Rebel Fish and the iPhone 2

Posted on July 22nd, 2008 in Business, Digital, Fun by Rebel Fish

Now that she’s had her iPhone 2.0 for a week, Rebel Fish feels it’s time to chat about it. All-in-all, it’s been a satisfying experience; and the applications… oh! the applications! It seems about 20 a day are arriving at the store, with no end in site.

Let’s start with the hardware of the phone, itself. Rebel Fish got white, because it’s different and beautiful. It does scratch, but so does black. The basic feel of the phone is a little sexier, due to the slight bevel Apple has introduced to the back of the phone. The overall dimensions are roughly the same.

The bevel, while feeling nice in the hand, is a bad idea when on the table. Rebel Fish loves the rock-solid feel of the 1.0 phone when using it as a calculator, texting, or whatever she happens to do. With the new bevel, the phone rocks and slips when you hit the edges of the screen. Bad.

The audio quality of the speakers and microphone are both improved. It’s much easier to hear and people seem to enjoy better microphone pick-up. The metal buttons are pretty, but otherwise unchanged from the original.

The battery doesn’t last as long as the 1.0 phone, but Rebel Fish suspects that’s more due to the addition of the 3G capability, which she’s glad to sacrifice some battery life for. The 3G requires more power! And, while it doesn’t last as long as iPhone 1.0, it still lasts longer than any other 3G capable phone on the market.

The addition of the GPS is fantabulous! Rebel Fish frequently turns on the Google Map program, activates the GPS-follow mode, and turns on the satellite image. When you’re driving, you can zoom in and see the buildings you’re zooming by in real-life mirrored on the phone. Your little, pulsing, blue dot moving on the road you’re on–even showing it on the correct _side_ of the road. It’s so fun!

But really, the heart of the upgrade has been the software. Rebel Fish has downloaded many of the available applications, and she’s screenshotted the ones she’s decided make the cut–just for you! Click the thumbnail to see them all.
iphone applications!

Rebel Fish loves Loopt, a little application that auto-detects your location, allows you to take a photograph, and post a little note. It then updates Facebook, Twitter, and more!

The language learning applications are fantastic. From flash-cards to native speakers, it’s becoming much more practical to learn a language.

The games are great, of course. In the iPhone, we’ve got the world’s best gaming platform–and you can expect folks to start developing some awesome titles for it. Texas Hold’em, by Apple, is perfect. You can play against other folks on your wifi network, or in single mode. It’s a blast to sit around a table with 4 or 5 friends, still chatting, tossing insults, and playing a great game of poker–without the cards or chips!

Rebel Fish also enjoys Twitterific, a simple app to keep tabs on her friends that Twitter and Tweet.

There is, of course, a down-side to all this joy. The push applications (which, Apple has admitted, aren’t exactly push applications) seem to take more of the battery life out of the phone. Syncing and backing up the phone takes longer, as there is now more to sync. Essentially, we have been enjoying the iPhone’s speed because we’ve had way more processing power than was required to run the basics of the phone. Now, with hundreds of third-party applications arriving, the little processor is feeling it’s limits.

Rebel Fish heartily suggests that anyone with an iPhone who hasn’t (is there anyone?) upgraded, dive in; the water’s great!

Go go gadget Apple!
RF

Use Alsoft When it gets Hard.

Posted on June 11th, 2008 in Digital by Rebel Fish

Rebel Fish has had 2 drives fail on her recently. These drives didn’t just have “problems”, they plain didn’t mount or show up on any computer she tied them to. Tough to run Disk Utility when a drive doesn’t register with the OS.

Never fear! Alsoft is here! (trumpets)

Rebel Fish was in a bind and quickly ran out to the web to download Alsoft’s amazing Disk Warrior 4. After paying the pathetic $100 for the “Download and CD” option, she quickly slurped down the software, launched it, and the silly thing immediately discovered the drive that couldn’t mount with a little message that said, “This disk’s directory structure needs to be rebuilt.” Rebel Fish clicked “rebuild,” and about 10 minutes later, the drive was purring along, no data lost.

Click here for more info on this fantastic, simple, and powerful disk saver. Thanks, Alsoft!

Intro to Lightroom: NEW!

Posted on May 3rd, 2008 in Digital, Photography, Workflow, Videos by Rebel Fish

click to order

If you’re still using Bridge or (gasp) Photoshop to edit your images, step out of the stone age and into the future with Adobe Lightroom. Kevin Swan walks you through the basics to get you up and running by the time you’ve finished the video.

Kevin can edit a full wedding from 2000 images to 600 in less than 2 hours. That includes all sorting, final effects, crops, file naming, everything! This video shows you how it’s done.



The video is 45 minutes long and covers the following:

  • Importing
  • Rating and Sorting
  • Basic File Management
  • Image Editing
  • Presets
  • Exporting
  • Go checkout Lightroom, free trials available!

    Order Now: Click HERE!

    Online Books get iPhone Looks

    Posted on March 30th, 2008 in Business, Digital by Rebel Fish

    Rebel Fish has been using Quickbooks Online Edition to run her photog biz for the past year. It’s the best decision she’s made when it comes to the biz side of the biz! The down side has been the lack of Mac support; she’s had to run Bootcamp or Parallels or VM Ware to access her books.

    This week, Intuit announced the iPhone interface for Rebel Fish’s data, and she couldn’t be happier! You know it’s just a matter of time before we’re able to enter transactions via our favorite little gadget. It’s so sweet! Check it out:

    The main interface:
    iphone interface

    Who owes Rebel Fish:
    Who owes me

    Look at a transaction detail:
    Transaction Detail

    Client details are fully clickable: phones dial, addresses send it to google maps on the phone.
    Client

    There’s much more, but it’s an exciting step forward!

    Swim on!

    Sweet Lightroom Addon

    Posted on December 5th, 2007 in Digital, Workflow by Rebel Fish

    Our buddy, Frederick Van, hooked us up with a sweet addon for Lightroom. Slideshow Pro. Click HERE for the website.

    It creates a nice slideshow that publishes directly to your website, no muss, no fuss.

    The real deal
    SlideShowPro for Lightroom contains the same software as our Flash component, but in a compiled form that’s editable from within Lightroom.

    No Flash required
    No Flash (or Flash experience for that matter) required. Everything is self-contained and ready to export locally or upload to your web site.

    Real-time live preview
    Change any of SlideShowPro’s 60+ parameters and preview your changes inside a real, working preview of SlideShowPro before you publish.

    Savable templates
    Publishing more than one slideshow with different settings? Save them as templates you can retrieve anytime to update with new content.

    Build your own captions
    EXIF, IPTC and file metadata available to build your own custom image titles and captions to display inline or as an image overlay in SlideShowPro.

    Integrated FTP upload
    Upload your slideshow directly to your web server from within Lightroom without a separate FTP client, and bookmark it for updating anytime you need to.

    Quality photo publishing
    Built on the industry standard backbone of Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom publishes top-quality, web optimized imagery for your slideshow automatically.

    Always up to date
    Because the engine uses SlideShowPro, it will always be kept up to date with the very latest version available to users of the Flash component.

    Living with the Kitty or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Apple’s Leopard

    Posted on October 28th, 2007 in Digital, General by Rebel Fish

    (from Kevin Swan)

    Living with the Kitty or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Apple’s Leopard

    So, of course, I waited in line to buy Leopard, the next version of Apple’s OSX operating system; just one of many hopeful geeks.

    Over the years, I’ve come to have high expectations of Apple. The iPhone continues to exceeded most of my expectations. Their computers are simply a joy to use. The ever-changing line of iPods is ever-getting-cooler. So Leopard was bound to make the experience of the 4 Macs I own even that much sweeter.

    I was disappointed. And then I wasn’t. But still I am, but not really.

    Before I launch into this, here’s a link to many of the new features I’m reviewing: http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/

    The installation was easy, as you’d expect, but I ran into problems nearly immediately. I have several external hard drives that serve various purposes. One is my active client data, one is a large backup drive that supports several computers, one is my music and movies, etc. When I plugged my client data and backup drives into my newly Leopardized laptop, I received an exciting message that Leopard wasn’t able to repair the drives and that I was being given access to them on a very limited basis. It recommended I back them up immediately.

    Not good.

    So, I pulled the drives, stuck them on one of my OSX 10.4 computers that hadn’t been updated yet, and ran my repair utilities on them to see if there were any problems. None showed. The drives purred along and all the data was accessible. Hmm.

    Put them back on my laptop: now the Active Data drive could be read but not written to and the backup drive wouldn’t even mount. So, I tried connecting them to another computer with Leopard: same deal–it wouldn’t mount and I couldn’t repair it.

    I actually almost decided to take the drives and my laptop in to Apple for help. You know things were bad if I was considering such a drastic step. I went another route, though…

    I formatted the large backup drive in Leopard, since it contained just duplicates of information already on other drives. Then, I copied all of the Active Data to the freshly formatted backup drive. It took a while! My plan was to then reformat the Active Data drive by Leopard, and copy everything BACK to it. However, suddenly, the Active Data drive has no problems. I can verify it, repair it, mount it, write to it, read from it, etc. Nothing changed. It just started working. It’s humming along just fine now, so I never reformatted…

    Not good.

    One of the things I’ve been looking forward to in Leopard is the Time Machine application. I’ve been having a frustrating time trying to back up all my computers lately. I’d bought the new Airport that allows you to serve multiple hard drives over your wireless network. Perfect! I thought I could hook up some big drives and have Apple’s Backup program back all the computers up on a nightly routine. It was swell in theory, but the Airport kept dropping connections to the backup drives. It’s new technology that hasn’t been fully bugged out yet. That’s what I get for early adoption. So, I’ve been manually moving drives around, getting backups of machines, etc. I was very hopeful that Time Machine would allow me to back all the computers up more efficiently. Then I discovered that Time Machine doesn’t support disks served over the wireless network on Airport.

    Not good.

    After some experimentation, however, I discovered I could attach a few drives to my old Powerbook G4 12″, which has been working as my print server in the “back office,” and connect to them over the wireless network, and with some tweaking in the sharing settings–get all the machines to see those drives through Time Machine and the auto backups seem to be working great! It’s a little slow over the wireless (the first backup of my work laptop and the active data drive is over 450gigs. It took about 15 hours!), but once the big backups are done, the incremental hourly ones shouldn’t even be noticeable. This was a BIG improvement for me, and a big relief that all my systems are backing up hourly.

    Good.
    Very good.

    The entire operating system seems to be running MUCH faster. Safari launches immediately. Websites snap into existence. The new Finder is sharp and snappy, even the new Coverflow view is fast. Quick Look is super-cool, allowing you to look inside documents without having to open them up–you get addicted to this quickly.

    Good.

    The parental controls are much improved. You get complete reports of every application the kids launched, of every site visited (and every site they TRIED to visit), every email, every IM. It’s sweet! You can also take over other computers on your network VERY simply, which makes for management of multiple computers pretty fun and simple.

    Good.

    Most of my applications (including the important ones like CS3 and Lightroom) seem to be working just fine. I’ve had to update a few (like Journeler) that didn’t work right off the bat. I’m still having a problem with RapidWeaver being able to publish to my blog, but I’m sure these minor things will be worked out.

    Good.

    As a GTDer, I was very excited about the new To Do and Notes system that is incorporated into nearly every application. The implementation is, sadly, horrible. The only cool thing is that you can select text from just about anywhere and right-click on it to select the new “New To Do” option.

    The To Do list in email doesn’t even allow you to filter so that completed items don’t show up. It’s crude and rudimentary at best. The way it “syncs” with the iPhone is, it turns your To Dos into emails that are all stuffed in an IMAP folder on the mail server. You can’t DO anything to the To Do, you can just read it (sort of) on the phone. You can’t sort them, you can’t complete them, nothing. For those of us with lots of To Dos that we’re used to formating and sorting in useful ways–this is an unacceptable. It’s unusable. It’s un-American. This feels like such an add-on, last-minute thing that I’m embarrassed for Apple.

    Not good.
    Very not good.

    The notes are only slightly better. You’re supposed to be able to sync them online as well, but on my computers you can either sync the To Dos or the Notes, not both. Not sure why. But it’s lame. You’d think that the Notes in Mail sync with the Notes program on the iPhone. You’d be wrong.

    Not good.

    Mail has been beefed and cleaned up in satisfactory ways. Much of the preference panes are smarter, simpler, and otherwise improved. One of the things I love is that any date or address or phone number are auto-detected and you get a quick little drop-down that allows you to add these things to a contact, go to it on a map, etc. Very slick. Mail supports sexy templates that I can see being a big improvement as you get used to them and customize them.

    iCal no longer has an inspector tab, you have to double-click on an item to see/edit its details. I can live with that, but it’s a little extra work that I didn’t think helped anything. I do like that you can now schedule default alarms. So, in those departments, small but enjoyable upgrades.

    Good.

    Some of the eye candy is fun, like Spaces, but I don’t find I have much use for it. I’m trying to force myself to get into it and see if I find a good use for it–it’s nothing as revolutionary as expose was, though. The new dock is cute, but otherwise just a dock. I really like the new Web Clippings feature in Safari. It’s so simple to use, it’s fun. I can see a LOT of uses for this functionality. The new PDF controls are very swank, too.

    Good.

    Spotlight is MUCH MUCH improved. It’s lightning-quick, and much smarter. I’ve actually ditched Quicksilver and gone back to Spotlight because it’s so much better than the first version. I wasn’t using all the very clever, but slightly complicated, features of Quicksilver, so as a launcher and document finder–Spotlight is once again my favorite.

    Good.

    iChat has some fun new toys, but more important is the ability to remote control the computer of the person you’re chatting with. It means you have a quick and easy way to help support someone’s technical question, or a quick way to show them something on your machine. You can also do presentations of slideshows, documents, movies, whatever across iChat, which makes it a very useful business tool. This stuff rocks!

    Good.

    All in all, I’m having fun with the kitty now. It’s not the giant leap forward I was hoping for, but it is an improvement, and I expect the little things that are irritating me will be gone in future updates. I’m sure there’s more, but I wanted to get you a quick feel for where things were at! March on!

    Kevin

    Clean up that addy-book!

    Posted on August 25th, 2007 in Business, Digital, Workflow by Rebel Fish

    This post, from 43 Folders, made some simple sense to Rebel Fish…

    Purging info-poor entries from Address Book
    You may share my Address Book pollution problem — having too many orphaned names that got scribbled on a PDA or were manually added but never fleshed out (like: 10 years ago!).

    Here’s a really stupidly useful Smart Group for Address Book that helps identify entries without any real information attached to them.

    Seem too obvious? Maybe. But it helped me kill eighty-two entries yesterday that might have sat around for another ten years if I hadn’t made it. Yay, obviousness.

    Oooh. Neat. Lightroom Trick

    Posted on July 20th, 2007 in Digital, Workflow by Rebel Fish

    Hey! Rebel Fish was working in LR and happened to press the option key while in Library mode. If you have the quick-Develop pane open with Tone Control, etc. extended, you will see Clarity change to Sharpen and Vibrance change to Saturation. Your keywords (if shown) will display how many images are in that particular keyword. If you’re in Develop mode, you’ll see the settings give you an option to reset.

    Try it. It’s super fun.

    RF

    1 Lightroom Library, 2 Computers

    Posted on July 10th, 2007 in Digital, Workflow by Rebel Fish

    Rebel Fish talked with Kevin Swan about using LR on two machines… Here’s what he had to say:

    If you want to work with LR on two computers, the only thing you need to sync is the Lightroom Library. The raw files are irrelevant, since they aren’t actually edited.

    So…

    Import the photos into your library on your desktop.
    Copy your LR library (wherever you have it) to your laptop.
    Copy the raw images you want to work on from your desktop to your laptop.
    Launch the LR library on your laptop.
    Go to the library view
    Because the raw images you are wanting to work on are in a different location than what the library remembers, the folder they were in (and all the other folders) will be red.
    Double click on the folder that contains the images you want to work in.
    It will ask where the photos are, point it to the new folder.
    Make your edits as usual.
    After you’re done editing, you copy ONLY the LR library back to your desktop (replacing the old one)
    Launch LR on the desktop.
    Because the library thinks the photos are in whatever location they were on your laptop, the folder will again be red.
    Double click the red folder, point it to the location where the original raw files are.
    Everything will then be synced up.

    It sounds complicated, but it’s not once you’ve done it a few times.

    When I used to have a desktop machine I:

    Import all the shots into LR and download the raw to a folder on the desktop.
    Make my edits to my favorites.
    Run my slideshow.
    Get home.
    Copy my LR library file over the old one on the desktop.
    Copy the raw folder from my laptop to whatever location i want on the desktop.
    Launch LR and repoint the folder to the new source.
    Done.

    Easy as cake.
    Piece of pie.

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