iPhone

July 18th, 2007

I got an iPhone a few weeks ago and I think I’ve had it long enough to comment on it. 

Let me just say that this thing rocks!  Usually after I’ve bought some new gadget or toy I regret it for the first little while after I’ve gotten it.  There is no such remorse with this new phone.  I just can’t get over how cool it is.

Recently, someone from work sent me an article from a local newspaper on the iPhone.  Here is an excerpt from the article.

The good
    After hesitating to make the switch to Cingular/AT&T, which has not had the best reputation for coverage, I was pleasantly surprised. Service in my house was better than with my previous carrier, Sprint. Coverage in Little Cottonwood Canyon was good nearly all the way to Snowbird, and service in Big Cottonwood Canyon was OK save for spots in the middle. Signal quality was good throughout the valley from Draper to downtown Salt Lake City. I have yet to drop a call or have the phone’s operating system crash.
    The iPhone and the iPod are well integrated. When a call comes in while listening to a song, the music fades out and the ringtone fades in. A small microphone on the headset cord also is the switch to answer. Click it again to hang up, and the music fades back in.
    It’s really the best iPod Apple has made, as Jobs claims. The bigger 3.5-inch screen is more detailed, the video is smoother, and scrolling through CD covers in the iPod’s Cover Flow function is like fingering through a box of albums.
    The Safari browser is stunning – it works just like the desktop version.
    Voice quality is outstanding, clear and loud.
    Yes, AT&T’s EDGE data network is slower than others, but it was speedier than anticipated, working especially well around the valley for Google Maps and for e-mail.
   
    The bad
    I had a hard time connecting to my home Wi-Fi network initially and had to change my wireless security protocol. Chances are, it won’t be hiccup-free at first for you, either. Expect to call Apple’s technical support the first day.
    The external speaker sounds clear and loud when playing a song or video but inexplicably loses volume with the speakerphone.
    One of the great advantages of the last iPod was outputting the video signal to a TV to watch videos on a bigger screen – like a portable DVR in your pocket. You can’t do that with the iPhone.
    It takes forever to charge, anywhere from six to eight hours. And the battery life is less than Apple claims under more normal use, more like six rather than eight hours.
    At eight gigabytes, storage is inadequate. At least 16 would be better.
    No Flash or Java support for the browser yet. And you can’t download files or ringtones to the phone.
    Did I mention the $600 price tag?

Now while I agree with the majority of the items pointed out I disagree on a couple.

SpeedI find it painfully slow over AT&T’s edge connection.  There are many times when I will wish to check out something on the internet and I’ll dash the thought to pieces while only thinking about how long it would take for it to come up.  However, when connected via WIFI, the internet is wunderbar!

Battery LifeThis article indicates that the battery takes 8 hours to charge.  While there were many defective batteries/iPhones shipped, I do not believe mine is one of them.  It takes mine 2.5 hours to complete a full charge from 5% battery life.

Overall, this is probably one of the better purchases that I have ever made.  I have never purchased anything made by Apple in the past and I must say I am very pleased with this one.  Kudos to everyone at Apple who helped make the iPhone such a success.  I hope to see other such killer products from them in the future.

Nail gun…

June 18th, 2007

So I haven’t written anything on the blog for a while.  Here’s a copout…  My hand was hit with a nail from a nail gun.  Yup that’s right.  My left index and middle fingers were stabbed brutally by a nail 2 Saturdays ago.  I’m not really sure how it got there.  But I probably did it, since the nail gun was in my hand at the time.  I wish I had some cool pictures that I could post up here.  But unfortunately I don’t.  And it’s pretty much healed now anyway.

I did it while working on a playhouse in the backyard.  It was actually pretty funny.  My dad was right there and I kind of hid my hand because I couldn’t believe what I just did.  He saw it and gasped, “Gordon!”  So he took my hand and pulled out the nail with a pair of pliers.  I walked in the house holding my hand and stopped at the tile because I didn’t want to get it on the carpet (of course).  There was blood everywhere on the tile and my dad came running down with two bandaids (one for each finger I guess).  I kind of laughed and told him to get some paper towels.

We went to the clinic and they cleaned me up and gave me a tetanus shot and sent me home with antibiotics (I think I only took a total of 4, I was supposed to take 3 a day for like a few weeks).  So we went home and were right back out again working on the playhouse.  But this time I was a little more careful with the nailgun.  They playhouse will be pretty sweet when it’s done.  I’m looking forward to posting our handiwork soon.

I was lucky that it didn’t hit any bone.  Just the fleshy part of my finger.  And I guess it’s not really a copout because I could type fine after it happened.  But it was quite an adventure.

First Hit on Google

May 25th, 2007

I just checked and my home page is now the first hit on Google when you search for gordon child.  Whoo hoo!  This is exciting to me.

In light of this, I was thinking that I might celebrate by change my home page to be something different than the cat with a lime on his head.  Maybe something with a little more content on the home page.  Any suggestions would be appreciated.

Happy Days… :)

May 4th, 2007

I have just acquired an additional TV Tuner for my Media Center PC! For those who may not quite understand what this means… It means I can watch 24 while recording Heroes at the very same moment!! (sniff… I’m so happy… sniff).

This thing was purchased at my favorite ’shop’ for electronic stuff, NewEgg. (note that shop is a term used lightly, because as far as I’m concerned this place has no physical location. It exists only on the internet.) It came yesterday in a brown package.

I had ordered it on Tuesday after a duel over what TV shows my family wanted to watch on Monday. Had we not come to some sort of agreement, 24 would have quite possibly been compromised after a game of rock, paper, scissors. I decided that it was necessary to have this device so a gamble of such high stakes would never take place. (whew, that was a close one.)

Orange Juice

April 20th, 2007

Lately, I’ve been visiting my brother’s home in Cache Valley quite frequently.  Each time that I’ve come home I’ve been pretty tired and stopped at a Chevron that’s in Brigham City when you come out of Sardine Canyon.  They have this Tropicana Orange juice that is just awesome!  It’s the kind that’s not from concentrate and tastes excellent.  I don’t usually get it elsewhere but it’s been kind of a habit for me to stop there and pick some up.

Media Center PC

March 5th, 2007

Well, my Media Center PC is working great now!  I built one for Christmas and after many times of trial and error while in Windows Vista, I was able to getting it running well.  The only last complaint that I have is this:  It takes somewhere around 3 hours to convert a 1 hour TV show that I’ve recorded and then burn it on a DVD.

But, overall, I’m enjoying Windows Vista and the new interface that it comes with.  It’s so easy that even my 8 year old sister can use it.  (as you can tell by one of the screenshots).

Oh, Canada!

February 12th, 2007

I haven’t written in here for a bit but I recently got back from a trip up to Canada.  I drove there.  It took about 13 hours.  But it was loads of fun.  I went to the Calgary tower and I guess they remodeled it a little and now they have a portion that has a glass floor.  So you can walk on it and look at the cars below.  I took pictures on my phone.  I’ve been waiting to post until I get the pictures up on the website.

I also got to see some friends that I hadn’t seen for a while.  So that was fun too.  Some of them might be reading this blog.

Dot Net 3

January 22nd, 2007

So far, my experience with .NET 3.0 hasn’t been all that great.  I don’t see that much of a change since .NET 2.0.  I guess I have been expecting beautifully rendered applications when in fact everything looks .NET 2.0ish.

When I installed the CTP of Orcas, it didn’t appear that anything had changed since Visual Studio 2005.  The Expressions designer is pretty cool.  However it’s not built into Visual Studio yet.  For me to have to go to one program to design the interface then to another to actually code the program is cumbersome.

I’m gonna give it one more try this week.  I saw a few online workshops that are meant to transition you to .NET 3.0.  So I’ll see what those have to offer.  I’m sure I’ll be pleased, but I just expected it to be a little more “plug and play” as far as learning it goes.

Wikimedia

January 16th, 2007

You learn something new every day.  Today I visited the Wikipedia (as I do many days).  I decided to first of all donate to the Wikimedia Foundation.

After donating, I decided to learn some history on wikis in general.  I found out that the term “wiki” comes from a bus that goes around in Hawaii.  The word means fast.  And “wiki wiki” means very fast.  How appropriate.  When I want the right information, fast, I go to the Wikipedia.  It has information on every subject that I have wanted information for, and is very unbiased.  But of course, that is only my opinion. 

Sooo slooooww

January 12th, 2007

Doesn’t it drive you crazy how if you leave your computer on when you leave work, the next day it’s slower than molasses to respond.  Well the reason why is because it’s been doing other things all night (like virus scans, checking for e-mail and such) and it swaps all the other running programs out into virtual memory (the hard drive).  Then after you’ve been working on it for a bit, it swaps things back into memory.

From what I hear, Vista is supposed to fix this.  I think it does something like swap back into memory the parts of applications that it uses the most.  So I guess it will have some sort of ranking feature to rank parts of an application that are used more than others.  When I get vista on a work machine, we’ll see how well it does…