Thursday, March 31, 2011

Sparrow email for Gmail

Tech for travel- one of the basics is doing email, when and where you can.  If you can do this, you are Exechobo road ready.  If you use Gmail, you may copy emails into Word or Text Edit and compose responses, then paste them into an email when you get online.  Or you might just have another Jack and deal with it when you land and find an internet connection.  That's no way to roll.

And if you have several email accounts, like Yahoo, Hotmail, etc, you just do all that with the accounts that are most critical to you.

But I do like my Gmail.  I like it for keeping all the messages I want to save, for how fast it is, how reliable it is, the way I can tag emails.  What to do?

Try Sparrow!  By Viêt Hoà Dinh, Dominique Leca & Jean-Marc Denis.  It has a clean, simple interface.  The free version has ads and only works with one account.  I will try it for awhile before paying for the app and the ability to add all my accounts.  At $10 it is priced fairly.  


So far I like the use of Growl to notify me of emails.  The way Sparrow handles tagging is also an improvement, keeping the tags out of the way till I want to drop down the pick list.  The simple icons on the margins are effective and complete.  

Android Ouch!

I am not qualified to comment on this. But it is self explanatory editorial content. 

Daring Fireball

Ashlee Vance and Peter Burrows, reporting for Businessweek:

Playtime is over in Android Land. Over the last couple of months Google has reached out to the major carriers and device makers backing its mobile operating system with a message: There will be no more willy-nilly tweaks to the software. No more partnerships formed outside of Google's purview. From now on, companies hoping to receive early access to Google's most up-to-date software will need approval of their plans. And they will seek that approval from Andy Rubin, the head of Google's Android group.

So here's the Android bait-and-switch laid bare. Android was "open" only until it became popular and handset makers dependent upon it. Now that Google has the handset makers by the balls, Android is no longer open and Google starts asserting control. Andy Rubin, Vic Gundotra, all of them: shameless, lying hypocrites.

Sent with Reeder

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

The Amazon Tablet

Stephen Hacket speculates on an iPad competitor. A real one, who could do what no one save Apple does- a user experience.

The Amazon Tablet
FORKBOMBR | MARCH 30, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/19ori


The tablet space is a weird little corner of the technology market right now. Apple's crushing everyone with its iPad 2, ... Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!
/

Jonathan Ive, on the Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh

This vid is cool. Take a trip- way back to the turn of the millennium. Remember the Millennium Bug?  Forkbombr posted thus this cool Jonny Ive video of his uber design for th 20th anniversary Mac. I am glad I waited a couple years to get the Titanium MBP.

Enjoy ExecHobo's first video embed!

Jonathan Ive, on the Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh
FORKBOMBR | MARCH 28, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/193Zy


Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!
/

The Hunt for iPad 2

I had a similar story about my Quest for iPhone4 last June. It was equally heart- rending and evocative.  I can't take it again, I am sterling myself to a long wait for my iPad 2.

The Hunt for iPad 2
FORKBOMBR | MARCH 29, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/192Zc


Editor's Note: This is written by a friend of mine, Caitlin Woodward, who spent countless hours trying to find an iPad 2 ... Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!
/

This is why I can't get an iPad2

So many people want to own this curiosity that experts know is merely a "fad", and costs "1500 or 1600 dollars" ( yes, those are real, recent comments from well placed tech authorities).  Damn!  I was planning on spending $500- maybe I needs me three of em!

Why? We can only guess that is is like the tulip craze of old holland. 

Analyst Eightball: 5-9 Million iPads Sold In Q2
EVERYTHINGICAFE | MARCH 29, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/18HhZ


Over at Fortune, Philip Elmer DeWitt has put together a big list of all the analysts and how many sales they're pegging ... Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!
/

China- Apple growth for another 10


This survey of attitudes about iPhones shows the potential that is opening for Apple in the next great market. With the inevitability of per capita income parity with the US, consumer goods in China, even as expensive as the iPhone, can win a share of this market. IF the brands can work with the system (governmen/culture) there. Required: a thoughtful long term foundation for being a worthy China citizen. 

Survey: Apple ready for big China growth
TUAW | MARCH 30, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/197ky


China is catching up with the Western world in many ways, and now "Wanting an iPhone really, ... Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!

/

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Camera+ app update

I love the App Store! App updates are usually like tiny little surprises in my notifications. Today Camera+ sent me a big one- a promise of even better photos. Software to compensate for my ineptitude.



A quick spin shows that this new version is HOT! It starts up faster that Quick Cam- less than one second.  Results are better than ever, and there are more filters than before.  I am reinstating Camera+ to my menu bar as my primary camera app again.  Way to go tap tap tap!!!

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Writing on the Road- an examination of note taking apps

I do a lot of writing on the road, in fact, I never write in an office, per se.  Even when home I write on the go.  I get inspiration, opportunity, and gratification from this style. Coupled with a photography flirtation to make the blog a little bit visual, and the result is, my workflow is less than static.

Writing is important to me.  Since very early in grammar school I wrote to sort out thinking, and to express myself.  Not talented, I keep working at it.  And learning.

Right now, I use four apps that improve utility.  To me that means they work, without being more complex than necessary.  An example of the latter is Word.  I have never been able to learn or use most of it's power.  In fact, it has done little for me over the years that Text Edit doesn't do as well.  Exceptions are bids and forms.  But this is not about every writing need I have, it is about those I use as I travel, those I use most.

I have been posting separate examinations of Evernote, SimpleNote, DraftPad, my tools.  I like each of them for different reasons, and am discovering how to use them as a complimentary suite of tools.  There is little doubt that one of them will be deleted, but judgement will be withheld until after I use them on an iPad.

The NYT’s Melting Iceberg Syndrome

The only time I read a paper is when I travel. Local papers are a good way to immerse into and explore my surroundings. The dilemma of newspapers is a concern to all of us who consume credible news, and it is an interesting business conundrum. 

This article attempt to analyze and propose a solution for transition of the NYT to the new reality of digital reading. I hope someone over there is taking heed, not just trying to strengthen the bulwarks of the so called pay wall. 

The NYT's Melting Iceberg Syndrome
MONDAY NOTE | MARCH 27, 2011
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/monday-note/~3/fzUjT-1teso/


Could the New York Times be viable as a digital-only operation? What a ridiculous question: With almost a million copies sold ... Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!

/

Monday, March 28, 2011

iPhone- world’s most popular camera?

Nobody is not impressed with the camera on the iPhone 4. It's ubiquity, ease of use, quality of imaging, flexibility of post production make it handy, fun and effective. 

This infographic from Geekaphone via Joshua Schnell shows how dominant the iPhone has become as a camera- in some market segments. 

Infographic: iPhone is the world's most popular camera
MACGASM | MARCH 28, 2011
http://www.macgasm.net/2011/03/28/infographic-iphone-worlds-popular-camera/


Infographic Via Geekaphone Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!

/

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Kalakala: Classic ferry

Travel in the Puget Sound region revolves around ferries. And back in 1935 the Kalakala was the ferry of tomorrow. It's streamlined design was a moving work of art, along with a few trains and automobiles. It was an era when airplanes were feeding the public's imagination with thoughts of spelled and glamour. 

Alas, the Kalakala has been out of advice for many years, and no one has figured out what to do with it, though everyone feels like something should be done with it. Now it seems it's days are numbered. 

Kalakala's next move may be to the bottom: Classic ferry taking on water
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS -- LOCAL NEWS FEED | MARCH 27, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/17JQZ


TACOMA — Steve Rodrigues' dream for the MV Kalakala is starting to look more and more like a nightmare. The old 1935 ... Read more

--
Want to read news on the go? Get Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Its Free!

/

SimpleNote vs PlainText

These two apps compete directly in my toolbox. They seem to have the same objective, .txt based notes that are accessible minimal, searchable. So is this a death struggle, where there can be only one? I hope not. I like em both.

Both let you work offline, notes can be accessed and edited, then synced when you regain access to their clouds.

Plain Text let's you make folders within the app, so you can organize notes that way. As I understand the way the app works, moving notes between folders on an iPhone is not possible. So you have to first create a folder hierarchy, then fill it with notes as you go. Not spontaneous, not simple.

In SimpleNote you tag notes. I like this way better after getting used to it, because I can tag a single note with multiple tags so it is cross referenced. Also, I can add tags as they occur to me, connecting notes in a more organic flow. Good thing.

Plain Text uses DropBox for note storage. If you are a DropBox user this is elegant simplicity. You have a folder in your DropBox folder named Plain Text. Open it, and there are all your notes as .txt files. I really like this. SimpleNotes are on their server, unless you buy the $19.95 per year pro version, an app whose price doubled this year. Big ouch. Since I use Notational Velocity on my MBP, there is a work around using it as a sort of proxy to go from SimpleNote server to Notational Velocity to DropBox. Simple? No. And I don't like putting another server in my notes management process.

The interface is more polished on SmartNote, showing me my notes in a format similar to Instapaper. It wins hands down in this area.  Makes it easy to browse, locate and edit notes.  PlainText, I am not so sure about.  I can use it, but is there a point where minimalism is simplicity for it's own sake?  Where PlainText's super clean interface is good is when I am starting a new note.  Not quite as easy as DraftPad, but a bit more direct and spontaneous than SimpleNote.  Not that any of these are a challenge!

My verdict?  SimpleNote and PlainText shall coexist on my iPhone, and will be granted a stay until we see how they work on the iPad.  Lets see if I can't find a way to have these two similar, thought slightly differently endowed apps work in support of each other.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Saturday Morning in Manhattan

We have found a modestly priced, spanking new hotel in Manhattan, between Chelsea and Murray Hill, a great place for us.  It is so quiet we are able to sleep, even on Friday night.  What a great place!  The tech? An elevator, essential for this mainly vertical, 5 rooms per floor tower.  And a proximity sensor lock for the door, a microwave, TVs, and WiFi.  All I need.

Friday, March 25, 2011

BlogPress denigrates my photos

BlogPress is a powerful, and seemingly unheralded app.  I have used it since I got an iPhone, every day I believe.  Most of my posts are via BlogPress, and I love it.  BUT...

When I take a photo, and load it into a BlogPress post, then publish it to the blog, I get a very, very low resolution result.  This has become too annoying.  Because I use photos to illustrate most posts, and they are important to the look and feel of ExecHobo, this is a problem.

I work around it for now.

Travel Coffee Tech





The Smart Dripper has been working brilliantly to brew our morning cup. Grinding a weighed portion (20 gm), of decent bean in the Hario Skerton has proven to be a pleasure. I weigh out the hot water as well (450gm), which fills the #4 Melita filter, set my timer for 3 minutes, and pour a small amount over the coffee. After a few seconds I pour in the rest of the water, stir lightly, cover and wait. At the 2:30 mark I put the Smart Dripper on the first cup and it begins to flow. I move to cup 2 and continue, and by 3 minutes it is done. It all goes in a smooth rhythm that makes the ritual enjoyable.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

App Update Fest

Today was like an app Christmas- I opened the App Store on my iPhone, and learned that 5 apps I use have updates ready.  Automatically.  I authorized the updates, and I have some cool new functionality and fixes to bugs.  Everyting is hunky-dory.  App developers are so cool, and the App Store is such a great way to buy download and manage apps.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Calvetica app missing function

So far I am liking Calvetica. It is super lean and clean. The views are great. I can see the number of appointments per day in the month view, I can see a week at a glance, and the day view is super clean.

The one thing I would like to see improved in Calvetica is links. When I have a phone number in a conference call appointment I expect to be able to touch it in the calendar and have it dial.



Amazon may make it interesting

I use Amazon. I like what they do. Getting into the App game comes very late, but if I were to bet on an Android AppStore to emerge, despite early issues, this would be the one. 

Android users won't care so much that Amazon can't make a nice looking site. 


Daring Fireball

Justin Williams on the process of installing the Amazon Appstore on your Android device:

There should never be an eight step installation process in mobile computing. Unless Amazon is able to net a killer, exclusive application that's unavailable anywhere else, I am hard-pressed to find any logic or reason why this will succeed.

I think this is Amazon's first step towards launching their own Amazon-branded (or perhaps Kindle-branded) Android devices, where the Amazon Appstore will be preinstalled, and the devices will ship from Amazon with your Amazon credentials already set up on the device (as with the Kindle hardware today). They're launching now, for existing Android devices, to work out the kinks and build the library of available titles.

Even with the arduous installation process for existing Android devices, I wouldn't be surprised if Amazon's store soon surpasses Google's Android Market. Amazon knows how to sell digital content; Google doesn't.

Sent with Reeder

iPhone 4 survives 1,000 foot fall just to spite glassgate

Damn!  Now that is traveling!  I had to post this. 

iPhone 4 survives 1,000 foot fall just to spite glassgate
MACGASM | MARCH 23, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/161c3


It's not every day that an iPhone 4 dropped 10 feet survives the impact, especially with Glassgate being a real thing and ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Tweetdeck- deleted from my iPhone

I have been waiting too long for Tweetdeck to deliver on the long promised iPhone update.  The crashes, the slowness, the lack of saved state, all made it's use a bit frustrating.  If there is an area where competition is wide open, and consolidation is only beginning, it is in Twitter clients.  No one who wants to stay can afford to stumble.

Echofon is my default choice, but further exploration is under way.

And it's days are numbered on my desktop too.  The fact I have to use Adobe Air to run it on OSX makes me unhappy.

Dear Tweetdeck, Twitter should not be this hard.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Call for AT&T / T-Mobile Due Diligence

Tech is a province of the young. As such, the predictable slant is decidedly liberal, and skeptical of big business.  Add a dash of AT&T hate, and the story line is spun. 

Looking at this merger rationally might be enlightening, and I hope as Endgadget and other do so, they separate reporting from editorializing. But as an element of the Huffpo/AOL realm, I am not holding my breath. 

For one who travels, better national cell and data coverage and innovation is a dream. The size of our country makes those teeny tiny national cell businesses quaint, and meaningless. Our solutions are by necessity different. 

The old Ma Bell, a regulated utility, was cheap, dependable and innovative. They also were broken up to yield more competition, and we got Worldcom, and a host of rapacious competitors working to grow at all cost. Solutions are not always as easy as bumper stickers. 

Senator asks DOJ and FCC to do their jobs, provide friction for AT&T / T-Mobile tie-up
ENGADGET | MARCH 22, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15WLI


There's always one. Back in the winter of 2009, Senator Kerry made public his request for Fox and Time Warner to keep the Bowl ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Charity for specific reasons

There is an up and coming Mac blogger, Stephen Hacket, with a child who is being treated by St Jude's for brain tumor.  The work of St Jude's is some of the best things humans do for each other.  He is doing what he can to pay back.  St Jude does this work at no cost to parents, and people like Stephen do their work so other parents can benefit too.  

Take a look at the shirts he is selling, and if you need or want a tee, or want to gift one to someone, this is one that will make you feel good.  Maybe wear it to the next VC meeting you attend?  

Evernote-Road Warrior Tool

Business Travel is information intensive. Evernote is a tool that belongs in any Road Warrior's smartphone toolbox.

Evernote is a powerful app for managing a variety of notes, though it's power brings complexity and a proprietary note format and cloud server. Even so, it fills a couple of needs better than others note apps. I use it to keep and organize information more than notes, information that is mainly in the form of webpages, or photos. If I used voice notes, this is where I would keep them. Loosely, all these notes are images of ideas lifted from other sources. So this is a catalogue of those images.

The uses for Evernote that keeps it in my workflow is for storing webpages and note photos. For example, when I plan a trip there are inevitably several webpages for reservations, cancellation notices, and local attractions that I simply save to Evernote. This gives me a perfect picture of what the company in question sent me. This is sometimes better than email, for example when the company, say an airline, sends me a confirmation email that is nothing more than a link. And the link requires that after I navigate to it, I enter my login information to access my record, which is several frustrating pages deep in the process. Nothing like adding aggravation to anxiety when traveling! So with Evernote I simply open the app, enter a search term, and voila! There is my information snipped from the web.  The plugins and extensions for web browsers make this usage easy for those situations when I use my MBP.  This is one of the two Safari extensions I use most.

The other use for Evernote for me is to act as a repository for research on a large or long project that includes images and webpages. Again, I can set up folders and start collecting items as I come across them.

I have tried Instapaper for this, but the fact that graphics are stripped away is a serious shortcoming for this particular use. If you are saving a reservation web page, it is mostly graphics, and many times the essential information is graphic. So Instapaper won't cut it for this, though its great for other things.

Sometimes, a picture is worth a number of words. See a book you want to remember for later? Snap a picture of the cover, in Evernote directly, or in Camera and send it to Evernote. Same with other ideas you see that would take too long to describe. This is such a help when you are on the move! Movies, too, or photos of a project idea or subject. One can even use it to organize photos for an essay if you have a subject in mind, annotating the pictures in real time, and embellishing later.

Originally, I used Evernote for long term storage of written notes. I have moved these to simple TextEdit files on DropBox. I changed this because of past experience with note organizing programs to which I lost access for one reason or another, and therefore lost all my notes. So recipes, personal notes, and long term written notes are now simple .txt files in backed up drives. This doesn't mean I would not be bothered to lose the data in Evernote, but that is mostly data from other sources, not my own work.

Evernote is so popular, there are numerous extension apps for it, to make it work as a better to-do list, to make it easy to capture quick notes, etc.  This speaks to its large user base, its inbuilt utility, and its complexity.

I recommend Evernote for anyone who travels through life and needs to carry certain types of information with them.  Just don't confuse it with a note taking app- it does this duty well, but less well than other apps, at least for my needs.

Monday, March 21, 2011

QuickCam app review

The iPhone camera- amazing is the correct term to describe the hardware, current common usage aside. The abilities of the sensor and lens in my phone exceed or equal those of dedicated cameras of similar resolution. I use it a lot.  The software though, is open to improvement, and many are doing just that.

TUAW posted a review of an app that is designed to make the camera quicker, reducing the lag at startup so the first shot can be grabbed faster.

I often look for grab shots as I am walking, or need a photo to illustrate a point for my work. The "long" wait for Camera+ is unacceptable, though I love everything else about that app. The native iPhone camera is only slightly faster.

In my tests I get the iPhone camera opened or awakened in about 2.75 seconds. The QuickCam app in about 1.5 seconds. A good improvement, and required to justify this app, because it is a lean picture capturing app with no other attributes.

For example, when you want to view a photo you can't from the camera, you have to go to your photo library.

I also had a problem recording video longer than a couple of minutes.

And the appearance? Homely is the charitable way of putting it.




There is a minor surprise feature too, that lightbulb button on the upper left turns on the flash, without recording a movie- instant flashlight, and goodbye to another single use app on my iPhone!

Focus and exposure work like the native camera, great- and I don't miss the missing HDR- iPhone's software is not that good anyway. There is a zoom slider too.

What QuickCam does is get your iPhone camera into action fast. As fast as I can get it up and framed the camera is ready, and that is worth the $.99 to me.  I used it all day and was pleased with the speed.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Evernote & Simplenote

How these powerful note apps work together for me.


The native iPhone Notes app is OK, just OK, and syncing remained a mysterious ritual. Some things sync via email in real time, some only when I tether, some dupplicate over and over, some won't allow themselves to be deleted.


I started with Evernote and used the heck out of it. Photos of books, websites, reservation screens, recipes, anything that I wanted to keep and that wasn't a to-do. Not a zillion things, but the "more important" ones. It soon grew to almost a hundred items. I would go on sprees: snap a photo, write a caption, save it. A great way to build gift lists!

The large collection of notes I was accumulating included some recipes that deserved preservation, as well as copious "on the go" jottings that I always thought I would deal with later. Things that really never should have been preserved, but ended up in my Evernote cloud server. I cleaned it out regularly and dealt with these then, but this was not the right place for a "to-do", in my view.

So I took the recommendation of Patrick Rhone at Minimal Mac to try Simplenote.
It is a very very basic note taking and managing app. One purpose, efficient transcription of ideas via a keyboard. Simplenote reminds me of a program I loaded on my old Campaq 486 portable. Basically that was a fully searchable flat database skinned to look like a deck of 3x5 notecards.

I thought I had figured out how Evernote and SimpleNote worked, and how to use them together. Then, while working at 40,000 feet, I opened Evernote and learned the obvious. Without web access there are no notes unless you saved them to the iPhone! Duh. But now I wonder about the file size of all those notes, the ones I feel like I have to have access to, in case the need ever comes up. Are they filling my iPhone's scant 16GB of memory on the off chance I want to read them later? It seems the Simplenote approach to notes as text files makes more sense.

Syncing on both apps is automatic. But I characterize Simplenote as syncing onto devices, not my MBP and a cloud server. This means I get a copy of the latest version of a note on my iOS device, synced when there is Internet access, and available for use when there is not, like when in airplane mode. With Evernote you get access to notes on the cloud.  If you are in the clouds, unless you anticipated what notes you wanted to use and saved them to the iOS device, you are out of luck.

Search is an essential function that both apps do well. It's fun to enter a search term and watch the related notes list shrink as you type. On Simplenote saving is unnecessary. It's always saved.

The interface on Evernote is iPhone elegant, even more so with the latest update. Photos and clips of notes are shown in the window, making access almost tactile, like Pulse news reader. That is welcome, especially for web pages I save, and the Safari extension makes it a one click deal to do so on my MBP. I do this with things like motel reservation and cancelations, travel sites and directions that I used to print and tote in a folder. But if I don't remember to star them and save them as favorites they aren't available on my iPhone without internet access. Evernote also let's you organize notes into folders and tag them. But these folders reside only within the app.

I like to use Evernote because it is sexy, and now I think of it as a place to store webpages and photos related to a long term project or trip, not working documents. I also am more cognizant of starring items I may want when away from AT&T's semi ubiquitous signal.




Simplenote is much more plain and pedestrian. Notes are just black and white lists, with the first couple of lines showing. All business.


Simplenote is designed to save notes. If you type it you can save it, period. Certainly the ability to do so via a camera or a click is outside the brief of Simplenote. Just typed text, thank you very much. For those other things one saves, maybe Instapaper? Maybe PDF files on Dropbox? The ability to keep images of webpages relating to business travel has to be my most essential Evernote function. This has saved me significant money in disputed cancellation fees alone.

Managing Simplenotes includes a cloud aspect, and cross-app file access. This is a strong benefit. I don't want to have to again move hundreds of notes into the next note system as I have had to do with Palm, Windows Mobile, Cronos SOHO notes, Stickies, Smart Stickies, Evernote, etc. The idea of a basic text editor system in which I manage file folders and can add keywords has great appeal to me. I can write on my MBP in TextEdit, and when I import those documents to Simplenote they stay linked, and there they are on my iOS device, not only in a cloud based server. If I want a copy on a cloud server I can send the same file to Dropbox. And text edit files can be opened in a number of apps and platforms.

So the bottom line is that both are strong programs, and I think each has a reason to be on my iPhone. Writing this post helps me explain why to myself.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Tech Travel Not Always Good for You

Travel by air is aggravation.  The outcry about the new backscatter X-rays that produce full nude images of us and dose us with radiation are again in the news.  Wired Magazine just ran an article about the error in measuring the radiation dosage from these machines.  Pilots and Flight Attendants can congratulate their union for successfully exempting them from these machines on the basis of occupational safety.  We frequent flyers have no such voice, save our congressmen.  TSA has always been up front with their response- Tough Shit Asshole- its their name.

If any private concern had under reported a public radiation emission by a factor of 10, there would be hearings in congress.  The fact that there is a $90 Million contract for these machines, and the buying agency is essentially an unsupervised bureaucracy makes all the difference.

I am anxious to learn how the radiation from say, 20 trips through these machines compares to the radiation around Fukushima?

Friday, March 18, 2011

Thorsten Overgaard- great photographer

Photography is an odd art.  It takes what we all see and turns it an image that makes you see it differently.  Little a photographer captures is outside of your normal vision.  You may be standing next to the photographer, and not realize you are looking at art till you see the image rendered.  Thorsten Overgaard is one of those photographers.  His blog generously shares his work and he takes a lot of time to write about it, and has been doing so for many years.  It is worth looking at if you ever wonder what there is around you of beauty or drama.

His tool is appropriate to his skill, a Leica M9 currently.  It is interesting to read his view of his transition from film to digital, and his reason for using a Leica.  Unlike many photographers, it has nothing to do with the brand.  It is simply that it works for him in the way he works.

If you have an interest in photography, visit his blog and get inspired.  You will up you game.

Japan Aid as "reported" in USA Today

Yesterday the geniuses over at the USA Today rag had reported that only $49 million had been so far donated to aid Japan.  It went into all kinds of reasons why this may be so, reporting conjecture in place of fact.  Kinda like we bloggers do.

Today, they show that the contribution for 9/11 after two weeks was $607 million.  Of course, this is one week after the Japan quake, and it is not an attack in NYC.  But it does involve donations and disaster, so I suppose any apples to oranges comparisons are fair game if there is nothing else in the news to report.

What a rag.  I'm glad to be in a hotel that drops this at my door each day to give me a chuckle.

DraftPad- how it helps

I have been writing about writing apps lately. SimpleNote, Evernote, DraftPad. The nagging question is: Is DraftPad necessary?

I have been living with it for a few weeks, and keeping track of how I use it.

  • Notes about a restaurant review while sitting in the dining room
  • Notes for action later while on the job
  • Things to add to To Do lists
  • Research ideas for future online sessions

I inadvertently deleted notes I had made on the fly in DraftPad. One of it's key features is the ability to go back and get old versions, a'la Time Machine- saved me a bit of reconstructive writing, I like that alot.

PlainText is the only app I use that rivals DraftPad, but

Readers know I like SimpleNote, but once you populate SimpleNote with a few hundred notes, and a dozen tags, it is not longer completely spontaneous. DraftPad is. It is always ready, alway a blank slate, and let's me write what occurs to me, then decide if it is worth saving, and how to save it. Good little app. Of corse PlainText can do the same thing, and saves to Dropbox. Hmmm, I see a comparison coming.

DraftPad app for note capture

MacBook Pro | iPhone | iPad are the tools I seek to weave into a fabric of utility.  I have been searching for a proper workflow for my writing that will support blogging, work, and personal organization with the most stripped down and simplistic interface possible.

I want my notes to be as "program agnostic" as possible- in other words, when I lose an app due to it becoming obsolete and unsupported, or due to changing platforms, I don't want to also lose the writing within, my work.  I have been following Patrick Rhone on his beautiful blog MinimalMac to get up to speed with my goals as easily as possible, learning from those who go before me.

DraftPad is an app that attempts to take the acetic ethic as far as it can go on a device.  Here is what the business end of the app looks like- as simple as it gets, and as fast as it gets.
The working view of DraftPad

I have scoured the internet for reviews, tips, discussions and reviews of the DraftPad app.  With one exception, what I read leads me to believe that any review of the app is required to either plagiarize or properly use Kyle VanHemert's writing, so here it is:
"If anyone's ever said "QUICK jot this down," and you went for pen and paper before your iPhone because you weren't immediately sure where to type (I nervously default to the universal search bar), then DraftPad is for you.


Now I can perhaps inject my own individual thinking.  


First, to all the so called bloggers who write reviews by copying and pasting them: SHAME ON YOU!  You are pointless wastes of binary code.  If you want to do this, write at least something that contributes.  


Second, here is my contribution.  
This little app is just what it advertises itself to be- a simple and fast way to capture a note as expeditiously as possible.  You then decide what to do with it, later.  This is ideal for me.  I often find myself too concerned with how to file or tag the note, thinking ahead to it's ultimate use.  I should just jot it down and move on.  


With the iPhone native Notes I could do that, but honestly, DraftPad is even better to use.  Both are searchable, but when it comes time to do something with my draft, in DraftPad when I open the app it is a blank sheet to write on.  (Tip, when you are done, use the "Clear All Text" assist to clean off your slate for next time.)  After writing, I can make use of the cool little assists.  With a simple touch and flick I send the note to Evernote,  Twitter,  Email, Omnifocus, a search, an SMS, or any of dozens of other apps.   


The way to search and find notes left from previous sessions is to look in the history.  Simple and effective.  Enter the search term, and voila, not anything unique, but it works.  The document is essentially a single file, and the notes are entries that are separated by time.  


The developer, Manabu Ueno keeps these assists in a library on the website, and tells us you can write your own, though I have had no success.  You see, the one app I want to send notes to is SimpleNote, and I can't find an assist for that.  It seems the SimpleNote API is not open, or some such developer speak.  I know you have to request it from SimpleNote, and they judge if the use is going to work.  I hope someone figures it out, in the meantime I use the handy assist "Copy all text" and paste in in SimpleNote.  

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Who is Jon Bon Jovi?

It must be rant day.  I know he is important, cause I live on a street named sorta like him.  And he did something with a sports league didn't he?  I know he was an 80's-ish rocker, if there was any rock in the 80's.  But what has he done to build the music industry other than provide content?  Like Metalica and Kiss, his time has come and gone, and the oldies are great, but really, who is he?  Oh, he is getting another 15 minutes for saying Steve Jobs is killing music.  Right.  Here is a response more articulate than mine, from someone who knows who this guy is, Jeremy Horwitz on iLounge.

I read Bon Jovi's words, and I resent them.  I was one of those kids who bought a couple of albums a year, all I could afford.  And who was pissed off when I ripped it open to find most of the music sucked, and that as I gazed at the album cover, my anticipation had turned to bitterness, and I learned betrayal.  Those who never disappointed were a handful of legends.  Joplin, Hendrix, Cream, Led Zeppelin, CCR.  Even Crosby Stills and Nash wasted my money.

When I bought a gen one iPod, I could buy music I liked.  I now have a few songs from hundreds of artists.  People for whom I would never have plunked down $20 for an album.  They have made careers out of this kind of music.

The album cover?  I do miss it.  But I replace it with an internet search.  I no longer have to sit in front of a turntable to enjoy music.  It travels with me.

Instapaper- solution for reading on the road

My daily routine when working keeps me away from WIFI sources, so when I am on a break and want to catch up with my favorite web reading, or dig into a project I am mulling, I am out of luck.  Instapaper has filled the need nicely!  I reviewed it recently, as has Macgasm.

The issue of connectivity all day is even more pronounced when traveling internationally, or are onboard a plane (I won't pay airlines the $12.95 for wifi access).

The developer, Marco Arment, has created a system that is powerful, simple and focused.  It helps that he is a coffee lover.

This is becoming an app I gotta have.

No Donor Rush to Aid Japan

Or so I read today in the USA Today.  The article is factual, and represents a short term mentality about aid.  Aid services usually fill the gap of need between disaster and the flow of bureaucratic assistance.  The point is timeliness, and Red Cross, among others, are there with water and shelter as soon as humanly possible, when it is most needed.  A week later, it is too late for thousands of second wave victims.  As we saw in New Orleans.

Getting Japan back on its feet fast will also keep the struggling economy of the world on the mend, impacting people in need everywhere.  

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Pepsi's 100% Plant-Based Plastic Bottle [Packaging]

Proving once again it's willingness to lead in corporate citizenship. The last time was the bio-degradable bag for Sun Chips. That effort was rewarded with public rejection because the bag was too noisy when crumpled, proving people are moronic. Let's hope this bottle meets the accolades and acceptance it deserves. 

Behold Pepsi's 100% Plant-Based Plastic Bottle [Packaging]
GIZMODO | MARCH 16, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15teU



--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Public WIFI security for Twitter

If you access Twitter via public wifi, as most travelers do, security is a critical issue.  Twitter has taken a step to help you protect yourself, by allowing you to turn on HTTPS all the time.  Use it.

Obama Administration Planning to Extend Privacy Rights for Internet Users [Privacy]

Even a blind squirrel finds an acorn. This would catch is up to the EU and other bastions of freedom. Godspeed! 

Obama Administration Planning to Extend Privacy Rights for Internet Users [Privacy]
GIZMODO | MARCH 16, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15k0N


If you're tired of online entitites playing fast and loose with the personal data of its users, you'll be happy ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Free e-book lending is disruptive squared

Traveling for extended periods with an adequate supply of reading materials is problematic. We used to buy used paperbacks by the dozen, shedding them along the way as we read them. 

With e-readers we were looking forward to having many books in one place. We will see how that works out when we get an iPad 2. 

This story is a potential buzz kill though. What if we got e-books at the library? Cool! 

And of course, whenever something is fun, one has to ask "what if everyone did that?" at least that's what they ask you at a local beach if you want to take a stone home. Soon the earth would become unbalanced and we all fly off into space. But that's another story. 

Apparently Harper-Collins is preparing to fight the final battle, when everyone is getting free e-books at the library and they can no longer sell them. An annual re-liscensing fee. That right, not only is information wanting to be free, it should be kept in perpetual bondage. 

Some librarians, in fits of conservative market lashback, are walking away from the publisher to hasten their end vision. 

Publisher starts annual e-book licensing for libraries, attempts blood extraction from stone
ENGADGET | MARCH 15, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15qNR


Public libraries are en vogue again now that e-readers and e-books are so popular, and publishers are wary of the trend. To ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Nissan Leaf driving range not reliable?

Traveling with no gasoline is appealing. The commercials that introduced the Nissan Lead were intriguing, beautiful glimpses into a less polluting form of transport. One of the little slurs about EVs, electric vehicles is that the range is too limiting. Seems that may have some validity, at least if you aren't familiar with the software. 

Range anxiety gets real: Nissan Leaf drivers run out of juice on the road
ENGADGET | MARCH 16, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15kgr


Fears of range anxiety have loomed over EVs since their inception, and those fears were validated courtesy of a couple ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Donate to Japan earthquake and tsunami relief via iTunes

Red Cross is your best bet for effective contributions. They are depleting reserves to help fast, and need contributions to rebuild reserves. 

Donate to Japan earthquake and tsunami relief via iTunes
TIPB - THE #1 IPHONE, IPAD, AND IPOD TOUCH BLOG | MARCH 15, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15jE7


iTunes is taking donations for the Red Cross Japan earthquake and tsunami relief. Just log in and you can one-click ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

DaisyDisk2 ExecHobo endorsed and now in the app store

When i was cleaning up, reformatting and reinstalling my MBP and remote HDs, I used DaisyDisk to monitor what my hard drives looked like. It works well, looks great and makes managing hard drives as much a pleasure as possible. Plus the app store is an awesome way to get apps for an OSX machine. 

DaisyDisk 2 available on the Mac App Store
MACGASM | MARCH 15, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15kpR


Daisy Disk, the popular disk application that lets you track down rogue files hidden on your system has finally made its way to ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Monday, March 14, 2011

iPhone Calendar- Help Requested

I work with calendars.  You do too.  I treat the one on my iPhone as a last resort, to be used in case of emergency, but never to plan.  I want to change that, since I am not always at the MBP when I have to plan something, so I went looking for an app.

The paucity of calendar apps for the iPhone is appalling.  Unless you consider apps to track your woman stuff.

I am parsimonious with my app dollars.  I spend on apps that seem to work, do something for me, and take some significant coding effort.  Like Documents to Go, or GPS Drive, or Camera+.  And so many apps are disappointing.  So I ruled out, at first paying for a calendar app.  That narrowed down the field nicely!

I use Google calendar to share calendars, so it would be good to have direct access to that function without having to go through Safari.  And I want a week view.  The month view on the iPhone screen is almost useless.

To address my needs, I downloaded the two best apps I could find on the app store that are free:  Calvetica and GooCal.
Calvetica Month View

Calvetica is proud of being quirky and Swiss.  They employ what must pass for humor in the Alps on their website to tell you that the app has some flaws, and they may not address them.  It is true, they write stuff like that, and the app has some flaws.  Read the reviews in the App Store, and believe them.  Sometimes you rotate the iPhone to see the week view, and it never comes back.  Close, shut it down, and restart it.  What it does well is look clean and cool.  Like a Swiss Miss.  If you want to see help, go online with your Safari browser to their website and find it.  Maybe that is good though, to keep the app free of the settings and all.  One other feature that works is being able to keep synced up with Google Calendars, which I use for work groups.
Calvetica Week View

GooCal looks very similar to the native calendar app on the iPhone, except for a couple of neat things.  Notice the button on top of the page for a week view?
GooCal Month View
It has one, that is of some value, but without the ability to flip it landscape view, so it is hard to use.  
GooCal Week View
But the big feature of this app is that you can write to and read your Google Calendar.  It behaves much like the native calendar app, but the linkage to a Google calendar is immediate, so planning to share is easy.  For me this is beneficial, but I don't put all my plans on my Google Calendars, so I use this app only for those activities I make public.  

For now, I am working with Calvetiva to see if I can adapt to it's quirkiness. So far, I like being able to add and change events right in the calendar, without having to go to a dialogue box.  In Calendar, you not only go to a dialogue box to create and event, you have to go in and out several times to set all it's parameters.  More control, but definitely more cumbersome.  One last example of Calvetiva quirkiness, the date is displayed on the home page icon as a bubble, like a notification.  It alarms me every now and then when I look at my home screen and see a number over the calendar icon, like a "14", till I realize its the date, not the number of appointments I have missed.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Osprey Elroy Review

Performance Travel bag


The best travel briefcase? I think it must be a messenger style bag. I have had my briefcase slung over a shoulder for decades. The venerable musette bag is made for that kind of carry.

This Osprey has the size and organizing features that make me hopeful it will meet my needs. Easy on the shoulder, capacious, flexible, light, durable, protective, easy to access on the go. We shall see as I take it on an eight week trip.

Still not making sense, Prius with Li Ion batts coming to Japan

And the economics still don't make sense. At a $10,000 premium in it's home country, and an increase in interior space, it is not yet a sound financial decision. 

The current tech for this car starts to break even when gas is above $10 per gallon. Interesting that the Ford Escape breaks even at more like $4. Is Toyota doing something that much better?

The question is, do you send your green donation to Toyota, or make a more direct contribution?  You choose.

American Prius V to get old-school batteries, Japanese version to get fancy Li-ion ones
ENGADGET | MARCH 13, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15bfW


We'd rather see a more interesting Prius before we see a bigger one, but it's the bigger one that comes first. The taller ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Apple now accepts donations to Red Cross Japan relief fund via iTunes

Please use whatever means you prefer to help. 

Apple now accepts donations to Red Cross Japan relief fund via iTunes
TUAW | MARCH 13, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15buR


Following the disaster caused by the magnitude 8.9 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, Apple has ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Apple A5 is dual Cortex A9, PowerVR SGX 543MP2 competition stomper

It is true. My hands on testing reveals the speed is palpable. It increased my usage pleasure by a factor of 4.79

The speed of graphics leads the improvement. Simple scrolling reveals this. Rendering is so fast the touch interface really shines. 

Apple A5 is dual Cortex A9, PowerVR SGX 543MP2 competition stomper
TIPB - THE #1 IPHONE, IPAD, AND IPOD TOUCH BLOG | MARCH 13, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/158yb


While Apple believes the mainstream cares more about iPad 2 experience and feeling than feeds and speeds, Anandtech clearly ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

iPad 2- it may not be for everyone

I have been fondling the new iPad in Apple stores all over Long Island. When it is in my hands, I am in love.  I Jane to have one, and have the date and place of purchase logged in my calendar. I have selected my accessories. Having waited, I congratulate myself on my perspicacity. 

Then I read this writer's take on it, and I hesitate. At least until I go past another Apple store. 

Why I'm passing on the iPad 2
TIPB - THE #1 IPHONE, IPAD, AND IPOD TOUCH BLOG | MARCH 13, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/15bMZ


The iPad 2 out and while many have figured out what iPad 2 they should buy or whether or not they should upgrade from the ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Friday, March 11, 2011

iPad 2 touched by ExexHobo




The line was long, but I went to the door and like a rock star, walked right in. There it was, the iPad2. I handles it, and here is my first impression.

It is thin! Yes, amazingly thin, and definitely lighter, but, is it possible? Even more solid feeling. I fired up Safari to look for news on the earthquake and tsunami. The speed boost is so apparent, the old one is positively outdated. Played with a few other apps. So fast and smooth!

One thing, the screen is still just good. Walt Mossberg would say the iPad 2 is a failure. Apple continues to rely on a great screen. Someday someone will have a better screen perhaps, so this iPad 2 comes up short. That is the logic of Walt Mossberg.

Now my verdict. Go out or go online. Buy this iPad 2 now. It is cool.

Print Must Die

How they roll in the world of print news.




I am in a place that gives you a free copy of the old grey nag. Errr mare. No, it's the....Lady! Thats it- the Old Grey Lady.

Its a good way to remind oneself about newspapers, how they feel, work, and what a poor medium they are. I love tradition, and the tradition of news print is romantically appealing. As are books. May they survive long, but the really need to improve their business models.

Let's not confuse the issue with the cost of gathering news. I am all for professional journalism and reporting. But I will edit and curate my own news flow, thank you. I will balance the bias of the news reporter with my own selection of sources. The good will survive. Hacks and charlatans will perish.  I do value good columnists, and use means other than print to access their writing.

So, I opened the paper, read a couple of articles, but had to go, and didn't want to carry the damn thing with me, let alone open it at the table or in the car.  So I washed my hands, enjoying the sight of grey water going down the drain so I would not smudge my clothes, grabbed my iPhone, and moved on.  Figuratively too.

Pulse is my reader of choice.  Twitter lists give me as many headlines from as many sources as I can handle.  I digest news that interests me, in chunks I can use, when and where I want it.  So easy, so effective.  And I can access news sources in a "surgical" way, getting many diverse sources I could in no way afford to access via print.  The cost of so may print sources reveals their inefficiency, in scope and business model.  Move on world, figure it out and stop sobbing about a quaint, outdated bit of history.

Newspapers were super amazing back in the day, a hundred or three years ago.  Now they mostly are a waster of trees and chemicals.

iPad 2 Day Dawns with Disaster

We are working nearby an Apple Store, and I was looking forward to seeing the lines and hubub.  But the news out of Japan is sobering, making me think about the insignificance of the Apple news.  With relatives in south Japan, and living on the northwest US coast, this disaster is close to home.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Twitter for iPhone updated, #dickbar still mandatory but slightly less intrusive

Twitter's iPhone App has been annoying to many. I deleted the app because of it's attempt to force Me to care what the twitterverse is doing. Hint- that's why I don't read newspapers or watch TV news!  

Well, twitter has now made the app a little less aggravating. It is still not going back on my phone. 

Twitter for iPhone updated, #dickbar still mandatory but slightly less intrusive
TIPB - THE #1 IPHONE, IPAD, AND IPOD TOUCH BLOG | MARCH 9, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/14pfR


Twitter for iPhone has been updated so that the new #dickbar Quick Bar does not overlap tweets in your timeline. Twitter ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

Monday, March 7, 2011

Discovery leaves space station for the last time

Amidst all the Internet focus on Charlie Sheen, the iPad 2 and such, a tech travel era is closing. Discovery is on it's final voyage, leaving the International Space Station for the last time. 

Discovery leaves space station for the last time
THE SEATTLE TIMES | MARCH 7, 2011
http://pulsene.ws/14bx0


Discovery, the world's most traveled spaceship, left the International Space Station on Monday for the last time, getting a ...

--
Shared via Pulse, an awesome news reader for iPad, iPhone and Android. Check it out!

TweetDeck promising iOS update soon

After bitching about Tweetdeck, I got a nice reply- that I should be patient. Now an announcement that the new product is nigh. Reading their post makes it sound great! I hope it also plays well with Instapaper. I am learning to save interesting links from tweets to Instapaper for later reading.

Ironically, the one app that arms to have this function built in, Echofon, crashes when you try to use it.

It's Nearly Here - New iOS TweetDeck Will Be All Kinds Of Wonderful - http://j.mp/f3wzOZ

Sent from Echofon - http://www.echofon.com/

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Twitter Native app




After another short trial I am deleting the Twitter app formerly know as Tweetie. Why? It works OK. But I hate Twitter's obsession with trending topics, and how it tries to make me notice them. The new bar on the top of the latest version functions to not only flash trending topics, but to do unpredictable things when my finger strays near it. And the feature of linkage to Instapaper? Can't find it.

I am back to two. Echofon and TweetDeck ( who has promised they are working on fixing the iOS version, real, real hard). Since I live in a results based world, Tweetdeck stays on my third page of apps while Echofon is promoted to page one.

International travelers are best off with the AT&T iPad 2 Wi-Fi + 3G

If only it were so easy to travel with an iPhone. But in any case, is a data plan worth it for me?  I can't see it. 

International travelers are best off with the AT&T iPad 2 Wi-Fi + 3G
http://www.tuaw.com/2011/03/05/international-travelers-are-best-off-with-the-atandt-ipad-2-wi-fi/


International travelers are best off with the AT&T iPad 2 Wi-Fi + 3G

With the iPad 2, many people are sure to be excited that Apple is offering both AT&T and Verizon versions of the iPad 2 Wi-Fi + 3G. After all, many out there bemoan the less than desirable 3G service offered by AT&T, so it's nice that those people can buy an iPad 2 which allows them to opt for Verizon's 3G service. However, if you are a frequent international traveler like me, you'll want to make sure you buy the AT&T version of the iPad 2.

While you can buy any iPad 2 and use it on Wi-Fi networks when you land in a specific country, you won't be able to buy a data plan in most countries if you have the Verizon iPad 2. The reason for this is simple: the AT&T iPad 2 features a GSM chipset, which is the near-universal global standard. The Verizon iPad 2 3G uses a CDMA chipset, which, globally, is nowhere near as universal as GSM.

Of course, I'm assuming that you travel to most places I do, like Europe, Russia, Asia, and South America. If you are going to be traveling to Canada or Mexico a lot, the Verizon iPad 2 will work just fine for you since both those countries have wide CDMA networks. However, for most other parts of the world you're better off going with the AT&T iPad 2. When I leave the US with my AT&T iPad 2 and land in the UK, I can whip out my iPad and buy a 30-day subscription using one of Apple's data partners in the UK. If I had a Verizon iPad 2, on the other hand, I'd be out of luck for 3G data service while in the UK. Just something to think about before you let your frustration at AT&T's service push you into the open arms of the Verizon iPad 2.

Click these links for a full list of GSM and CDMA countries.

NOTE: I've called two different Apple stores asking them if the iPad 2 3G model will be unlocked. The first store's representative said "Yes, absolutely. Just insert a foreign carrier's SIM when you arrive in the country and you'll be able to buy local 3G service." The second store's representative said, "I don't think they'll be unlocked." However, even if the iPad 2 is shipping locked, it is easy to unlock it and if you are an international traveler, you are still going to want to go with the AT&T iPad 2 because you'll be able to use it on any GSM network. An unlocked Verizon iPad 2 will not be able to access 3G data networks in most countries because it uses a CDMA chipset.


(via Instapaper)