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iPhone OS 3.0 Review

June 14th, 2009 Calibration263 1 comment

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So, apple is releasing iPhone OS3 to the masses in the days, June 3rd. Luckily for anyone who already has an iphone, the GM seed released at WWDC last monday didn’t require the user to verify they were a paid developer. This means anyone with an iPhone and a bittorent client was able to get ahold of it a little over a week early. I’ve been playing with it for almost a week now. Apple announced OS3 and most of it’s features at a keynote in March. There were not giant new features added at the WWDC announcement,  so anyone following apple news isn’t in for any huge surprises. There are said to be about 100 new features and tweaks added to the phone, which all add up to make using the phone somewhat easier and make the entire experience that much more fluid. While these small changes help you to appreciate your phone that much more, until AT&T enables features like MMS and tethering, there have only been a couple of features which have really stood out for me.

First thing I did after installing the new OS was check out the all new “spotlight search”.  Sometime in the run of OS2 apple realized the sheer number of apps people were downloading, and how many pages this took up on our phone. For any of us with the cash or care to download all the featured apps, you’d have to flick about 20 times from your last page of apps, so you could get back to your email, texts, or weather. This unforeseen problem hadn’t been accounted for in the initial design of the OS, so apple gave it a quick fix, tap the home button from any of your hundreds of pages of apps, and it’ll bring you all the way back to the first page. Well now, once you’ve made it to that front page, you can tap it again, and it’ll bring you to a page left of there, where you’ll find spotlight. As well you can flick left in order to reach it. Getting back to your app filled pages works pretty much the same. Either flick the spotlight search left, or press the home button and you’ll find yourself on the main page again.

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So, what do i love about spotlight search? Well, it means you  can now find anything on your  phone, from a single place.  This means no  more flicking through hundreds of apps,  simply type  the app you want, and it’ll show up. Spotlight  search will check your contacts, apps, emails,  music, calender events, as well as notes. For your  contacts, you simply type in the name you’d  like, tap the  name and it brings you to the contact page. For emails it  checks both the sender, as  well as the email title. Music can  be searched by artist title, or album. Calender events by  location  or title.  Notes will be scanned for all their included  text, and obviously apps by their name.

I found spotlight to be highly usable. I was expecting some lag while it checked through my  content, but in almost all cases it was instant. There are times when at first 5 songs pop up, then  less then a second later it shows up with acontact under that, but normally by the time you are  done typing what you want, it’s done finding and displaying all your results.

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This feature is great for anyone who is carrying tons of  content in their pocket. Personally, most  of  the emails,  contacts, or apps i need to access are at the top of my inbox,  on my favorites list, or  on  the second page of apps. But there  have come times when i need to call some one obscure, and    simply flicking left and typing a name has been much quicker  then flicking through my phone    book. Also, I’m sure  once I’m back in school, being able to look up a event like  when an essay is  due, will be a huge time saver.

Apple also integrated this search feature directly into each of  their respective apps. so mail, contacts, and the iPod all have  search functions built in. Simply scroll all the way to the top  of the app and a little search bar appears for your queries. It  works the same way as the spotlight search, but will only  show you content within that app, for any of you who have  more then 10 people with the same name, that happens to  the song title you’re looking for, and those contacts keep  getting in the way on spotlight.

The next largest and most helpful feature i found was cut copy, and paste. This is something everyone was asking why it was missing 2 years ago when the first iphone was announced. Even after only a week i’ve found myself using this countless times, especially web browsing, or sending links to people in aim.

So how does it work? Well this is somewhat confusing. In some apps you just douple tap what you want, but in things like safari where the douple tap gesture is already in use, you press and hold over what you want to copy. Holding to copy works anywhere though, so it’s probably your best bet.

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  • Hold what you want to copy
  • Move the blue dots to the left or right
  • A magnifying glass appears showing you the text you’re selecting
  • If you select a large area, a box appears highlighting the entire text area
  • You can then expand and copy other areas as well
  • Simply tap copy, and go where you want to paste it

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I have found copy a little finicky at times though. It doesn’t as far as i can tell, yet work in 3rd party apps (although once OS3 is officially out, and theIMG_0348 developers release updated apps for it, I’m sure they will), and sometimes it selects a box, rather then line of text or a word. Also in safari, like when you double tap a link, it doesn’t get all of it, same with copy. You will have to grab the blue dot and pull it over the entire URL you want. Also if it does for some reason decide you want to select a text box, i haven’t found a way to make that box into the in line copy. I am sure that all these bugs will slowly be worked out, and the entire experience made more fluid over time, and I’m sure eventually I’ll learn why Safari is selecting a box rather then inline text, but it is somewhat disheartening that i waited 2 years for copy and paste and it isn’t completely perfect.

While copy may have its bugs, paste seems to work pretty flawlessly. Third party app, texting, email, urls, google search, web pages, it doesn’t matter where you are on your phone, or where you have been, or how long it was since your last copy. No matter what text box you happen to find yourself in, just give it a double tap, or a tap and hold, and a little black bubble appear with the magic words paste, and you’re done.

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You can also copy images with a press and hold. Although unlike copying text, a myriad of options pop-up. This solution is far less elegant then the text based copy, although in my demonstration image it also has a hyperlink, which also is why there are 4, rather then 2 options. Also, you can’t just past a picture into any old text box, once MMS is up you can put them there. I’m sure third party developers will also open up this ability on their apps, as well you can do it in emails. But honesty, copying images is something i have yet to have found a use for myself, but it is nice to know i can.

The last thing to talk about in the realm of copy and paste is copying texts. As you may know OS3 allows you to delete or foreword individual texts, and with copy and past you can also, well, copy and past texts. The problem here is that you have to copy the whole text. Double clicking, or the press and hold technique, turns the green or grey text bubble blue, and pops up the black “copy” bubble. There’s currently no way to copy just a snippet of the text, which means copying the whole thing, pasting it, and deleting what you don’t want, which is rather annoying when you get a long text and only want a part of it.

While cut and paste definitely still has quirks, and things which should be improved, as a whole it’s very usable and intuitive, and i welcome it to finally be arriving on the iphone.

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One other feature that people have been asking for for a long time is the horizontal keyboard. Although this has been available in safari for some time now, they finally have put it into text heavy applications like notes, email, and texting. Personally I am in love with the iphones portrait keyboard and of coarse played with it in horizontal mode every now and then in safari. Before OS3 i never liked it, it’s more spaced out, but that just means i had to move my thumbs further to reach keys. After spending hours and thousands of characters each week texting on the portrait keyboard, landscape just felt large and awkward. I think the real problem wasn’t so much the keyboard, as it’s uses though. While texting or emailing, we sometimes send lengthy messages, the web browser often only required 2-3 letters before the address you wanted showed up. Since you open the app vertically, it just took longer to turn your phone, wait for it to orient, and type in a url, when you could type it, and let it orient while whatever you want loads. But now that it’s in texting, i’ve found myself using it more. I still find if I’m busy, or only have one spare hand for texting, or just need to throw a quick reply out, keeping it in portrait seems to be a lot easier. Also since the portrait keyboard is smaller, i find that i can still type quite a bit quicker on it, but not as accurately. If i want to have a important conversation with some one, possibly using words my keyboard won’t recognize, since i don’t use them as much, being able to type on a larger keyboard where i’ve found i almost never will make a mistake, is very useful. As well, the landscape keyboard takes up much more screen real-estate, and doesn’t allow you to view as much above the keyboard. I don’t think the landscape keyboard will ever completely replace the portrait keyboard, but that’s the great thing, it doesn’t have to. I find that both orientations offer different uses, and are just as nice in their own ways. Being able to have both a large keyboard for accuracy, or a small one i can use one handed, or more quickly without re-orienting my phone, is a huge plus, and i think an area where the iphone is one of the few phones that give you this option.

While there are definitely other features then what I’ve talked about, I’ve found these to be the most noticeable and exciting to the user. There are also tons of other small upgrades such as stereo bluetooth, tethering, MMS, hardware encryption, youtube accounts, and auto-fill, I either was unable to use them (stupid first gen iphone), they were unavailable yet on my carrier (stupid AT&T), or they just didn’t excite me as much as the features i did talk about. Also with the new 3GS coming out, things like video recording, voice activation, a compass, and many others are going to be add which will hopefully give OS3 a new feel, rather then just feeling like a slightly better version of OS3.

The last, and largest thing i do believe about OS3 is what the future is going to provide. Firstly, OS3 enables a brand new level of power, and tools for the developer to create amazing and great looking 3D apps. As well it should be a lot faster and smoother. The change that 3G users are going to notice though will be the 1000+ API’s developers have been given. With all these new API’s developers are going to be able to create better more useful apps for the user, one of which being a turn by turn navigation by tom tom. Another feature they will allow are going to be push notifications. Not being a developer myself, there were no apps around which had this built in for my to play with, but it sounds exciting. I think the last, and largest improvement which will change how we use our phones, is the ability to build apps which will talk directly with accessories over bluetooth or the 30 pin connector. This means that companies can build any device imaginable, and allow it to be controlled using your iphone. I think that these new API’s are what are going to create a brand new OS for the iPhone. It won’t be so much what your iphone can do, but rather what you can do with your iPhone.

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T-Mobile Shadow Review

June 12th, 2009 Jordan No comments

T-Mobile Shadow

T-Mobile Shadow

I’ve had my Shadow for well over a year now and I’m finally making a review of it. For starters, it’s a quality phone for the price. I bought it off Ebay long ago for $200. It’s been through a lot (including being dropped a few times on concrete and water splashed on it) but still in great condition.

T-Mobile ShadowThe outside is pretty slick looking and can almost pass for a touch screen as the screen is so large. It has buttons on the front so one can use the phone without sliding out the bottom and making it 30% longer. The wheel on the front is the only thing that doesn’t feel quality made. It has no friction and no stopping points, so you don’t know how far you are from say, going to the next picture or the picture before. This also doesn’t help as sometimes I touch it lightly and screws up whatever I was doing.

The charger port is also somewhat of a pain as there is a rubber cover on it. To plug it in, it requires one hand holding the phone while holding back the cover perfectly at the same time. If it is twisted, the charger won’t plug in all the way.

There are 3 little blinking lights on the front next to the earpiece. One yellow light flashes all the time, one flash every 3 seconds, to tell you if it is has reception. Another yellow light flashes once every 6 seconds if it is connected to wifi. And a blue light flahes if it is connected to bluetooth. This is both very annoying and distracting as one can easily slide open the phone quickly and check if it is connected to anything.

Micro SD card

Micro SD card

For the hardware, the processor is very slow and can’t multitask very well. I have a program that can overclock the processor which improves responsiveness and multitasking by a very noticable amount from the default 200Mhz to 240Mhz. I’d rather not try past that in fear of killing the processor. The battery doesn’t even last that long as it is. With full charge and constant use of texting and wifi, it will last about 7 hours. Without touching the phone on a full charge will get it to last about 2 days. The Shadow carries 128MB of RAM which is sufficient for multitasking and internet browsing. However, like I mentioned before, the processor is the bottleneck. It also has 256MB of flash memory, where it doesn’t sound like much, is more than enough to hold any third party programs and settings. If you take a lot of pictures and carry music, I would suggest to invest in a little 2GB microSD card (which is the max storage allowed on the Shadow). I still can’t get over how small these are as they can hold several GB. This is also a disadvantage as the microSD card slot is spring loaded. I’ve had this happen to me several times where I was using my nail to push the card in when it slipped and the chip sprung out and flew a few feet.

Now finally for the software. The software on this phone is just terrible. There are so many bugs and internet explorer on it is the worst thing I’ve ever used. Sure, the home screen was custom made for this phone, but I don’t think the developers spent very much time importing and adjusting the settings on it.You can check this bug out where the home screen and options disappear which happens randomly. I can access everything I need from the start menu as well, but the fact that it bugs like this leaves a sour taste in my mouth.

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T-Mobile Shadow Bug

I’m using a mobile browser called Skyfire. It is a very light program with many features and is gaining popularity quickly. I’ve also recently discovered my phone supports Flash pretty well through use of Skyfire. What I do like about the Shadow is that it has many features. It is also very customizable through its registry which can be edited through third party software. All in all, it is a great phone but is being outdated quickly. I’m leaning towards full touch screen as my next phone.

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Half-Life mini-Review

June 10th, 2009 Jordan No comments

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So I’ve been playing the original Half-Life game along with Opposing Force and Blue Shift for the story. Now these games came out around 1998. But wow, now I know why it has received so many awards. It has a great story and the player can see the developer creativity in this game. The story of Half-Life is about playing the role of a recently graduated theoretical physicist known as Gordon Freeman who just joined the team of a top secret underground research facility known as Black Mesa. Their teleportation device has gone awry and brought an alien world and Earth close together. Now Freeman must fight his way out of Black Mesa against dangerous aliens and the U.S. army trying to pull off a government cover-up.

Half-Life as pulled off some amazing feats and set a high bar for games following it. Opposing Force is played from the perspective of Special Forces, colonel Adrian Shephard. And Blue Shift is played from the perspective of security guard, Barney Coulhoun. These games were made by a third party, but they are still a great play. Even though these are more than 10 years old, I recommend that any gamer play them.

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