Showing posts with label ipod touch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ipod touch. Show all posts

Jul 22, 2011

So you say your iPod battery doesn't last?

A few days ago, my wife noticed that her iPod touch (2nd Gen) was draining battery like nobody's business!  She would fully charge it, then within an hour or so, it would be dead or nearly dead.  She is running 4.2.1 and it is well-known that the 4.x iOS has major issues with various generations of iPods, especially battery issues.

Of course, "Airplane Mode" solves the problem. It also defeats the purpose of having a wi-fi enabled handheld device.  I did some poking around and stumbled across a suggestion to reset the network settings.  At this point, I figured it couldn't hurt.  So far, so good!

To reset your network settings, go to SETTINGS > GENERAL > RESET > RESET NETWORK SETTINGS



This will, of course, make your device forget everything it saved for your networking, so you will have to re-join your wireless network(s).  But, already we've seen a MAJOR difference in her battery life.  Evidently, the update process hoses the network connection such that the wi-fi never sleeps or runs at max or whatever. 

People jumping from full factory reset directly to 4.2.1 say they have no issues.  That leads one to believe that the issue is in the updating process.  Well, whatever the problem, the fix at this point seems to be to reset the network settings on the device.

Hope this helps someone else!

Nov 17, 2010

Drinking the Apple-flavored Kool Aid

I am sitting in the living room as I write this.  While that is not exactly novel, this is: I am using a MacBook to type while experimenting with an iPad *and* a 4th Gen iPod Touch.  Three years ago, I would have fallen on the floor laughing my head off if someone said I would be here now in this set-up.  Heck, even two years ago, I would have been scoffing at least a little.  A year ago, we didn't even know what an "iPad" was.

For the record, let it be known that these devices are not "mine," but rather they belong to my place of employment.  I simply get the benefit of using them until one of several things happen: a) something new comes along and I "trade up," b) I decide one or more of the devices cause more headache than they solve and pass them on to someone else, or c) my employment with the education service center where I work is no longer a factor and I have to turn them in.  Okay, I threw that last one in for fun.  I like to create controversy every so often just to keep people's juices flowing.  At least, I *hope* it's a joke!

Let me start with the iPod Touch 4th Gen.  Why?  Because, for me, it has the least amount of impact.  Why is that? Because I have a 3rd Gen (technically 2.5 Gen) iPod Touch that I personally own.  While the addition of two cameras is nice, it's still a Touch.  Frankly, it's not a very user-friendly one either.  You see, the edges are even more rounded than in previous versions.  Not a bad thing in and of itself, right?  Well, pair that with the top and side buttons that are essentially flush with the unit, and everything I do on it feels as though the thing is going to squirt out of my hands and crash to the floor. 

The metal is ULTRA slick, and this is one slippery fella.  In fact, the power button on top is basically on the back of the unit.  Not easy to manipulate, in my opinion.  The camera takes pretty good pictures and can fire off several pretty quickly.  In my unscientific testing, I was able to shoot about 3 pictures (like 2.5, really) every second.  I did a rapid-fire shutter test.  that is, I pressed the shutter button as fast as I could ten times.  The camera took 6 of the 10 shots!  That is impressive for something mounted inside a media player.

Is the device worth the extra $30 over its predecessor? Even with my grumblings about the unit, I have to say yes.  Having the dual cameras is a nice touch, and I'm sure I'll figure out other things once I get to using it more and more.


(note: the reflection of the bookcase in the picture was intentional. I've been letting Kevin Honeycutt's creativity rub off on me!)

Now, let's talk about the iPad.

You may recall, I posted several times about my dislike for the device.  Granted, I had only played with one for a little bit and at the time it was nothing more than an iPod Touch XL.  In a lot of ways, it still is that.  But, in other ways, it is more.  There are iPad-specific apps that take advantage of the resolution and screen real estate.  Other apps have been ported to the iPad.  And, if you do run iPod/iPhone apps, you can use the "2x" control to zoom in for a larger (not better) view.

One of the first apps I installed was iNet.  It is an iPhone/iPod app that I could run from the smaller device.  But, having a bigger screen means that I can READ what it is telling me much better.  Another app I installed is Jump.  Jump is a remote desktop tool that offers all kinds of great options, settings, etc.  I also installed Flipboard for reading Tweets in a magazine-like layout. Oh, man, that is worth the price of admission alone.  It also reads your Facebook feed, provided you set it up to do that.  I wish it would let me add RSS feeds as well, but there is Pulse for that, I guess.  Not a big fan of the Pulse app.  Too much vertical scrolling.  I'm not a good vert scroller, as I've mentioned on here in relation to my DSL at home.

I also snagged several educational apps, and will keep adding those.  Since part of my job is to show teachers what they can do with the device(s), I want to get my hands on as many different apps as I can - weed out the good, the bad, and the ugly.

I installed VTrace, but it doesn't seem to work. It locates me via wi-fi, but when I enter an address or hostname then press "Trace," all I get is the empty map (not even showing my location).  Maybe someone knows what I'm missing here.

I'm still learning what I can and can't do on the iPad, but so far, I have done a full 180-degree turn around from my initial thoughts on it.  With the tools I have, plus others that will come along, I'm sure, I can fully understand why so many TECH people are snagging these up.  And, of course with the other apps, it's no wonder non-techs are diving into the thing.

Yes, I have drunk the Apple-flavored Kool Aid.  And, ya know, it ain't half bad.

Jan 27, 2010

Apple's iPad - Cool and not-so-much in one fell swoop

This is my take on the Apple reveal today.  I was not there live, instead I watched it via live bloggers and video from various sources.



Steve Jobs, et al, showed off their new "not-quite-a-tablet" computing device:  The iPad. Yes.  Let that soak in a moment (no pun intended).  Does it look kinda familiar?  It should.  It's basically a big iPod Touch with some "bonus features" thrown in.

See the "home key" on the right?  Just like it's little brother.  One new feature is pop-down/pop-out menus, which make getting to settings inside apps easier.  The screen size (9.7 inches)  provides for a nice viewing area, considering there are no frills with which to be distracted.  The unit comes with a microphone, speakers, WiFi, Bluetooth, and standard 30-pin apple connector.  For $150 more than the asking price, one can also add 3G cellular surfing from AT&T ($14.99/250 MB per month or $29.99 for unlimited - no contracts).

Much of the beginning demo featured Mr. Jobs hanging out in his chair, showing different apps on the big screen: browsing the web, watching a video in HD, reading email, etc.  At one point, some software people came out to talk about the "new" platform.  To me, the NY Times had the best showing.  They rewrote their iPhone app for the iPad and it looks like a newspaper:

One of the cool things about it was the embedded video within an article.  Talk about marrying technologies.  EA did a demo of "Need for Speed: Shift," but frankly, it was like watching any other demo.  Nothing jaw-dropping there so far as I could tell.
 
The interface sports a qwerty keyboard that fills about half the screen, but as you can see, the keys are HUGE for such a little screen.  The presenters talked about iTunes, YouTube, Facebook, etc.  They also showed off their version of eReader: iBooks.  Now, THAT looked cool.  It actually looks like you are holding a book, with "pages" and even the illusion of a cover.  The iBookstore works like iTunes, so it will be easy for folks to pick up on that.

So, how much is this over-sized iPod Touch? 

As I said, add $150 in each category for the 3G access.

The real question is whether or not people are going to buy this thing.  I already have an iPod Touch, and while the prospect of having a much bigger screen is nice, I can't see running out to buy one.  It has NO usb ports and NO memory card reader.  Some people are complaining that it has no camera.  Maybe not, but I don't really see that as a huge drawback, considering what it is being used for.  Though, a user-facing camera would be nice for conferencing, I suppose.  It turns out there may be a device (here) that will add an SD slot and USB to the iPad, so who knows.  I am hoping to convince my boss we need one to demo/try out.  I think it is worth looking at, especially for education use.  Of course, schools could buy twice as many 8GB iTouches for the money as they could iPads, so I'm not sure it's worth it even then.

On, Plurk, there was a pros/cons discussion.  Here is food for thought:

PROS:
  • runs all iPhone apps
  • iphoto, itunes, iWorks
  • HD video, runs iPhone apps, easy to hold, smooth operation
  • keyboard looks cool
  • 10 hour battery life
  • sleeps for a month
  • it is not a netbook!
  • 3G models (assume with AT&T, of course) "Two awesome plans for iPad owners. The first one gives you 250MB of data a month for $14.99. We have an unlimited plan for just $29.99 a month."  No contract, prepaid.
  • $499 - $699 pricing. :-o Much less than I would have expected from Apple
  • NY Times Newspaper layout actually looks like newspaper and has embedded video.
CONS:
  • the name
  • probably price..
  • It's a big iPod Touch. If I have one, is there really compelling reason to buy this?
  • It's a tablet.
  • data plan w/AT&T leaves out rural areas. It's just for the big city folks 
  • So far, no mention of multitasking...
  • should have been called iSlate. Apple likes one-syllable names after the i.
  • How fragile are these?
  • No USB, No SD card slot

*images edited from Engadget's live posting of the event.  Visit their whole take on it here:
http://i.engadget.com/2010/01/27/live-from-the-apple-tablet-latest-creation-event/?sort=newest&refresh=0

Jan 20, 2010

40 Shuffled Songs on my iPod Touch

I haven't done a "40 Things" list in a while, and I thought it might be fun to fire up my iTouch and jot down the names of the first 40 songs that come up as I shuffle through my playlist.  That is, I listed all songs, tapped "Shuffle" then used the "next song" button.  I tell people that I "listen to anything," but a lot of folks don't quite understand what that really means in my world.  Let's see if I can help show what it means!
  1. "Beautiful Girl (Demo)" - Michael Jackson
  2. "Before He Cheats" - Carrie Underwood
  3. "Dancing Machine (Single Version)" - Michael Jackson
  4. "You are not alone" - Michael Jackson (I'm sensing a pattern here)
  5. "I ran so far away" - Flock of Seagulls
  6. "Away in a  manger" - Blaine Larsen (Yes, I still have some Christmas music on there)
  7. "Dinosaurs and Rockets Theme" - Kevin Honeycutt, et al (WAHOO! That is cool!)
  8. "Call Me Al" - Paul Simon (one of the funniest videos ever)
  9. "Here for the party" - Gretchen Wilson
  10. "Break My Stride" - Matthew Wilder (the epitome of one-hit wonder)
  11. "Amarillo Sky" - Jason Aldean
  12. "DJ's Got Me Groovin" - Grilio featuring Breezy (an AcidPlanet song)
  13. "Boondocks" - Little Big Town (Tyler hates the "you get a line" part at the end of this one)
  14. "Teardrops on my guitar" - Taylor Swift
  15. "Winter Wonderland" - Brad Paisley
  16. "We've had enough" - Michael Jackson
  17. "Life is a highway" - Rascal Flatts (Excellent remake!)
  18. "Forever & Always" - Taylor Swift
  19. "Crazy Train (remix)" - Ozzy Osborne & Madonna (supposedly)
  20. "It's On" - NLT (From "Jump In!" Soundtrack)
  21. "Last Kiss" - Pearl Jam (One of my faves)
  22. "Do you hear what I hear?" - Carrie Underwood
  23. "Dirty Water" - Plowed Under
  24. "There's your trouble" - Dixie Chicks
  25. "First redneck on the internet" - Cledus T Judd
  26. "Kryptonite" - 3 Doors Down (Would you still call me Superman?)
  27. "Hoedown Throwdown" - Miley Cyrus
  28. "A memory" - Hannah Blaylock & Eden's Edge (WAHOO! Arky girl goin big time these days!)
  29. "In the back" - Michael Jackson
  30. "Fun Time" - Bruce Willis (Yeah, THAT Bruce Willis - Die Hard, etc)
  31. "Hard Workin Man" - Brooks & Dunn (the duo formerly known as)
  32. "Dont stop til you get enough" - Michael Jackson
  33. "She Came Down" - Kat Jimenez
  34. "Rock me Amadeus" - Falco (I still have no idea what the German words are)
  35. "I'm Already There" - Lonestar (Not the one with the Schwartz)
  36. "Coca-Cola Theme (remix)" - Yes, the commercials remixed into a 4:30 song!
  37. "Push it to the limit" - Corbin Bleu
  38. "I dont think about it" - Emily Osment (Yes, even bubblegum music makes it on here)
  39. "Time of your life" - Green Day
  40. "Dream" - Miley Cyrus
 Not quite as varied as I thought it would be.  Then again, with more than 100 Michael Jackson songs alone, it is easy to see why he ended up in the list so many times.  At the time of this post, I have nearly 450 songs loaded.  I recently pared down my tunes, cutting out almost all the Christmas music and I am about to load in about 500 more songs that I want to add to the mix.  Who knows what will come up next time.

Jan 4, 2010

Back to Work, People!

Welcome to the first Monday at work of 2010. For many in the state of Arkansas, the winter break was extended by a snowfall that shut down many school and business north of the Little Rock area. For those of us living below the Saline County line, however, it was time to brave the cold, dodge snowflakes, and get to work.

I started the day at the office by setting up my boss's new computer, which came with Windows 7 Professional installed. She is the first at our place to have Windows 7 as a primary OS, so it will be interesting to see how things go. Having played with it a little and getting her set up, I have to say, I am ready for the change. Win7 has some neat features like Live Preview (which shows you live screenshots of running programs, like an installation running behind other windows for example). The system also automatically detected and installed her printer which blew me away compared to the nightmare that was Vista.

Once that was out of the way, I began revamping the co-op's web site (http://etsp.k12.ar.us). It still has work to be done, but it is getting more color, actual photos, and will eventually be more user-friendly (er, I hope anyway). We are also changing our corporate logo and the samples I've seen (being done in-house by Gina, one of our Teach Center workers) are lookin' good. I can't wait for us to choose one and move forward into the next phase of what SWAEC will bring to the schools of Southwest Arkansas!



Speaking of the site and photos, John and I grabbed the camera and jetted over to the site of the new building to take a couple shots and see how things were progressing. I have to say, seeing a slab there suddenly makes the project appear to be much further shead than when it was just piles of dirt with pipes sticking up!

Before Christmas Break, we had ordered 120 iPod Touch units as part of the TIE program we host. Well, due to a mix-up in processing, we had 100 shipped instead of 120. One of the conditions of placing the order was that the units could not be received during the holiday break. The day after we placed the order, I got an email listing 20 boxes heading our way for delivery on December 23. Umm, you see a problem here? Well, I was able to get those diverted and delayed until after January 4. Rather, it turns out, they were scheduled for redelivery *on* January 4th and they came in today! Normally, that is great news. Unfortunately, it seems someone put their hand in our candy jar:



This box only had TWO units in it, even though there are FIVE serial number on the box. You may also notice that the factory seal appears to be broken and then resealed. That was some serious eagle-eyeing by John on that one! I had overlooked that little piece of info. I took pictures of the box (luckily I had opened the box from the bottom by mistake!) and sent them to our contact at Apple. We'll see where things go from there!

Seriously, is it quitting time yet?

Dec 11, 2009

Rockin (er, blues-in') on the iPod

I met Kevin Honeycutt (http://kevinhoneycutt.org) at the TIE (http://tie.k12.ar.us) conference earlier this year.  He is a wild, enthusiastic educator who loves to have fun bringing technology into schools, SHOWING how to use it.

Last night (Thursday), Bob (from Western Co-op in Branch, AR) and I met up with Kevin at a nearby Waffle House.  Kevin had never been to one before and he decided that was where we would eat supper.  The night started out like this:



And when things start out like that, they can only get nuttier.  After supper, we headed back to Kevin's room where he had several iPod Touches, a guitar, amp, and wiring to hook it all together.  Using the "Band" app on the Touch, along with other apps we tried, we managed to pull together a bluesy song and our own rendition of "Wipeout" (appropriate, given how it sounded!)

Kevin is a fan of streaming anything and everything, so he recorded us practicing last night.  Here are the two videos:

We started the night out just trying to figure things out.  We played different songs, letting ourselves get a feel for the software and trying to help Bob and me find rhythm.  It was not easy.  Eventually, though, we were so goofy that we kind of forgot about what we were doing, and things (sorta) came together.  I am hoping to do something similar in a workshop for teachers next summer!  It is going to be a blast!!

Oct 16, 2009

Using a Mac, learning more about the iPod Touch, and being sick




I broke down and told the boss that I was taking one of the MacBooks home with me to learn how to use it, troubleshoot it, network it, etc.  I decided I would NOT put Windows on it, despite my massive desire to do so.  And, let me tell you, it's been heck.

I started out by trying to get the Mac to print to the shared printer on my Windows machine.  The Mac sees the printer, but can't find the driver I installed for the printer, so I can't print.  Not a big deal, right? I'll just try another one.  Wrong.  So, I will keep working on that until I figure it out.  Turns out at least two techs are watching me for updates on how I get it to work (or *IF* I get t to work!).

At home, the Mac's iTunes sees my media server and lets me play music in iTunes from it. Great! But, he machine itself can't seem to find the network share with the music in it, so I cannot copy the shared music to my iPod. Not so great.  In the meantime, I hooked my iPod Touch up to my PC and everything works just like it should.  Not very promising for the Mac of things, let me tell you.

Also at home, I have a Netgear IP network print server and all the PCs can print to it just fine.  The Mac? Uh, no.  I am installing updates on the Mac, so we'll see if somewhere hidden in those updates we find a way to print to the Netgear (with HP 1012 attached).  I did some poking around, and evidently there is an open source set of DMG files I can download and install to get the 1012 to work.  Seriously?  Yeah, I'm hoping the update thing works for me. :-)





Speaking of iPod Touch (which I will refer to as iTouch because it's easier for me and I don't care if it is right, wrong or otherwise), I got one the other day to use and play with.  It's very cool, but I had limited use because our DSL has been out since the downpour of rain.  Actually, it turned out to be because lightning hit the line and fried the port our connection was attached to at the main switch in town.  That can't be good, but it is better than our house burning down!



So far, he only apps I've used are "Band" and "Skeeball."  I will be adding more, preferably free ones, in time.  BAND gives you various instruments you can play and record.  There's even an audience for those that need a little ego boost.  SKEEBALL is just what it sounds like.  You can use your finger to launch the ball, or even better, you can flick the iTouch and "roll" the ball that way!  SWEET!  It is very addictive!  Or, well, it is for me anyway.


If you're reading this and have some ideas or suggestions for cool apps to use/try, let me know!  I am willing to experiment with just about any app, though I do prefer the ones with no price tag on them.  I've seen a bunch of different ones on friends' devices (a flatulence machine, a lighter, iBeer) that are not up my alley, but hey, I'm willing to at least READ about anything that gets suggested.



I left for work this morning, ready to help a district with network issues.  I got to the gas station, filled up, and then something went wrong.  I got pretty sick very quickly.  I decided the best thing to do was come back home and see where things went.

I took some medicine and laid down for a while after letting everyone know I was sick (work, family).  The DSL guy called so I talked with him and explained what was up.  He did his thing and after he left, I laid back down again.  As of 11am, I feel better, not great.  I have a sore throat and my head is a bit woopy, but no fever!  I realize you may not want all of that, but there it is. LOL!