André Fischer

Jun 21

L’iPad, 10 jours après…

Ben voilà, ça fait 10 jours que j’ai l’iPad. Qu’en dire, une fois l’excitation du début passée? Plein de choses. Pour ne pas (trop) polluer les feeds sur Facebook, Twitter, etc. je mets un break ici — la suite ci-dessous.

 
 
Tout ceci n’est bien sûr que subjectif: je ne fais que recenser ici mes opinions, en espérant qu’elles puissent vous aider si vous hésitez à acquérir un iPad. Note: je parle depuis le point de vue d’un utilisateur Mac, car je n’ai aucune idée comment on synchronise ses photos, par exemple, avec un PC sous Windows.
 
Première impression
 
En déballant la machine, le premier truc qui me vient à l’esprit est que l’engin est dense. La plaque de verre, le corps en alu superbement machiné, le poids de l’accu… tout cela donne un sentiment de solidité, de qualité. Reste à voir ce qui se passe si on le laisse tomber par-terre—je laisserai le soin à quelqu’un d’autre de tester.
 
Le gentil monsieur de l’Apple store de Genève m’aide à activer la machine sur place (brancher l’iPad sur iTunes, 2 ou 3 clics, c’est bon—je passe à la caisse et sors du magasin, un homme heureux). Je vais donc au Starbucks du coin, histoire de parfaire l’expérience “à la Cupertino” et le prends enfin en mains.
 
Whoah! La bête est rapide. Tout se déroule en un clin d’oeil. Se balader sur une page web devient un vrai plaisir! Et le côté tactile du surf, c’est un peu ce qui lui manquait. Pour moi, la différence entre surfer au doigt, comparé à la souris à molette, est aussi grande—plus grande, même—que l’arrivée de la souris à roulette. Tout défile, se touche, m’appartient, du coup.
 
Logiciels
Un tas d’applications sont déjà installées sur l’iPad en standard. Entre autres, on retrouve:
En gros, voilà pour ce qui est livré avec. J’oublie certainement 1 ou 2 trucs, mais bon, je me fais vieux, j’ai le droit.
 
Utilisation

À l’utilisation, ce qui m’époustoufle à chaque fois, c’est comment l’iPad change mon interaction avec l’informatique, avec “mes” données: cette machine est beaucoup plus orientées sur la notion d’une tâche que d’un document ou d’un programme en particulier. Et pour moi, l’absence de “multi-tâche” n’est en soi pas un désavantage.
 
C’est clair, ce serait pratique de pouvoir répondre à un IM sur Beejive sans devoir sortir de mon jeu de Words with Friends, ou de vite répondre à un mail sans quitter Pages. Mais en tout et pour tout, je suis confronté à une décision que je n’ai pas à prendre sur mon Mac, ou sur le PC: est-ce que cette interruption est importante maintenant? Le pote qui m’a envoyé un IM n’attend pas forcément une réponse tout de suite (c’est bien à ça que ça sert, les IM). Le mail, je peux peut-être l’écrire plus tard.
 
Donc, je garde ma concentration sur ce que je suis en train de faire, sur la tâche du moment. S’il se trouve que l’IM du copain est suffisamment important, alors je peux lancer BeejiveIM et m’y consacrer à ce moment-là. Je gère donc mieux mes priorités.
 
C’est clair que ce mode de fonctionnement ne conviendra pas à tous. Et je salue l’arrivée d’une solution de multi-tasking dans iPhone OS 4, parce qu’il y a bel et bien des choses que la machine devrait pouvoir faire toute seule sans m’obliger à attendre que ce soit fini: par exemple, uploader des photos vers Flickr, ou synchroniser mes fichiers Dropbox.
 
Par contre, le fait d’avoir 15 applications ouvertes en même temps, juste pour pouvoir passer de l’une à l’autre, m’importe relativement peu, personnellement.
 
Clavier, ou pas clavier?
Le clavier virtuel est, somme toute, pas mal. Comme sur iPhone, on peut configurer plusieurs langues (pratique pour quelqu’un comme moi qui écrit en français, anglais et allemand), et en orientation à l’italienne, les touches sont assez grandes pour que j’arrive à taper presque aussi vite que sur un “vrai” clavier, même avec mes grosses mains pleines de doigts.
 
En more portrait, le clavier est un peu bâtard, à mon goût: les touches sont juste trop petites pour que je puisse écrire rapidement avec les doigts, mais le clavier est juste trop grand pour que je puisse taper confortablement avec les pouces, comme sur l’iPhone.
 
Pour ce qui est d’écrire son prochain roman, ou même un billet aussi long que celui-ci, un clavier externe s’impose. On préfèrera un clavier Bluetooth, car en effet, le Dock avec clavier d’Apple force l’utilisation de l’iPad en mode portrait, ce qui ne convient pas à toutes les applications (Keynote, par exemple).
 
Protection

En guise de protection, j’ai acheté l’Apple Case pour iPad, non pas parce que je la trouve si géniale, mais parcequ’elle avait l’avantage d’être disponible de suite et sur place. J’attends toujours de trouver l’étui de mes rêves, mais en attendant, ça fait l’affaire.
 
Bon point: on peut orienter l’Ipad de manière à le faire tenir debout en mode portrait ou à l’italienne, genre pour regarder des vidéos ou s’en servir comme cadre photo, ou couché à un angle de 25° environ en mode à l’italienne, ce qui offre une meilleure position pour écrire.
 
L’iPad est très à l’étroit dans l’étui. Au point où, quand on m’a demandé si je pouvais le sortir pour montrer son aspect “tout nu”, j’ai dû renoncer. Je le ressortirai (probablement au couteau) lorsque j’aurai trouvé l’étui qui me plaît vraiment.
 
Bon assez pour aujourd’hui. Je vais préparer, ces jours qui viennent, des billets sur les diverses applications que j’ai rajoutées, et inclure les liens AppStore aussi, pendant que j’y suis.

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Jun 18

Power from thin air | The Economist

Wireless technology: It is already possible to send electricity without wires. Can devices be powered using ambient radiation from existing broadcasts?

ANYONE whose mobile phone has ever run out of juice—which means, these days, more than half the world’s population—will like the idea of getting electrical power out of the air. The notion is far from new. A little over a century ago, the inventor Nikola Tesla drew up ambitious plans to transmit electrical power without wires. He carried out a series of experiments in which electric lights were illuminated via electrostatic induction, by connecting them to metal sheets suspended in a strong electric field produced by a distant transmitter. In 1898 he proposed a “world system” of giant towers that would form both a global wireless communications network and a means of delivering electricity over large areas without wires.

Pretty awesome if it can be made to work on a large scale, especially since solar power cells are still very inefficient, and there would be many applications for this sort of technology where radio waves penetrate, but light doesn’t (I’m thinking indoors, mainly).

Reminds me of a good book I read on the whole world of energy production and delivery: The Scientist, the Madman, the Thief and their Lightbulb (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Scientist-Madman-Thief-their-Lightbulb/dp/0743449762/…).

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Jun 11

Cool Hunting: 27Letters

27Letters

Getty Images introduces a new tool for those with severe cases of information overload


Advertorial content:

With digital media operating at a constant fever pitch—mostly fueled by the constant stream of recycled content—it’s difficult to sift through the massesto find the most relevant, original information possible. Cue 27Letters.

The site, designed as a top-level filter for the most notable and referenced images from over 250 media sites, allows users a quick and easy way to consume content that sets thousands of global conversations in motion every day. Edited and collated alphabetically according to various keywords, it reflects the power that images hold over wider culture—from politics to architecture.

As a one-stop solution, 27Letters appeals both to the casual reader and the creative professional looking for new ideas or insights, with an intuitive interface that allows for both quick glances and deeper exploration. Short blurbs about each image give context and link out to the original source, and the site also flags content you’ve already checked out to further organize info and limit time spent in front of the computer screen.

For anyone trying to stay on top of the rapidly-changing media landscape without damaging already-fried retinas more, 27Letters come in as a valuable asset.

Read on Cool Hunting
Sent via Cool Hunting for iPad

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Jun 09

Good news about the middle-age brain - Holy Kaw!

Good news about the middle-age brain

Forget version 4 of the iPhone as today’s big news. This is really important. Barbara Strauch, former deputy science editor of The New York Times published a book called The Secret Life of the Grown-up Brain: The Surprising Talents of the Middle-Aged Mind. Here’s the paragraph that made my day:

“If you have to learn new information — a new computer system at work — brand new information can take a little longer on average as our brains age. [But] our brains in modern middle age have enormous capacity and are formidable in their powers to get the gist of an argument, to see the big picture. Someone I know who teaches at Columbia says the kids are smart, but they don’t seem to connect the dots. What we have in the middle-age brain is that ability to connect the dots. I’ve had many people tell me, ‘I can’t remember what I had for breakfast, but solutions pop into my head.’”

Now where did I put my iPhone?

Full interview at Boston.com.

I’ve had that very same feeling for quite a while now, this inability to remember trivial things like what I ate yesterday, while getting better at the “big picture” things (something I’ve always been quite good at). So I guess my abilities as Software Architect aren’t due to wane just yet… Hooray!

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Jun 07

Untitled

Testing Google Talk -> Ping.fm -> Posterous integration…
via Ping.fm

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Rant: You said it, Steve…

You just said it (again) at D8, Mr. Jobs:

 I think people are willing to pay for content. I believed it in music, I believe it in media and I believe it in news content.
 
So here’s my question: where is all the damn content that we’re so eager to pay for? It’s okay for Apple to make everything available in the US - it’s your home, after all. But hey, there’s a whole world out there, full of people who would love to rent films, or buy, you know, all those books you’ve been promising on the iPad.
Why is it that I can still only find ancient, public-domain books from Project Gutenberg in the iBookstore? After all, the iPad has been out for over a month now, and you’ve been preparing this for ages. Those books that are on sale in brick-and-mortar bookshops here, in English. Is it just that all those piss-and little Euro-trash countries aren’t interesting markets? Or what’s the issue?

If the problem is somehow with managing your international stores, well, then just let us create accounts in your US shop and buy our stuff there, or something!
And the same goes for software: what is so odd about someone in Switzerland wanting, for example, Dragon Dictate for iPhone or iPad? Think nobody here speaks English? Think again!

And don’t get me started on the Apple web site. Apple.ch gives me a choice of two languages (German and French), for a country that has four official languages. And then redirects me to some pages over on apple.com anyway. Why can’t I be in Switzerland and read your shop pages in English, given that it’s the same machines being sold? Argh.
Phew. Just had to get that off my chest. As much as I love the various Apple machines I own, as much can I get really upset over the brain-deadness of some of the underlying software ecosystem. “Pond” is a much better word, I think.

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Jun 04

Ah, nostalgia…

56K Modem Emulator
(A.K.A. Sounds Broadband Users Never Hear)


 connect 

[home|huh?]

Now here’s a sound I haven’t heard in a long time… Good times, good memories. :)

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Fractal Haze Could Solve Weak-Sun Mystery for Early Earth | Wired Science

A thick haze of organic material let the early Earth soak up the sun’s warmth without absorbing harmful ultraviolet rays, according to a new study.

The model offers a new twist on an old puzzle: Although the sun was so dim billions of years ago that the Earth should have been a ball of ice, the young planet had liquid oceans capable of supporting life.

“Given these recent papers, we can probably say the early faint sun problem is not one of the problems anymore in solving the origin of life,” said astrophysicist Christopher Chyba of Princeton University, who was not involved in the new work.

The sun should have been up to 30 percent less bright 3.8 billion to 2.5 billion years ago, according to studies of the lifecycles of sun-like stars. If the Earth’s atmosphere had the same composition then as it does now, it would have frozen over completely, like Jupiter’s moon Europa. But geological records show the Earth was at least as warm and wet then as it is today.

Scientists have struggled with this “faint young sun paradox” since 1972, when astronomers Carl Sagan and George Mullen suggested that an atmosphere containing a small amount of ammonia, a powerful greenhouse gas, could have warmed the Earth enough to keep the oceans liquid. But a later study showed that ultraviolet radiation from the sun would destroy the ammonia in the atmosphere and cancel out its warming effects.

Sagan countered in 1996 that the early atmosphere would have produced a thick cloud of organic haze, much like the orange cloud that enshrouds Saturn’s moon Titan. This haze would have blocked ultraviolet light but let in visible light, letting the Earth tan without getting burnt.

But early models assumed the haze particles were spheres, and that when individual particles collided, they globbed together to make bigger spheres. These spheres blocked visible light as well as ultraviolet light, and left the Earth’s surface even colder.

“It basically led us to a dead end where we couldn’t have a warm early Earth,” said Eric Wolf, a graduate student in atmospheric sciences at the University of Colorado at Boulder and the first author of the new study in Science June 4.

Wolf and coauthor Brian Toon realized that assuming the haze particles were spherical was too simple. Instead of combining to make bigger spheres, tiny haze particles no more than 100 nanometers across could form long chains, like strings of pearls. These chains would link up and branch off each other in a complicated fractal geometry, similar to the structure of clouds.

These strands of haze would form fluffy, airy structures that would let in visible light while blocking ultraviolet light, Wolf said.

“If you take into account the shape factor,” he said, “it turns out that the haze would be quite a strong ultraviolet shield while being relatively transparent in the visible. Visible light can reach through the haze and reach the surface.”

Without the destructive ultraviolet light, ammonia could build up under the haze and warm the Earth efficiently, Wolf said. Only a few parts per million of ammonia would be enough to offset the faint young sun.

But if early organisms could have looked up, they wouldn’t have seen a clear blue sky. The sky would be dim and rust-colored, like Titan’s.

“We’re really dealing with this completely alien world on the early Earth,” Wolf said.

Wolf’s study comes shortly after an April 1 paper in Nature that proposed another solution to the faint young sun paradox: The early Earth was darker, and therefore absorbed more heat. Both explanations could be right, Chyba said.

“It seems likely that the answer is going to be a composite explanation,” he said. “You cobble together a number of factors and you solve the paradox that way.”

The next step should be looking at ancient rocks to determine what the early Earth’s atmosphere was really made of, Chyba added. “That’s going to be really hard, because those rocks are really worked over. But that’s probably where the field is heading now.”

Image: Haze on Titan./NASA/Cassini

See Also:

Science. It just works.

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Jun 03

Le dossier de candidature a remplir pour devenir conducteur de taxi en Angeleterre est maintenant disponible en braille. Ca dérange quelqu’un d’autre ou c’est que moi?

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Jun 01

Que Faire si iTunes ne reconnaît plus l’iPad ou l’iPhone?

Je ne suis pas le seul à qui c’est arrivé: depuis la version 9.1.1 d’iTunes, quand on branche son iBidule, iTunes ne le reconnaît pas. Redémarrer l’ordinateur, débrancher/rebrancher, jurer comme un charretier, rien ne sert.

La solution, enfouie quelque part dans les tréfonds des fora de support d’Apple, est simple:

  1. Jeter iTunes (dans le dossier Applications) à la poubelle.
  2. Vider la poubelle.
  3. Re-télécharger iTunes.
  4. Réinstaller iTunes.

Et hop, simple, rapide (une fois iTunes téléchargé, ça met genre 3 minutes – 3 minutes de trop, note…).

Jusqu’à ce qu’Apple sorte une nouvelle version, ça vaut la peine de garder le fichier d’installation d’iTunes (le .dmg téléchargé) sous la main, pour les réinstallations quotidiennes…

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