Prompts

Prompts

MG Siegler is right:

Not everything done in computing is intended to be nefarious. At some point, you simply have to trust that someone — be it Apple, Google, or an app developer — isn’t out to screw you over.

I decided a long time ago to assume that I am being treated fairly and honestly. It feels a lot healthier then assuming everyone is out to screw me.

Great Presentation By Corey Pressman On The Post-Book

Very interesting presentation by Corey Pressman last night at Mobile Portland. He talked about the history of publishing (he’s an anthropologist by training) and how we are at an inflection point. But unlike most in the “traditional publishing” world Corey sees this as a tremendous opportunity, an amazing inflection point, a Big Bang with tons of possibilities in the publishing world.

Corey speaks for the first 38 minutes and then there is a panel on iBooks Author and eBooks in education. Well worth the time!


(or watch it here)

TV Is Broken

TV Is Broken

Oh this little story is awesome and mimics my own experiences with my own daughters:

I say all of this to set up the fact that Beatrix has little idea of how traditional TV works and seeing her first real exposure to it was enlightening to say the least.

“Why did you turn the movie off, Daddy?”, Beatrix worriedly asks, as if she has done something wrong and is being punished by having her entertainment interrupted. She thinks that’s what I was doing by rushing for the remote.

“I didn’t turn it off, honey. This is just a commercial. I was turning the volume down because it was so loud. Shrek will come back on in a few minutes” I say.

We have a television set and have basic cable but rarely ever watch it. The “basic” part gives us the local channels and Discovery channel, in essence. For the most part, we stream movies and tv shows from a hard drive to Apple TV or via Netflix, not that my girls watch much of that even.

So their exposure to commercials? Almost none.

When I was 3 years old my mom worked nights so would set me up in front of the television on Saturday mornings to play and watch cartoons. She said I would watch the commercials saying, “I want that!” to every one. Now my girls barely know what a commercial is. Funny how things have changed in 35 years.

The Awesomeness That Is VoiceOver

We started work on version 3 of powerOne for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch this past week. While I am not ready to announce what made the cut and what didn’t, we do hope to ship it to Apple in about a month. It will be a free upgrade to current customers.

One of the requests we got was to enhance our support for Apple’s accessibility feature called VoiceOver. Our customer said, “This app isn’t perfectly compatible with VoiceOver, Apple’s built-in text-to-speech technology, but it is the best I’ve found so far.” I’m really glad she wrote because powerOne is perfectly geared toward the sight-impaired and with version 3 it will be even better.

How does VoiceOver work? There is a setting in the Settings app (General then Accessibility) that when turned on lets you tap a button, label, or control once to hear what it is and then double-tap anywhere on the screen to activate the button or flick to move the slider. It is a little arduous but I can only imagine how hard these devices are to use for the visually impaired without it.

For the most part the iPhone and iPad is really smart. It does things like read the contents of table cells and labels. Today the templates work quite well as Apple reads the label and value in each cell when tapped. But the calculator and number editors are filled with buttons with graphics and it reads the name of the graphic used on the button. Other problems include the fact that it doesn’t tell you the settings correctly and it didn’t read the result of a calculation.

We went through and spent the better part of a day assigning all those details. For instance choosing the decimal precision now tells you the current setting and as you move the slider it reads it to you: “0”, “float”, “1”. Every calculator button now says what it does, every toolbar and navigation bar buttons says what it does, it even reads the help to you. And now when you complete a math problem, algebraic or RPN mode, it reads you the result.

This was one of those features that would have been easy to justify away. After all, how many sight-impaired customers could we possibly have? But it is rare that we get a chance to implement a feature that truly helps people better themselves, to help those who would otherwise need help do for themselves. In some ways the time spent enhancing powerOne for VoiceOver felt like no time at all!

 

Japan, An Early Mover In Mobile, Trails The U.S., Others In Smartphones

comScore: Japan, An Early Mover In Mobile, Trails The U.S., Others In Smartphones

This headline (and story) doesn’t surprise me at all. The important quote:

Ironically, it seems that Japan’s early move into mobile content – the i-mode service from DoCoMo, launched in the 1990′s, being one of the very first plays at offering more than just voice and text to users – is partly to blame.

Why is this ironic, though? It is typical. Leaders don’t generally transition quickly from one paradigm to another because the old is good enough. DoCoMo was kind of like smartphone technology years ago and it was heavily adopted in Japan, a decade and a half before anywhere else. It is not surprising at all that the consumers there have been slower to transition to smartphones.

A great example in the US is how long it took for cell phones to take off relative to other countries. We had awesome and expensive copper wiring going to every house in America. Of course there is little incentive for people to change and little incentive to “string the last mile” of cell phone service across the country. Other countries had no copper wiring, no landlines, and were much faster at adopting cell phone technology.

This is why most companies can’t make the transition from one business paradigm to another, too. It is why Google sucks at social, why Microsoft has struggled at mobile.

Japan is way more typical than this article wants to admit. There are examples everywhere.