your zipcar in a crowded parking garage.

Take your card for your zipcar and hold it to the windshield. The doors unlock and you are free to drive your car until your reservation end time. Then simply return the car to its space. Gas and insurance included! If you live in the city, check out this option for a car. If you are visiting a city, check the rates of a rental to zipcars. I guarantee paying 7$ an hour to drive the car around the city and then returning it is much cheaper and less stressful than paying for a car rental fee, looking for parking, and then paying for that on top of it (An hour in a Chicago parking garage=23$!)

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Is the iPhone the new laptop? The new digital camera?

A comment to my first post raised a great question. With the iPhone's extensive library of apps that can really do anything, will there be a need to lug around your laptop or digital camera? If you are driving and decide to get something to eat, there's an app to find a restaurant. If you are lost, your iPhone has GPS or you can mapquest. If you forgot your camera, you can use your iPhone to take a picture, edit it, and save it or send it. Your iPhone can send and receive email, allow you to read a book, and surf the web. So is there a need for your bulky laptop or your digital camera?

In my opinion, iPhone, as impressive its capabilities are, will not phase out laptops or cameras. While cameras are the closest to being replaced by iPhone, they have two saving graces. The first is that the camera quality on an iPhone does not quite match the quality of a digital camera. The second is that not everyone is an iPhone user who has the capabilities of taking pictures you can edit and email. Laptops are nowhere close to being pushed aside for the iPhone. The iPhone has all the capabilities of a laptop and is lighter and more compact. But there lies its flaw when compared to a laptop. If you had a five page paper due would you want to be typing it out on the tiny iPhone screen with a keyboard that is sometimes hard to just text with? Would you want to read all of your articles online by expanding the screen and moving it back and forth multiple times for each line you read? You cannot edit movies on an iPhone. Downloading things can get pretty difficult, especially if its a .zip file. There is no place to plug in your jump drive to transfer a document from your iPhone to your jump drive. The last saving grace for a laptop is simply not all laptop users have an iPhone.

So while that iPhone has an app for almost anything, it seems, I do not think it is anything for manufacturers of laptops and digital cameras to worry about. Are less people taking their laptop to Starbucks and to campus when they have an iPhone? Probably. But I would not start thinking of the iPhone as the omniscient, omnipotent piece of technology.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Musicians. There's an app for that...

As a musician, I found it quite an inconvenience that my Baby Grand piano and guitar took up too much space in my cramped living quarters at college. Even though the iPhone music apps cannot count as a complete substitute for the real instruments, I was pleasantly surprised at how vast the choices were for those without instruments at their disposal.

For those who want to practice or mess around on an instrument of their choice, they can download the app for it! Pianist is an iPhone app with the full keyboard (that's all 52 white keys and all 36 black keys) that even includes the three pedals for softening and sustaining notes. You can play around on the keyboard or compose a piano piece all on your phone. There is also the Pocket Guitar app, if you are a guitarist. This is includes all six strings, so you can strum away without the nasty blisters. If you need a refresher on chords, download the Guitar tool kit. It will show you any chord variation you need to learn or need to be reminded of. You can even set your phone on your desk and have it become your portable metronome, tuner, or recorder. The one downside of these instruments on your phone is that they are harder to manipulate than a real instrument. However, anyone who plays an instrument knows how addicting it can be to play. Any instrument, even a electronic substitute, will do. Also, if inspiration for a song comes into your head at any point in time, you can record it on the spot instead of forgetting it later.

But for those music lovers who do not play an instrument, there are apps for you, too. Pandora.com is quickly becoming a cheap college students favorite website for free music, and the iPhone was quick to notice. Download the Pandora app and listen and create your stations from anywhere to listen wherever you are. However, I think the most ingenious app was created for those who always ask, "Who sings this?" Put your iPhone up to a speaker when you hear that new song you can't get out of your head, but still don't know the artist or title and Shazam will identify the song, artist, and allow you to download it from the iTunes store. Did I mention Shazam is a free app?

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Did you know there's an app for that?

A cellphone that costs from $499-599 with a cellphone bill that could range from $59.99 to $99.99 a month does not seem to be worth it. What is so unique about the iPhone? Why does it seem to reign supreme amongst cellphones? Why is it the envy of every cellphone user? Why are there hits on the web for iPhone application development workshops that cost $1200 to attend?
It all goes back to the iPhone tag line, "There's an app for that". The next few weeks I will be highlighting what iPhone apps there are, what they can do, and how you can actually profit from developing an app. Hopefully, these postings will give you a better understanding of why some people will spend the money for an iPhone and why it may not be such a bad investment after all.