Iphone VS Droid

August 16th, 2010 | Posted in Blog, Software & Hardware & Devices | No Comments

I got rid of my iPhone yesterday. I’ve been gearing up to get a 4G just as soon as an unlock hack could be created for it. I have no plans to leave T-Mobile who I’ve been happily with since I got my first Visor Phone in 2001. They weren’t even T-mobile then. VoiceStream?

Anyway, the more I read and the older my iPhone got, I began to get frustrated with the way Apple does business. Then I happened to catch sight of the Samsung Galaxy on Engadget, my favorite tech blog. Its design is very iPhone-like but it runs Android OS and the best part, T-Mobile had a flavor of it right when I needed a new phone.

I cut the cord with iPhone and purchased the Samsung Galaxy S Vibrant. I got it for a good price after an instant rebate and about $50 I will get at some point on a Visa card. I like getting the card in the mail even though it would be better if it were simply an instant rebate.

So far I love it. And best of all, I don’t have to worry about hacking my phone. That’s one thing I liked when I had my Blackberry. That was the first time in a long time I’d had a phone that I didn’t purchase on eBay and hack somehow. I’m up for a good adventure most of the time but more and more, I felt I was risking bricking my phone whenever I did anything to it. I even fell for the old 3.1.2 upgrade debacle with my iPhone. In retrospect that’s when I think I really decided to get something else when I needed a new phone.  So here I am, back in the fold, able to call T-Mobile when something goes wrong.

If there is “an app for that” with iPhone I have not noticed a lack of apps for that with my Droid. I did have to repurchase SplashID for Droid. I’ve now officially had that app with Treo, BlackBerry, iPhone and now Android. Still it’s a great app and worth the fee. One little thing that annoys me is that the password screen automatically defauls to upper case first so that’s an extra keystroke. It’s minor but something I had to get used to.

Way more vexing is the lack of straight across Outlook synching. Fortunately I already had a Gmail account so it has been OK, just going to take some getting used to.

I discoverd from my second favorite techsource, my brother the network engineer, that Android does not have the ability to pop up reminders on top of the lock screen. This is going to take more getting used to. I missed that on the iPhone and I was fully expecting Android to be able to do it. Alas. Another thing I’ll have to get used to is checking the notification screen or remembering to look at the tee-tiny icons at the top of the home screen that indicate meetings, appointments and texts. I immediately shut down the email notification. Jeez, that would never be off. I check three accounts, four if you count Gmail which I don’t. It would be better to have an icon that shows when I don’t have email.

The next hurdle is finding some sort of iTunes replacement. When I got the iPhone, beside really wanting one, I also wanted to carry only one device rather than two. I gave my old iPhone 2G to my mom so I can’t go back there. She’s pretty attached to it. So now my device also needs to play music. I’ve been disappointed so far but hope springs eternal. One thing I do miss is the ability to shake the device to advance the song. I also miss the ability to double click the button-dongle I purchased for the car. The hangup button on my headphones also worked. I have an older Passat that still has the cassette so I play my device that way. That I do miss.

Texting Prayers

August 2nd, 2010 | Posted in Portfolio, web | No Comments

This project came about when an existing client (Can-DE Fund) came to me with an idea he had. He’s a true entrepreneur and he’s also very spiritual. His idea is to combine texting with prayers. This is an interesting project. We decided to use WordPress for the bones of the site. Right now we do everything manually (posts, updating prayer counts) but our next step is to find a programmer to connect the API for the site we’re using to send the texts with WordPress. There’s a bunch more coming from this site, let me tell you. Later…

Checklists & Questionnaires

August 2nd, 2010 | Posted in application design, Blog, uidesign | No Comments

It feels like I operate entirely on lists. My iPhone calendar controls my life, just like my Blackberry before it and my Palm Treo before that. In other words, I write everything down.

About 10 years ago, I had a friend email me wanting to know what it takes to build a website. I fired off about 15 questions and went about my way because nothing came of that project. But a kernal of an idea was there so I fished that email out of my Sent items. This was the beginning of a questionnaire I could use. I’ve been using and refining it since then.

I can tell from the permalinks that this article appeared last year on Smashing Magazine but it was highlighted recently. It got me thinking about my little questionnaire and how it stacks up against others. Actually, I wouldn’t call it little. It’s four pages.

I found this article endlessly helpful in my quest to write things down. Especially because, as crazy as it seems, given my propensity to write everything down, I DO NOT HAVE A GO-LIVE list. This is crazy when you think about how long I’ve been doing this.

My new Go-Live list will be different than it would have been had I started it earlier. Today it will include a whole section on how to move a WordPress site from a test folder to the live folder. It’s actually pretty easy and well documented in the WP Codex:

  1. Backing Up Your Database
  2. Moving WordPress