Archive for March, 2009

Griffin PowerJolt

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One accessory that I have neglected to buy for the iPhone in the six months is a car charger. My shopping for this overlooked essential began at Apple Store online on Monday where I found the Griffin PowerJolt Car Charger and the Kensington Car Charger, both priced at £14.63. After a quick tweet about both of these contenders, it seemed that people had found Griffin to be far superior quality, so I decided to purchase that. However, after a quick price comparison between other sites, I found it cheaper than Apple – £11.49 through a store on Amazon Marketplace (+ free postage).

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There seemed to be two versions of the PowerJolt on some websites – one listed as being 2007, the other 2008 and obviously I wanted to make sure that it was iPhone 3G compatible, not just the 1st gen model. Again, some sites out there were a little confusing with their information, so I went for the 2008 version and can verify that this is completely and utterly iPhone 3G compatible.

The features of the Griffin PowerJolt are:

Plugs into your cigarette lighter or 12v auxiliary power port to power and charge your iPod or iPhone.

Light ring glows green and amber to indicate charge status.

Protects your iPod or iPhone against power surges with easily replaceable fuse.

Includes detachable charge/sync cable for iPod or iPhone.

It’s a nice little piece of hardware that works like a charm – and will keep me powered when I’m at the wheel. The cable on this is 40cm long – I know the length is important to people.

So, my first Griffin purchase. Happy. Will definitely be exploring their other products for iPhone and Mac.

Read All About It: Newsstand app for iPhone

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Since moving back to NewsFire RSS app on my iMac from the very flaky NetNewsWire, I haven’t been able to keep up to date with my RSS feeds on the iPhone. This largely hasn’t bothered me as I use my iMac more than the iPhone and even when I did have the syncing ability between NNW on my Macs and iPhone I never checked them.

Because I will be iPhone exclusive in a couple of weeks I suddenly remembered that I won’t be near my RSS feed on my Mac for a number of days. Being delivered the feeds I subscribe to on the iPhone during my Mac and wifi timeout will be one of the things I’ll look forward to as no doubt I’ll be beating a lot of boredom.

Last night I searched through the iTunes App Store for an app that would allow me to access my feeds by importing my OMPL file. Syncing wasn’t high up on my list, but something that performed well and looked good was.

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Newsstand is arguably the most elegant RSS feed app in the App Store at this moment. Not only can you view and organize your feeds in portrait mode but flip your phone into landscape mode and this is where the app shows it’s true beauty, turning into a beautiful shelf of newspapers that you scroll through with a flick of your finger.

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To open up a feed in shelf mode just tap the screen twice and it flips that feed open like a newspaper.

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To add subscriptions to Newsstand you can import your subscription list from any Bloglines account, OPML file on the web or Google Reader. I imported my OPML file by uploading it to my webspace first. You can also add your OPML by uploading it to a free service such as opmlmanager.com You can also manually add new RSS feed URL’s at any time, aswell as share articles from Newsstand via E-mail, Twitter or delicious.com bookmarks. Be sure to check out the video here.

Newsstand is a beautiful app that is well worth the price at £2.99 [iTunes link] Newsstand will elegantly tide me over until NewsFire is available in iPhone app style with syncing abilities. I culled my RSS subscriptions list to around 22 recently, so when I’m back to my Mac I shouldn’t be too overwhelmed by unread feeds.

Terminal Tip: Twitterrific

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I love Twitter chatter, but sometimes there can be just too much noise, especially if there is an event being talked about heavily and people are using those annoying hashtags before the #word. If you couldn’t care less about hearing the chatter about these events, then you’ll be looking for a way of filtering them out – or considering closing your Twitter desktop client until the event is over!

My friend Nik posted a godsend last night, especially for the desktop Twitterrific users out there. It’s just one simple line to pop into Terminal (Applications > Terminal) to filter out certain tweets and hit enter. This is the line I’m using…

defaults write com.iconfactory.Twitterrific tweetTextFilter -string "(please RT|RT please|Facebook|Austin|[sS][xX][sS][wW]|#[sS][xX][sS][wW])"

From Nik’s blog;

The one above is one that I’m using on the desktop (apart from the SXSW mentions) and I’ve used it previously to hide annoying Twitter competitions and the like. To filter out tweets with other terms, simply manipulate the expression in brackets to your needs. You can enter URLs, hashtags and the like to you needs, but be sure to remember that for now, the terminal command will overwrite the existing expression instead of adding things to it so you’ll need to enter the entire thing once again. I remain hopeful that the Icon Factory will add a UI for this functionality (even if it’s just a basic ‘exclude’ list). There’s plenty more options to tinker with via the Terminal if you read the Twitterrific 3.2 Read Me included with the Twitterrific download.

I have a feeling that I will be updating terminal quite a bit. I considered filtering the hashtag altogether, but then that would probably make Twitterrific too quiet! Now, if only Tweetie had a built in filter…

Bugged by iTunes 8.1

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Late last night I installed iTunes 8.1 when it showed up in Software Update. Now I’m wishing I’d stayed on version 8 as a horrible pre-v8 bug has reared it’s ugly head once again.

A simple action such as clicking on a song to play will make iTunes hang, crash and then get itself into a loop where it continually re-opens as you attempt to Force Quit. Even when iTunes is happily open and you simply try to quit or shut down the Mac, it keeps on re-opening meaning it interrupts any attempt to shut down your computer. Very frustrating.

It seems there are many others experiencing the same issue if the threads over at Apple Support Discussion Forums are anything to go by. If the new features aren’t something you desperately want then I’d recommend holding off installing iTunes 8. Let’s hope Apple fix this annoying issue quickly.

Electric Nightmares

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In less than 2 weeks my worst nightmare will come true. The whole house needs to undergo the most major and invasive work that it will ever need to undergo – a full electrical rewire.

About two weeks ago some lights in our house started flickering. Being concerned that this wasn’t the first time strange electrical things had occured at home, we decided to call in an expert and check our wiring. We were told that it would be a full rewire and that it would be almost certainly done in one day. Our wiring is mid-1970′s, meaning we’re around 75% more likely to have a house fire or death caused by electrical shock than with those who have ‘modern’ wiring. And that’s a statistic we don’t want to be part of.

So, last week began the de-clutter to get everything out that we didn’t need from old PC’s and software, to clothes that many a charity shop have benefited from this week. Then yesterday we met with the electricians to be briefed on what exactly was going to happen and what we needed to do prior to the work being carried out. I was hoping that they would tell us that the work would be minor and that new wires could be replaced by making just a small incision, a bit like keyhole surgery. However, as you can see from this tweet it wasn’t quite that sugar-coated.

Just 5 weeks ago I completed the redecoration of my home office which I’d so cosied myself into. In less than 2 weeks it’s going to have the floor pulled up, holes cut into that and the walls mauled to death. One day was a bit ambitious and although we’re assured the electricity will be back on within that one day, there will be men coming and going from our property for several days after to plaster and patch up everything that they unpatched. There’s also no way we can stay in our home while the rewire is taking place as it will be noisy, dusty and uncomfortable.

While I’m in the middle of a mini breakdown, I’m also finding my head bursting with a ‘to-do’ list that just keeps on growing. I have no idea where to start, but I shall need to get the mental notes out onto paper so that I can check things off as I go. If that wasn’t bad enough, the estimated “end of the month” could be brought forward a bit, which will give us just over a week to pack up our life into many boxes to ship out. It may sound silly to the non-Geeks out there (not sure this blog gets that kind of readership, however) but the only thing I will be personally physically dragging around with me on the big day is my iMac, aside from my iPhone that doesn’t need dragging, just tucking away quietly in my pocket. The iMac has my worklife on here and there’s no a chance in hell that I will put it into storage in a deep dark cupboard at home, nor will I let family take this incase they have a break-in. Yeah, I’m a classic case for Cognitive Therapy ;)

So, since my router will be packed up for a while, I shall be solely accessing the internet (um…Twitter, mostly) with my iPhone over 3G (god bless these two technologies!). A few nights will be spent with my parents while the dust, literally, settles. Then of course will be several weeks of cleaning up, redecorating and re-laying wood floors. I’m just hoping it’s now safe to install/update apps over the air on 3G because you can bet the new super-duper version of a super-duper app I’m using will become available during my downtime. Please say it’s so.

Maybe it’s time to invest in one of those GTD apps on my iMac which can sync to my iPhone. Any recommendations?

FStream on the iPhone

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One of the ways I get through my day is by listening to the fantastic DI.fm House radio station via iTunes on my Mac. Now with an app I discovered yesterday I can listen to that same station on my iPhone when I’m away from my Mac.

FStream is a brilliant free app in the iTunes App Store. Once downloaded you can select from hundreds of stations in the Presets section or add your own in by going to Favorites > Edit > Add new webradio then fill in the Name, URL, Format and Bitrate.

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Thanks to a review in the App Store I was able to add in BBC Radio One by inputting the following:

Name: BBC Radio One
URL: http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/wm_asx/aod/radio1.asx
Format: WMA
Bitrate (kbs): leave this empty

BBC Radio 1, 2, 3 and 4 are all available, so if you want Radio 2 then simply change the URL to http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/wm_asx/aod/radio2.asx or 3 or 4, whatever your listening preferences are. If you want BBC Radio 6 then do everything as above but the URL is different: http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/listen/live/r6.asx I am a very rare listener to any of the BBC Radio stations, but it’s good to know I can get them. And the best part about FStream is you can even record what you’re listening to on the radio!

My discovery of FStream came from a retweet posted by O2UKOfficial on Twitter – the only re-tweet I have ever received that has actually been of benefit/interest to me in some way. I guess one out of a million had to in the end ;)

Pixelmator Winner

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Thanks to everyone who entered the Pixelmator Giveaway competition that I’ve been running for the past 7 days. The lucky winner has been chosen at random and that winner is Jon Oakley. Congratulations, Jon! I’ve passed on your details to Pixelmator and you should receive your free license shortly.

Twimailer

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A new service launched on the intertubes yesterday which is one of the most exciting twitter-related services I’ve seen in a long time.

If you’re left wanting more information about a new follower than what Twitter currently supplies in their basic ‘new follower’ notification e-mail then you might want to try Twimailer.

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After registering your e-mail at Twimailer it will generate a random e-mail address for you which you just enter into your Twitter account settings as your default e-mail. Then it’s just a question of waiting for that all important new follower so you can see the beautified notification e-mail. It gives you as much information as you’ll need to know about this new follower, including their avatar, location, bio, their following/follower stats aswell as their latest 10 tweets. It’s is a great way to weed out the spammers without even having to leave your inbox. Twimailer is what the Twitter.com new follower e-mails should have looked like by default. Be sure to watch the video on their site for a full walkthrough.

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