Smartphone-free for a day – how did I go?

Today was an interesting day. For the first time in, well, ever, I didn’t use my smartphone for the entire day. No phone calls or text messages (although these were allowed in the brief), no email, no checking my Facebook and Twitter through Tweetdeck, no web browsing to look up random things, no access to Evernote to write down notes and look up existing notes – I couldn’t even check the time.

Well, that was the idea. I ended up having to use my smartphone twice for work purposes: once to write a tutorial for APC magazine on using Tasker on Android (awesome app, by the way!) and the second time to finalise a feature I was writing for PC & Tech Authority on mobile apps. But that was it! The rest of the time I was cold turkey. The surprising thing was that I didn’t miss my smartphone as much as I thought I would!

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My top 10 apps for Honeycomb

In the past month, the apps situation has really improved for Honeycomb. I’m not surprised – there’s now like a gajillion Honeycomb tablets on the market now, and after the iPad, it’s got the largest user base in the tablet category. I’m actually pretty pleased with the Honeycomb-optimised apps that I’ve now got on my Motorola Xoom.

There are still a few things that I’d like to see, such as Honeycomb-optimised versions of Tweetdeck and Facebook, but on the whole there are enough quality apps out there that I actually feel comfortable recommending a Honeycomb tablet. It’s certainly not for everyone – there’s no way I’d advise my mum to get one, for example. She’s perfectly happy with her iPad and how simple it is to use. I’ve never tried to get her to use my Xoom, but I can just imagine her going cross-eyed and handing it back to me after a couple of seconds. Even I was a bit flummoxed the first time I used the Xoom, and actually had to refer to the user manual to figure out how it all worked!

Here are my current favourite top 10 apps that I use regularly on Honeycomb.

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Digital magazines all the way!

As I was saying yesterday, sometimes having a hard copy of something is preferable to seeing it on-screen. I’ve always counted magazines in the former category, but after having read a handful of magazines on my iPad over the past few days, I’m now convinced that reading them digitally is now the way forward for me.

Let me count the reasons why:

1. I’ve been a print journalist for 9 years now, and as you can imagine, I have a LOT of magazines. Most of them are archived at my parents’ house in massive boxes – I’m lucky they have such a huge house, otherwise there’s no way they could’ve fit it all. Even moving from my last house, where I only I lived for a year, I filled up a huge box of magazines that’s just sitting unopened in the storeroom downstairs. Whether I’ll actually ever open up that box and go through the magazines ever again remains to be seen, but I can’t bear to throw them away, as many of them are issues where I’ve had something published in them.

2. Many of the magazines I write for (such as Australian Personal Computer and PC & Tech Authority) have an iPad version using a dedicated app. Other magazines that I read regularly from overseas also have digital versions, either through Zinio or through a dedicated iPad app, and each issue is so much cheaper than buying an imported paper version through a local newsagency. Examples: Digital Photographer (UK photography magazine, typically $15-$17 to buy paper version, only $5.99 per digital issue or $32.99 for a 6-month subscription), T3 (UK gadgets mag, typically $15-$17 to buy paper version, only $5.99 per digital issue) and LAPTOP magazine (US mobility mag, typically $15-$17 to buy paper version – assuming I can find it – and only $5.99 per digital issue)

3. I automatically get new issues for magazines that I have a subscription for. I haven’t subscribed to any of the magazines with dedicated iPad apps (yet – I think LAPTOP magazine will probably get my coin though!), however I have subscriptions to PC World (US), Popular Photography (US), Rolling Stone (US), PC Magazine (US) and American Photo (US) in Zinio, and I get an email whenever a new issue is available. Very convenient!

My digital magazine bookshelf in Zinio

4. The iPad 2 is the perfect size and weight for reading magazines on! Even the iPad 1 had the perfect screen size, but I thought it was too heavy to hold for the extended period necessary for reading a magazine from cover-to-cover. Not so the iPad 2! Reading magazines on the iPad 2 is an absolute pleasure, so much so that I don’t even think about the fact that I’m reading it on a tablet instead of on paper. I don’t have to zoom in to read any of the text, and everything is nicely formatted for the iPad’s screen. I can also read magazines in bed at night without disturbing my partner by having to turn the light on! :) Finally, just like with an eBook reader, I can have dozens of magazines to read but not have to deal with the weight of each individual magazine – just the 600g or so of the iPad 2!

5. I’m having fun with some of the interactive features in the dedicated iPad mags as well: built-in videos and video reviews, photo galleries, live links, alternative layouts, some even have live Twitter feeds embedded!

6. Most of the magazines I read are either tech/gadget magazines or photography magazines, and occasionally I would like to be able to refer back to old articles for ideas and tutorials. How to do this with a paper magazine? I suppose I could tear the articles out or scan them – neither of which are ideal, as I hate ‘violating’ magazines, and I can never get pages to scan properly because of the spine of the magazine. And once that issue goes into ‘the stack’ (ie the last 50 or so magazines that I’ve read), it’s a pain trying to find particular articles again! With a digital magazine on my iPad, however, it’s so much easier – I just take a screenshot, and then import it into Evernote! I can then look that article up whenever I want, either by looking for the specific note (I try to organise all of my notes by themed notebooks to make things easier to find) or just by doing a keyboard search, as a premium membership with Evernote includes OCR capability. Brilliant!

Five ways I find a printer indispensable

For me, printers are one of those things that I’ve always thought I could do without. Once I had one, however, I then realised just how darn useful a printer can be to have around.

For the longest time (say, five years or so), I didn’t bother. I proofed all of my writing on screen, read all of my research directly off the screen, and didn’t bother printing out work-related emails and PDFs. The few times that I ever did have to print stuff out – largely when going overseas and needing a paper copy of my itinerary and various bookings – I would go to an Internet cafe and pay 20c per page to print.

Being a technology journalist, however, I was eventually given a printer to keep, at which point I thought ‘well, I may as well use it, given it’s taking up so much space!’ And you know what? Now I’m not sure that I could live without one! Yes, I have multiple mobile devices that can call up any old document, email or webpage whenever I need to, but turns out having a hard copy in particular instances is so much more preferable.

Here are the ways that I find a printer indispensable:

1. Printing recipes. I’m always trying new dishes, but I don’t bother with a cookbook – I just Google a particular dish or meat, find a good recipe, then print it off. Yes, I could just call it up on my iPad, but I don’t particularly favour spilling oil and other foodstuffs on my iPad’s screen while I’m cooking! The other benefit of printing out the recipe is that if the dish turns out well, the hard copy of the recipe makes it into the ‘recipe drawer’, where either myself or my partner can re-use it.

2. Printing grocery lists. Every Monday, I write up the weekly grocery list in Evernote and then print out a copy to take to the supermarket, which then gets passed between myself and my partner as we wander the aisles. Again, there’s an electronic way to do this: I could have the list open on my smartphone and turn it into a ‘shared’ note so my partner could access it on his iPhone as well, but it’s just so much easier to check items off a piece of paper than fumbling with a smartphone while trying to maneovure a trolley! I’ve actually dropped my iPhone once doing this – never again, paper all the way!

3. Printing tickets of any description. This could be a flight itinerary, hotel booking, cinema tickets, concert tickets, or whatever. The powers-that-be always seem to expect hard copies at such things, and I’ve found it’s never a good idea to assume that they’ll be happy to read your details off a tiny smartphone screen! Plus, some places do insist that you have a hard copy.

4. Story outlines. When I’m writing a story – especially a long feature – I always do an outline to break up the different sections that I’ll be writing about. I do this on-screen, with lots of empty space between each section by hand. I then print that outline out, and go nuts with my pen and brainstorm all of my ideas for each section. I guess this is my version of a ‘mind-map’, and I find it so much easier to be ‘creatively-uninhibited’ with a pen in hand than I am typing away on a keyboard.

5. Proofing stories. There’s no way around it: proofing copy is so much better when doing it off paper than on-screen. I don’t know what the psychology is behind it (if it is indeed a psychological phenomena!), but I’ve always found myself to be sharper and more accurate in marking up copy when I have a printout in front of me. Being able to underline things, cross things out, insert extra passages in the margins – all of this could technically be done on-screen, but is just so much more free-flowing when done on paper.

I’ve actually just gotten a new printer in to play with: the sexy HP Envy 100, which supports Apple AirPrint and Google CloudPrint. I’ll be putting it through its paces this week and have a review up by next week – stay tuned!

Giving Windows Phone 7 a go

In the name of science (or maybe because I’m a masochist?), I decided to try and get Windows Phone 7 onto my HD2. Again, not an easy process, although easier since I’d already wrapped my head around HardSPL and MAGLDR – it was just a process of following the procedure to load the Windows Phone 7 ROM onto the HD2.

My HTC HD2 running Windows Phone 7

The hard part was getting it activated. Every WP7 smartphone has a unique activation code to enable it to access Windows Live services like Marketplace and Xbox Live, and there’s a multi-part process involving installing the Windows Phone 7 SDK, Zune, the Chevron unlocker, and various other little bits and pieces – plus you have to actually call Microsoft support and request an activation code once all the hacks are in place!

Another four hours (of my life that I’ll never get back) later, I’d finally achieved success with unlocking my HD2 with the Chevron unlocker! Seems you have to jump through all sorts of crazy hoops like changing the date on your PC and smartphone to 1 October 2011, disabling network connections and Skype connections, putting the phone into airplane mode, running Chevron and Tom XAP installer as an administrator, right-click on XAPs to install them (this I had to figure out on my own!), etc – and naturally all of this information wasn’t in the original post with the ROM download – I had to trawl through lots of long discussion threads to find those extra bits of advice!

But once again, several hours of stress and a phone call to Microsoft support later, and I’ve now got a “new” Windows Phone! Which led me to the crazy idea – why not use this as my ‘main’ phone for the week so I can really get to know this new operating system? Crazy, I know, but it’ll be useful for work as well, since I have to write a feature on tips and tricks for Windows Phone 7 anyway – best dive in headfirst! I’ll still be using my Samsung Galaxy Tab – mainly to keep playing Words with Friends – but for day to day use, it will be Windows Phone 7 all the way!

Half a day in, and I’m actually having fun using it! Naturally it doesn’t have anywhere near all of the apps that I’m used to using on Android, such as Tweetdeck, Evernote, Pocket Informant, WhatsApp and Skype, but I’m coping. I’ve customised the homescreen with photo speed dials, frequently used apps and a few live tiles, installed a bunch of software and games (including Amazon Kindle, Facebook, Twitter, Flixster, IMDb, Shazam, Resco Radio and WinMilk), and have started poring over the discussion forums to learn more about this new operating system. Yes, it’s the underdog, but it’s early days yet, and I got my start as a gadget monkey back in the day with a HP Jornada 545 running Pocket PC 2000 – so it’s kind of my first love as well, and it’s nice to see it all grown up now and trying to compete with iOS and Android.

I’m really looking forward to the upcoming OS update and all of the new apps that are coming! Will I keep on using Windows Phone 7 after the week is up? I’m not sure! For now, it’s novel and I’m enjoying using it, but I’ll have to see how I feel after seven days, and whether I can live without all of the apps that I’m used to using on Android!

Evernote vs OneNote on mobile

OneNote for iPhone

This is interesting. Microsoft has just released a OneNote client for the iPhone, bringing the total number of clients for the program up to three: Windows, Windows Phone 7 and iPhone.

I had a quick squizz at OneNote for iPhone last night, and it’s not a bad-looking app! Different notebooks are colour-coded, and it uses a notebook binder graphic in the background. It’s not as feature-rich as Evernote, but one thing it does offer over its main competitor is the ability to create mixed notes on the mobile client. OneNote for iPhone lets you create a new note that includes an image, checklists and numbered lists; on Evernote, you can only create plain text notes (although you’re able to view rich formatted notes and check items off in a checklist).

A nicer UI and support for mixed notes is really the only thing that mobile OneNote has going for it, as far as I can see. To get the full OneNote experience, you’ll have to purchase the OneNote desktop app, which is available for Windows only. There is a free web editor included in Microsoft Sky Drive, but it’s a clunky interface, and I’d really rather a dedicated a program than using clumsy HTML controls.

One advantage that the desktop version of OneNote offers is that it does OCR on text in images and handwriting (not to mention PDFs), so that any searches you do are include these images and handwriting. Evernote offers this as well, but only on notes that you synchronise with the Evernote servers. This effectively puts a limitation on the number of notes you upload for OCR purposes (and scanned documents tend to be quite large by default) – 60MB for a free account and 1GB for a premium account. It would great if Evernote offered this OCR feature to premium members for its desktop client so you don’t have to upload all of your scans to the Evernote servers. For things like bank statements and other personal information, I’d rather create an offline notebook that isn’t uploaded to the servers, but then I lose out on the OCR capabilities.

If Microsoft offered OneNote as a free desktop app – for Mac as well as Windows – not to mention a version of Android, I would consider trialling it as a replacement for Evernote. But right now I’m happy paying for a premium subscription to Evernote, the lack of local OCR notwithstanding!

More uses for Evernote

It seems the more I use Evernote, the more I think of cool new ways to use it.

Over the weekend, I was leafing through a photography magazine, and I remembered an old project goal of mine to somehow index all of the great tutorials in my photography magazines so I could easily reference them when I needed them. My original idea was that I would create a simple Excel spreadsheet that listed each tutorial with the magazine issue and page number. A further idea to that was I could tear out each tutorial and bind them in a big folder and use the index to find everything. The only problem is that I hate tearing up magazines – occupational hazard! I like to keep everything as is, but the problem with that is that the metre-high stack of magazines was just impossible to leaf through each time I wanted to look up how to do a certain thing.

And then it struck me like a cartoon thought bubble – I could scan all of the articles and put them into Evernote! Initially, I opted for a ‘local’ notebook rather than a synchronised one that’s uploaded to the Evernote servers, as each individual scanned page was around 3MB and I didn’t want to go over my limit of 1GB of notes a month. But now that I’m halfway through and see that the total scanned pages only equals 130MB, I’m going to convert it into a synchronised notebook, as there are more benefits to doing it that way: I can access the notes from any mobile device, and I can take advantage of Evernote’s handy optical character recognition system for doing searches on the text in the articles. Definitely glad I plumped for a premium account, as free accounts only get 60MB worth of notes a month :)

Scanning articles is a bit clunky as sometimes I would scan it in wonky and words on the extreme left or right of the page would get chopped off. I worked around this by checking each scanned page, re-scanning it if absolutely necessary, or otherwise just typing in by hand the text that was chopped off below the scanned page. However, I have lots of photography magazines in electronic versions through Zinio, and it was so much easier to transfer those tutorials – I simply opened them up on my iPad, did a screenshot of each page I wanted, and then transferred them to my computer. Now, I think I’m going to buy more electronic photography magazines than paper ones – and they’re actually cheaper than buying them through my local newsagency, as most of them are imported from the UK.

Using Evernote as a repository for photography tutorials

Evernote: how many ways do I love you?

I’ve been trying to move to Evernote as my main note-taking platform for awhile now, and I think I’ve finally cracked it! I scribble down notes quite frequently, whether it’s ideas for stories, research that I’ve done, or even just bills that I need to remember to pay, and I’ve gotten into a bad habit over the last few years of either jotting them down in notepad files on my desktop computer (which aren’t very handy if I need access to them while I’m out of the house, nor is it easy to search across all of them for a particular tidbit of info) or handwriting them on paper notepads (same problem!).

Now that I work across multiple devices, however (namely an Apple iMac, iPhone 4, Samsung Galaxy S, Samsung Galaxy Tab and Apple iPad), I thought I should make a concerted effort to move my convoluted system across to Evernote. The first few times that I needed to access my notes on a mobile device that I’d originally written from my iMac – and vice versa – finally drummed it home how useful it is to store my notes in the cloud and use a multi-platform note-taking app like Evernote to access it!

The iPhone Evernote client

Evernote is extremely versatile as it’s available for Windows, Mac, Android, iPhone, BlackBerry, and as a web browser version. It supports plain text, rich text, HTML formatting, images, weblinks, audio, tags, GPS coordinates and file attachments, as well as multiple notebooks, and the ability to search through notes and PDF attachments. Whenever you create a new note, it’s automatically synced to your online account, and then you can pull it down from any other Evernote client that you’re logged into.

Evernote lets you store pretty much anything in its system. I’ve really only scratched the surface of what you can do with it by entering text notes. You can also email messages to your Evernote account by sending them to a special email account, and clip web pages to your Evernote account for later reading.

Today I stumbled across a great new way to use Evernote. I had 11 rental units to look at today as I’m moving to a new (and bigger!) place, and I was looking for a way to keep track of all of the different apartments as well as make notes on each of them so I could remember which ones I liked at a later stage. At first, I tried looking in both the iPhone and Android app stores to find a ready-made app that would provide this functionality. I couldn’t find anything, and was just about to resort to using the ol’ pen and paper, when I remembered – Evernote! I made a new notebook for rental properties from my iMac, and then then created one new note for each property, listing the time I was mean to look at it, the price, the URL for the listing (which proved handy a couple of times for reviewing the property and contacting tardy real estate agents), a check list of must-have features like a balcony, internal laundry and car spot (Evernote lets you insert check boxes into the notes), and space for ‘Further notes’ so I could jot down any observations that I had. If I had wanted to, I could also have taken photos of each place and added them to my file notes, but since all of the listings had photos already, I contented myself with detailed notes instead.

Evernote is free to use, but you can sign up for a ‘premium’ membership that lets you upload up to 1GB of notes a month (free memberships come with 60MB), the ability to search PDFs, offline notebooks (free accounts can only access notes with an Internet connection) and larger single note sizes (50MB, versus 25MB for the free account). The premium account costs US$5 a month or $45 a year, and now that I’ve switched over to Evernote for good, I’ve signed up for a premium membership and haven’t looked back!

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