Jul 5 2010

Foursquare, Gowalla – Fight!

Often hailed as the next big thing in Social Networking, location based applications are increasing in popularity  as smartphones become more mainstream.  Facebook and Twitter have proven that people love to share their thoughts with anyone that will listen, so sharing your location is an obvious next step. The giants in this relatively new market are Foursquare and Gowalla, both use the GPS which is now commonplace in phones to allow users to create and check-in at a variety of locations such as shops, pubs, parks and museums. Achievements (e.g. Gowalla’s ‘Cup o’ Joe’ for visiting 10 different coffee shops) encourage users to explore

I’ve been using Gowalla for around a year now (over 320 check-ins), but after a couple of friends started using Foursquare I thought I’d give it a try too. Initially there doesn’t seem to be much difference between the two apps, they share a lot of common functionality such as posting your check-ins to Facebook and Twitter, but its where they differ that is interesting.

Gowalla allows users to upload photos at their check-ins and to add comments which only their Gowalla using friends can see. The application makes use of attractive graphics and a traveller metaphor – users have a passport, collect stamps and pins and add items to their backpack. Occasionally when checking-in to a location, you will find an item thats been left by another user and when creating a new location you can drop an item to become a founder. As well as adding locations, users can string together a collection of locations to create a trip, such as sight seeing or a pub crawl.

Foursquare is a little more popular and as such has more locations, most of the high street near my work is covered by Foursquare, with only a handful of check-ins available in Gowalla. One of the differences between Gowalla and Foursquare is that user comments are public, users can leave tips such as ‘try the steak!’ which you can mark as done or add to a to-do list. Check-ins in Foursquare are awarded points, although I don’t yet understand the criteria used or what the idea of the points is, also in Foursquare you can become a mayor of a location from repeated check-ins.

Personally, I prefer Gowalla – mainly because its more fun its in appearance and ‘gameplay’, I do like the tips idea from  Foursquare and a number of retailers have started recognising the power of this new phenomenon by offering specials e.g. Domino’s will give the mayor of each branch a free pizza every Wednesday.


Feb 13 2010

The Death of Flash?

no Flash on the iPad

I’ve never been a fan of Flash, either as a developer or as a user, so I’m excited to see the possible beginning of the end for what has become the defacto standard for multimedia on the Web.

Its a common a complaint that the iPhone and upcoming iPad don’t have support for Flash, but why would they? The Flash player is a buggy, resource intensive , security risk that these devices are better off without. There is very little that Flash can do that can’t be done with other technology such as jQuery, HTML5 and CSS3 (see the links below for some examples) all of which will run on modern browsers without the requirement of any plugins.

The two main video streaming sites YouTube and Vimeo are trialing HTML5 versions of their sites, using the h.264 video format in place of Flash. I’m hoping that the popularity of Apple’s mobile devices will encourage more content providers (such as Hulu and BBC iPlayer) to turn their backs on Flash and embrace these new technologies.

For the past few weeks I’ve been using ClickToFlash for Safari, which blocks Flash content, giving you the option to run it or not. I have noticed a significant increase in the loading of pages and am not missing the horrible Flash ads that have frequently crashed my browser and brought even powerful dual core computers to their knees. I’m ready for a future without Flash and praise companies like Apple, Google and Vimeo for taking the initiative to push the latest in Web technology to improve their user’s experience.

JavaScript

CSS3 Animations

HTML5


Jan 16 2010

Do I even need a tablet?

Apple are apparently going to announce their oft rumoured tablet computer (possibly called the iSlate) in the next few weeks and Microsoft unveiled their underwhelming (stock Windows 7 on a 5″ screen, really?) new ’slate’  PCs at CES earlier this month.

This form factor has been tried before but hasn’t been a widespread success, they are often large and bulky with poor performance; this new generation promise to smaller, lighter and well, we’ll have to see about performance. But still who needs them? A pure touchscreen interface isn’t ideal for work, I can’t imagine coding or writing documents with an onscreen keyboard on a regular basis, more suitable, although still unpleasent to spend much time using, are the cheap netbooks that have become so popular.

So whats left, web browsing and media playback? I already have a great product for that in the iPhone, a fair percentage of my personal web use is already done on my iPhone. Using excellent mobile formatted sites like BBC and Google’s web apps and apps like Facebook and Tweetie; I rarely miss a larger screen. About the only situation I could see the larger screen of a tablet being an advantage is as an ebook reader, however the larger the screen, the less likely I am to carry it, which is the strength of the iPhone I always have it to hand.

But what will the iSlate be? It makes sense that it would run existing iPhone apps, however it’ll be a huge disappointment if it turns out just to be an iPod touch with a big screen, but equally I don’t want Apple to go the Microsoft route of cramming their full OS onto a small device. Having owned a few Windows Mobile devices and a touchscreen PC I know that using unmodified Windows on a touchscreen is awkward and I don’t see OSX being much different. Microsoft’s Courier concept that cropped up a few months ago looks great and I’d love to use something similar, could the iSlate offer this kind of functionality?

Having said all of that, the guys at Apple are smarter than me and its quite likely they’ve thought of something I haven’t and the iSlate will be the most desirable product of 2010. So I’m saving for one, reading all the rumours and patiently waiting on the live blogging of the announcement anyway.


Sep 23 2009

Great iPhone Apps

The App store has over 55,000 applications and I read recently that the average iPhone owner has spent $80 on apps. This is a round up of  my favourite Apps, these apps are ones that I find useful to keep me connected when I’m away from a computer and which extend the usefulness of the iPhone allowing it to mimic expensive dedicated devices.

Weightbot
http://www.tapbots.com

Weightbot

I’ve been working on losing weight recently, this fantastic looking app has been a great aid in tracking my progress. The interface is attractive and simple, tilting either left or right displays a graph view or an overview of your progress and your data can be exported as CSV.

Convertbot
http://www.tapbots.com

Convertbot

I recently decided to switch to metric for measurements still more commonly expressed in imperial in the UK; this app has been handy to convert distance and weights to better communicate my achievements to olds and Americans.

Trails
http://trails.lamouroux.de

Trails

This is a slick GPS logger, I use it to map my bike rides and also for geocoding my photographs. The logged GPS data can easily exported to be used in Google Earth, TrailRunner etc

iTreadmill

iTreadmill

Nike+ it ain’t, but it’ll track your runs (or  walks) and calculate calories burned.

Spotify
http://www.spotify.com

Spotify

The mobile version of Spotify, a fantastic music streaming service, is a killer app. Streaming works well, playlists shared with you or created on your desktop are available, you can create new playlists easily and best of all you can ‘offline sync’ a playlist.  The app is free, however does require a Premium account (£9.99/ month) which also removes the ads from the desktop client.

Tweetie
http://www.atebits.com/tweetie-iphone/

tweetie

I ‘ve hardly logged into the Twitter web interface since downloading Tweetie and it’s desktop counterpart. The interface is slick and easy to use. Bonus points for the slightly creepy location based search.

Awesome Note
http://bridworks.com

Awesome Note

I just downloaded this one, but it looks like a keeper. I like the interface and the fact that I can import to and from Google Docs (its a shame it can’t sync though) and I’m considering using it’s ToDo list as an alternative to Remember the Milk (which I really rate, but the iPhone app requires the $25 Pro account and mine is due to expire soon).

Other favourites

  • Facebook - this is fantastic, so much better to use than the terrible website
  • Wordpress - I like this for starting drafts of new articles when I get an idea while I’m out
  • BeeJive - instant messager app with push notifications
  • Prowl - pushes Growl notifications from your Mac(s) to your iPhone
  • Shazam - yeah, its been around since day 1, but I’m still amazed by how well this works
  • Remote – this may as well come preinstalled, very useful
  • HoldEm – this is the only game I play the most on my iPhone
  • Zen Bound – a really pretty ‘game’, the aim is to to wrap objects in string