Nov
25
2008

Important info about my Wikipedia review

I received a comment from one of the developers of Wapedia (one of the Wikipedia apps I reviewed a couple of days ago). She pointed out a feature of Wapedia that I overlooked: it’s very, very fast. Due to the fact that the page is reformatted and re-rendered in a very minimalist style, it loads quickly on EDGE, 3G, or Wi-Fi connections. So, if the most important thing to you is speed and the data, Wapedia is a top-notch download. If, however, you also want elegance and all the extra features, I still stand by Wikipanion. I am, however, keeping a close eye on all the options so that if one app improves beyond the others, I will switch.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: iPhone | Tags: ,
Nov
24
2008

Where the Hell is Matt?

This is my new favorite video on YouTube. It’s a video of this guy dancing in places all over the world. I checked out his website, “Where The Hell Is Matt?” and learned a bit about why he’s doing this. Apparently, he just decided he didn’t want to work anymore, so he saved up some money, quit his job, and traveled. While traveling, he did a silly dance at the request of his friend and posted it online. It was quite popular, so he decided to do it more often in the various places he traveled. A year later, Stride Gum asked him if he would consider taking a trip around the world and dancing wherever he goes. He agreed and has been doing it ever since.

The videos he’s made are all entertaining, but this one is really the best. It’s also a video that was posted to YouTube in 720p (which is how I’ve embedded it below). Visit the direct link and you can watch it full screen. Make sure you click on the “watch in high quality” link off the bottom-right corner of the video on YouTube’s site. You can also create a YouTube account and change your settings to always display the “high quality” version when available.

The song featured in the video is incredibly beautiful. It’s titled Praan.


Direct link here.

Download the video in HD and SD here.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: Random | Tags:
Nov
21
2008

Battle of the Wikipedia iPhone apps

UPDATE: Clarified some misconceptions on my part about Wapedia below.

When I first got my original iPhone, I was very excited about the prospect of being able to access the breadth of information that the Internet had to offer from almost anywhere. One of the first web apps that really excited me came from the site Comoki.com. The authors of the site created an app that pulled info from Wikipedia, reformatted it to fit beautifully onto the iPhone, and passed it on to you. It was a marvel of web design and I loved it. Unfortunately, so did the rest of the iPhone community. And, as the community grew, the site got hammered and pounded and decimated. Due to the unavailability of the site most of the time I tried to reach it, I began looking for alternatives, but could never find one with the same simple elegance and ease of use.

And then Apple unveiled the App Store. Soon after iPhone software v2.0 came out, a Wikipedia app appeared in the store. And then another. And another. My quest for a replacement began. There were only a few requirements necessary for an application to succeed in my mind: 1) it must be fast, 2) it must be easy to use, and 3) it must be free.

With these criteria in mind, I went in search of the ultimate Wikipedia app on the iPhone. The following is a true to life story about one man’s journey into the largest encyclopedia in the world.

WikipanionApp Store (Free) / Wikipanion PlusApp Store ($4.99)

Wikipanion was the first Wikipedia app I found on the App Store and it was initially very frustrating for me. After using Comoki’s web app, I had grown used to a very unique method of browsing Wikipedia: using disclosure triangles for each heading to reduce the amount of scrolling necessary to navigate the article.

While scrolling on a computer is rarely an encumbrance, it can be very frustrating on an iPhone as there is no way to grab the scroll bar and just move it to the middle or end of a document. However, after spending a few moments with the app, I discovered a button at the bottom of the screen that allows you to pull up the Table of Contents and jump to the various sections of the article. This made viewing large articles a great deal more bearable.

Other great features available in the app that just aren’t available when using Safari to visit Wikipedia are the option to adjust font sizes and search the article for specific words or phrases. Perhaps one of the coolest features, however, is the ability to access Wiktionary from the very same app, and even listen to verbal pronunciations of words found in Wiktionary. Further, it is possible to lock the orientation of the article in landscape or portrait modes, e-mail links, bookmark a specific section instead of just an article, and open the page in Safari (perhaps to bookmark for future viewing on your desktop). Plus, if you click on a link that leaves Wikipedia and ventures out into the rest of the Interwebs, the app prompts you before opening the link in Safari to ensure that you knew you’d be leaving Wikipanion for another app.

There is also a pay version of Wikipanion that adds the ability to queue articles for reading later, as well as offline browsing.

WikiamoApp Store

This app is extremely similar to Wikipanion in rendering and interface. So much so, that it’s hard to tell the difference between the two. Some minor similarities, however, can help differentiate the two, and perhaps aid users in deciding if either of the two apps is right for them.

Like Wikipanion, it does an excellent job of allowing you to jump around the article using the Table of Contents. Unlike Wikipanion, searching for a new topic requires you to pull up a search screen with the push of a button (Wikipanion uses a search bar at the top of the article that is only visible when scrolled all the way up, similar to Safari). The push button search can actually be faster than Wikipanion’s as you can press the button from anywhere, rather than scrolling to the top of the article and then tapping the search field.

Bookmarking is also simpler in Wikiamo. Simply press the “plus” button in the toolbar at the bottom of the screen and add a bookmark just like you were using Safari. Viewing the bookmarks is just as easy, and includes a hierarchical bookmark structure just like that of Safari, including a specialized history folder (Wikipanion uses a history tab inside the bookmarks screen, instead).

Wikiamo also includes the feature to warn before leaving the app and opening Safari. E-mailing links from within the app is also available, though no feature to open the article in Safari seems to exist.

However, Wikiamo’s page rendering is not as dynamic as Wikipanion’s. Section headings are not emboldened and therefore can be easy to miss if scrolling through the article. The text size is larger by default, making it easier to read, but since both Wikiamo and Wikipanion can have their text size adjusted, it is only a victory for the lazy. Wikiamo also requires that you go to the Settings app to adjust the text size while Wikipanion allows it from within the app.

In fact, almost every feature available to each application is available in both, but some require returning to the Settings app to adjust. Wikiamo does have its alternative language options available by default. Wikipanion requires you to turn on the specific languages you want to use before it will let you view those languages.

WikiTapApp Store

This app is a very unique take on Wikipedia, one that didn’t exactly blow me away. But I highly recommend trying it out, as it does some things that no other Wikipedia app for the iPhone does. Let’s delve deeper, shall we?

To begin with, the app opens to a search screen, just like the apps I’ve talked about so far. However, this particular search screen has four thumbnails on it, each linking to a Wikipedia article that has recently had a YouTube video “linked” to it by a user of the application.

For example, let’s say you look up some information on Sonic the Hedgehog in Wikipedia. Once you’ve found that page, you can then do a YouTube search, playback the video to make sure it’s the one you were thinking off, and then tag it in a fashion that is tied to the article you were just reading. Furthermore, anytime you visit a page, videos appear in a sliding dock at the bottom of the screen that have been linked by other users or have similar keywords to the article you’re viewing. It’s a very unique way to merge Wikipedia and the largest source for videos on the ‘Net.

Another nice feature of the app is that it automatically caches the article you download and reformats it (just like the rest of the apps I’ve talked about). However, you can click a button and switch to the mobile version of Wikipedia if you’d prefer. Once there, however, you lose the ability to pull up the Table of Contents in its own screen (it’s now listed at the top of the article, just like on the website). Otherwise, the ability to mail a link to the page, add videos or photos to the floaty, dock-like thing, and view videos and images already tagged remains.

Unfortunately, there is no option to bookmark pages, or resize the text. Clicking on a link that takes you out of Wikipedia, however, is simply loaded inside the app using the Mobile Safari API that so many apps have developed to prevent kicking you out of their app just to view a link they’d like you to see. So, if you’re looking for a unique Wikipedia experience, this app is a good way to go, but will not provide you with the fullest experience you’ve ever had.

QuickpediaApp Store

If Wikipanion and Wikiamo are the most robust Wikipedia apps for the iPhone, Quickpedia is a horse of a different color. Leaving features behind for speed and simplicity, this app still manages to provide features that none of the others do (or at least, not obviously).

Quickpedia dumps you straight into a search screen with articles listed alphabetically for your browsing pleasure. A quick search will land you in the most relevant article, or give you a simple disambiguation list below the search field to quickly direct you to the correct article. Once you’ve performed a few searches, they appear at the top of the topics list for browsing and begin to disappear once the live-search kicks in and they are eliminated from a possible search term based on what you’ve entered so far. This makes it the easiest app to return to recently viewed articles.

Once you’ve found the article you’re looking for, it becomes quite clear that Quickpedia took some lessons from the gang at Comoki.com. Instead of a Table of Contents screen, subheadings are listed next to disclosure triangles that reveal their contents when tapped. Unfortunately, in an attempt to minimize the number of buttons on the toolbars at the top and the bottom of the screen, the Options for each page where you you can adjust the font size or e-mail links (again, no option to send to Safari) is a yellow bar that is larger than the toolbars of the application that is located at the top of the article and scrolls out of site as you proceed through the article. Tapping the bar causes the disclosure triangle for Options to turn downward and fill the screen with large buttons to accomplish your goal. If you have a friend or family member who needs large buttons and text to make their use of the iPhone easier, this is an excellent app for them. However, someone with excellent eyesight and fine motor control will do better to use an alternative app.

Quickpedia does have a unique method of text entry for searching that can be toggled on and off (off by default). A translucent keyboard, that hovers on the right-hand side of the screen rather than over the top of the text can help you see a lot more live-search options while you continue to type. Unfortunately, if you’re used to using the built-in iPhone keyboard, this one will only slow you down due to its new arrangement of letters and one-handed usage.

One final point that drags Quickpedia below the competition is that clicking on an external link opens Safari without warning. Thankfully, though, Quickpedia’s recent search list will always allow you to quickly return to your article should it no longer have it cached in the iPhone’s memory by the time you come back.

WapediaApp Store

Perhaps the laziest of the Wikipedia entries, Wapedia.mobi has been around as a Wikipedia portal for cell phones for a long time. In fact, it was the first site I found when I got my first generation iPhone and until I came across Comoki’s web app, was where I went for Wikipedia searches. Unfortunately, the native version of Wapedia is little more than a Mobile Safari wrapped website.

Performing a search query simply loads a search results window and selecting a choice merely opens the Wapedia.mobi formatted page in a slightly re-formatted-for-iPhone style. It does provide you with a Table of Contents screen located in a button on the toolbar, and it also allows you to e-mail a link or open it in Safari. Unfortunately, both options link you to Wapedia’s site, rather than WIkipedia’s, likely in an attempt to spread knowledge of their own site to the world in an effort to reduce the loading time of all pages over slower connections. Images have also been reduced in size for the same purpose (Thanks, Katie, for the heads-up!).

Due to the fact that the page is reformatted and re-rendered in a very minimalist style, it loads quickly on EDGE, 3G, or Wi-Fi connections. So, if the most important thing to you is speed and the data, Wapedia is a top-notch download. If, however, you also want elegance and lots of extra features, I recommend one of the others above.

EurekaApp Store

Eureka probably has the most minimalist interface of all the apps here, which is actually to its benefit. It opens to a blank screen with two toolbars. A search field can be accessed by tapping the magnifying glass icon. Searches are live as you type and a progress bar shows how much of the article has been downloaded when you select the one you want.

Unfortunately, the rendering of the page is exactly as the page appears in Safari. While a button on the toolbar gives you quick access to the Table of Contents, other languages, a find feature, Safari-opening, and emailing, the real nice feature is the ability to find articles in other languages and translate them to your native language. Unfortunately, I could not find any articles in other languages that were not already available in English to test this feature out.

Perhaps most similar to Quickpedia in design and ease-of-use, if you’re looking for a Wikipedia app with a small footprint and straightforward usage, this is probably the one for you.

The Winner

And now, for the moment you’ve all been waiting for. The winner of this knockdown, drag-out, street fight is… Wikipanion!

While a very close contest between Wikipanion and Wikiamo that could change at any time as the two apps are updated and feature-enhanced, at the time of this writing, Wikipanion provides the most features, and the most useful features are accessible from within the app rather than the Settings app. I feel that either of the two would be very useful, but having the option to get a paid version of the app with offline viewing will be really nice for those with an iPod Touch or traveling in poor signal areas. Be sure to check it out here.

Also, keep your eyes peeled to this spot. When Comoki releases their Wikipedia app, I’ll be sure to compare it to the resident champion and see if it can take the crown.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: iPhone | Tags: ,
Nov
21
2008

Snowflake Scarves

My best friend in the entire world (after my wife, natch—I love you, baby!) has started an awesome not-for-profit called Snowflake Scarves. The organization makes handmade scarves, sells them online, and then donates the proceeds to Outreach International. The site went live a couple of days ago and tomorrow they’re having a photo shoot to show off the product. So, if you live in Texas and are within reasonable driving distance of Del Valle, check out the site for the address and go have some champagne and model some scarves. While you’re there, be sure to sign the guestbook and let your friends know about this awesome new project.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: Random | Tags:
Nov
20
2008

Fun with Google Voice Search

A couple of days ago, Google released an updated version of the Google Mobile App for iPhone and iPod Touch. The updates primary purpose was to add Voice Search functionality to the app, allowing you to hold the iPhone to your ear and speak your search query into the microphone. Immediately, I began thinking of ways I could have fun with this.

So I searched for lewd things to see what would happen. The following is a list of things I searched for and the response I got instead. I warn you, these may be highly offensive to you and I have cleaned them up where I can, but you have been warned.

  • boobies = movies
  • breasts = breasts (only tried that one after boobies failed 3 times in a row and my wife prompted me to do so)
  • t***y f**kers = city slickers
  • <my wife’s first and last name> naked = <wife’s first name> cashmere kids
  • naked hotness = naked hot mess
  • Google Voice Search is broken = google voice surgery broken (my personal favorite)

So, as you can see, it’s not perfect. But it’s funny. And it does a good job with sensible requests. For example, I searched for “restaurants in kansas city” and it got it right the first time. I weep, however, for citizens with heavier accents attempting to use this feature.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: iPhone | Tags:
Nov
19
2008

Ludo – Live at the Apple Store

I had one of the most sublime experiences of my life today.

My favorite band, Ludo Ludo, performed at the Country Club Plaza Apple Store this afternoon. I haven’t been able to see these guys live for a couple of years now, and it was very refreshing to get this opportunity. It was also my son’s first ever concert, and even though it was a brief acoustic set, he thoroughly enjoyed it.

To those of you that missed it, I’m terribly sorry, but if there are other awesome bands planning to play the Apple Store in the future, I’ll do my best to keep you informed. I have several pictures posted below for your viewing pleasure.

Probably the best part of the entire event was listening to my son turn around and say, “I’ve heard this song before!” That was for Topeka, one of my own personal favorites. He also got his first ever autograph, pictured below, and even shared a dialogue about his Darth Vader shirt with Andrew during the set. Also, I am now the proud owner of a one-of-a-kind iPhone case that I can never actually use again for fear of rubbing off the awesome (pictured below).

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: Apple | Tags: ,
Nov
18
2008

The Most Excellent Frontier

What will you be doing on May 8th, 2008?

I know I’m going to be at the movie theater watching Star Trek. I’ve been mildly excited for this movie since I first heard word of it. But I’ve been skeptical, too. Star Trek has always been such a hit and miss thing. The original series was something I watched quite often as a kid. I loved Star Wars more than anything. I wanted to be a Jedi, and fly the Millennium Falcon, and blow up the Death Star, and have a lightsaber duel, and, and, and…

But Star Trek was a different sort of beast for me. I didn’t get super-excited and bounce around the room like I did with Star Wars. I didn’t pretend to be Captain James T. Kirk or Mister Spock on an away mission to the surface of an unknown world. It just wasn’t my thing. But I enjoyed watching the show. I wouldn’t go so far as to say I loved it, but I certainly liked it.

And then something changed. Star Trek became something for nerds (a moniker I was given in junior high) and losers, as I aged. Star Wars received the same punishment but to a lesser degree. Many of the “cool kids” liked Star Wars also, just not to the extent that I did. But none of them liked Star Trek. And none of them would tolerate a “Trekkie” in their midst.

It was well enough then, that I stopped caring about the show before I entered junior high just because there were other things for me to focus on. And as a result, I gave Star Trek my own dash of vile and bile. Never mind the fact that my favorite “Choose-Your-Own-Adventure” book was a hand-me-down Star Trek-themed novella. Ignore the fact that I really enjoyed Star Trek: The Next Generation. Everyone hated Star Trek. I had to hate it as well.

It wasn’t until high school that I really started to like Star Trek again. A friend of mine named Larry started the process. In the beginning it was just him and I giving each other grief over which was better: Star Wars or Star Trek. Obviously, I had the Force on my side. His crummy show didn’t stand a chance. But it made me realize that there were other people that liked Star Trek, too. Popular people. Even semi-cool people. It was okay to like Star Trek again.

And like that, the flood gates opened. I started watching Star Trek: TNG reruns in secret. I gave a few episodes of Deep Space Nine my undivided attention (it didn’t stick). I even watched most of the first season of Voyager. But for some reason, I could never get back behind the original series. It was just too hokey and easy to humiliate. My interest waned. I watched the movies on VHS and the later ones on DVD. But when Enterprise came out, I didn’t even give it a shot. For whatever reason, Star Trek was over for me.

Then I saw this.

The first trailer was nothing to sneeze at. Just a small teaser with a brief glimpse of the Enterprise being constructed. Big deal. But the new trailer. Oh, baby, the new trailer.

If even one Star Trek project after this is as awesome as this one looks to be, Star Trek could finally be what the Star Wars prequels failed to be: a saga from my adulthood that I want to imagine myself into.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: Random | Tags:
Nov
18
2008

Quantum of Awesome

If you haven’t yet had the opportunity to go see the new James Bond film, Quantum of Solace. And yes, I used the term film and I stand by it. Quantum of Solace is not a movie, despite it’s blockbuster tendencies. With incredible action sequences, gorgeous vistas, and jaw-dropping stunts, it certainly has the trappings of a summer big screen smash. And yet, its the scenes between the action, where Daniel Craig interacts with the various other characters of the film, that truly make this a spectacular piece of cinema.

I found the most compelling moment in the entire film was a brief interlude in which Bond seeks out the aid of a former MI-6 member and sits on his veranda sharing a glass of wine. This presents us with a stunning swatch of the film that appears to have been stylistically lifted directly out of the classic Bond films starring Sean Connery. Costumes, settings, and dialogue all feel timeless and familiar.

Character development is a key factor in Quantum, as it was in Casino Royale. While in Casino, Bond shows quite a range of emotion that humanizes him in short bursts, dehumanization has become key in Quantum. Daniel Craig’s Bond seems to care very little for the lives of anyone he uses through the course of the movie to accomplish his goals. Grim determination is the only emotion portrayed, and it makes viewers care so much more about Bond, because he is something less than human, but still so incredibly interesting to watch.

By the end of the movie, I felt as though I could watch two or three more iterations of this saga and still feel like the character arc had further to go. I highly recommend that if you haven’t seen it yet, seeing it soon. And if you have, to go see it again. Take a friend or two and tell them that they can’t say they’ve seen a James Bond film if they haven’t seen this one. A movie, perhaps, but not a film.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: Random | Tags:
Nov
14
2008

Sanctuary for all

 

A new TV show premiered on the SciFi Channel this year called Sanctuary. Originally a Canadian web series starring several SciFi channel regulars (particularly those from Stargate Atlantis Stargate Atlantis), the show was given a full season this year using the webisodes to create the first two episodes of the new show.

The writing on the show is excellent in terms of witty banter. The tech guy, Henry, is hilarious. At least once an episode I’ve found myself laughing out loud at something he’s said. The plots are rarely original, but they serve for good Monster-of-the-Week entertainment. There are definite similarities to Torchwood Torchwood and The X-Files The X-Files, but they’ve borrowed from whatever source material will give them an advantage.

The latest episode bore a strong resemblance to a classic Star Trek Star Trek: The Original Series epsiode, The Trouble with Tribbles, but with a bit more gore and violence (in other words, more awesome). Another episode was very similar to the movie The Thing The Thing, when a monster impersonates the characters while trapped in an antarctic blizzard. However, even the episodes that seem inspired by other sources impart their own excellence to the story that prevent them from being just more of the same.

If you’re in the mood for a good sci-fi pick with a fair amount of fun, I recommend checking it out.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: Random |
Nov
12
2008

Smule Ocarina song fingerings

I’m collecting the various links to the Online Score Generator for the Smule Ocarina iPhone app into one post so that when I update it, people don’t have to look through the review to find them. Some of these I made entirely on my own, and others I modified based on ones I found at the Smule Ocarina forums.

I’ve also included a key for how I’ve interpreted the icons for the score generator at the bottom of the post.

The Legendary Hero – The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker

Zelda’s Lullaby – The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Serenade of Water – The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Jurassic Park Theme

Star Wars Theme

Hobbiton Theme - The Lord of the Rings

Title Theme – The Legend of Zelda

Epona’s Song – The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Prelude of Light – The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Song of Storms – The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Song of Time – The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Score Generator guide:

I skipped 1-16, as they’re obviously just the fingerings, but these 5 are a little different. This is my suggestion for following these symbols.

 - 17: Hold note for about one count and then move right into the next note.

 - 18: Hold note for about one count and then move into the next hold.

 - 19: Hold note for about one count and let fade out, should be followed by 21.

 - 20: Quick breath, then right in to the next note.

 - 21: Breathe, this is your “free” space.

Bookmark and Share
Written by Zeph in: iPhone | Tags: , , ,

Template: TheBuckmaker.com Blogging Themes | Unlimited Blog Hosting, PHP Scripts Index