Posts tagged iPad

iPad Global Road Warrior Experience, Six Months Later

Six months ago I wrote the blog posts iPad Global Road Warrior Experience I, II and III. About 1MM iPads had been sold compared to an estimated 8-10MM today. Re-reading the posts reminds me of how fast things are changing and yet how much of that change is not visible to the great majority. As I shared on Facebook today: “Holding on to the past is easier then imagining the future”. Never had that problem.

We rarely as a society go back in time to check if what was said, forecasted or just imagined have become true. In all meanings of the word. So why not, with a great bottle of Chateau Langoa Barton 1997 and a couple of minutes to spare I’m inclined to make that journey.

Below are the “shortcomings” I found when on the road with the iPad for the first time and what has happened since then:

  • Exporting to PPT in Keynote was added a few weeks ago and makes a difference when working with enterprise clients
  • Editing Google Docs online was released today but the offline experience is still very limited to downloading and editing but no really good upload or sync. Rumors say that Memeo is working on updating their Connect for iPad
  • Skype introduced free calls over 3G a few months ago which works amazingly
  • iOS 4.2 Beta (to be released November 24 to the public) introduced multi-tasking which enables Skype to run in the background for inbound and outbound calls
  • The new native Google Voice app makes inbound messages (calls and SMS) easy to monitor and act upon - wherever in the world I am
  • I did buy an iPhone 4 recently to use as on-the-move and pocket-friendly mini-iPad. The camera / video recorder is really the killer app with associated photo apps as well as the most basic communication tools
  • I was tempted to buy the new Air to be able to download files and edit Google Docs on the road but thanks to iCab (an iPad/iPhone browser) and today’s new mobile editing I’ll stick to my iPad and iPhone
  • And I did install the iPad in one of our cars using a ProClip mount, for road trips when Google Maps and other apps add value. Took 5-minutes and is just beautiful

The only of my “shortcomings” that hasn’t been solved as of yet - without jail-breaking the iPad - is to demo web apps or mobile apps live on an external screen via VGA out. The first is solved by iCab, the latter only for Steve Jobs or individual app developers by adding a string of code leveraging the built in mirroring in iOS.

Things are happening faster then we think! ;)

iPad for Business

Nothing beats thinking and planning like doing. I’ll therefore only use the iPad for all my projects over the next 3 weeks to really take it for a thorough spinn. I already sold my Air and my iPhone is bust so what choice do I have… Here are more core apps:

  • Manymoon - for project management
  • Google Voice - for SMS and voice mails
  • Keynote - for presentations
  • Office HD - for Google Docs sync
  • Reeder for iPad - for news and blog posts
  • Skype - for audio calls
  • Kindle for iPad - for books / reading
  • Netflix - for watching movies

And most will be done via 3G as I have the no-longer-for-sale unlimited plan. Evil - I know. 

iPad + Velcro = why didn’t I think of that?

I’m Giving Up On “Books”

I’ve gradually gotten tired of *stuff* during the past 5 years. Clothes I never wear, kitchen utensils I never use and now books I never read or just read once. All of this stuff - just a physical representation of someone else’s trademarks or copyrights - is clogging up my space and life. 

I’ve been fairly agile in getting rid of most stuff - including physical DVDs and CDs - except for my books. I grew up in a bookstore you see so books have played a special part of my life, always accompanying me through the journey of life. But being an urban dweller one have to be frugal with space and therefore I’m getting ready to give up on all non-fictional books in it’s tactile incarnation and start reading the digital version on my iPad.

I never thought I’d do / say this but it’s time for the sake of the environment, the rain forest and my urban pied-a-terre to make the leap. I’m starting out soft with books than can be speed read, annotated and later on searched. 

I’ll keep buying fictions for two reasons: the tactile sensation of turning each page in a breath-taking thriller pocket as well as the iPad’s shortcomings being used at the beach or in the hammock. One can only change so much! ;)

Parents setting up their new iPad while Oliver is rocking out to Van Morrison’s Moondance.

Parents setting up their new iPad while Oliver is rocking out to Van Morrison’s Moondance.

A cheap ($2-3) elastic picture frame wire makes a great kitchen iPad wall mount. At least until modulR releases their very promising solution.

A cheap ($2-3) elastic picture frame wire makes a great kitchen iPad wall mount. At least until modulR releases their very promising solution.

iPad Global Road Warrior Experience, Part III

In meetings and working online.

I hit the ground running in Stockholm where my first meeting was to run through the presentation I made on the flight. Using the VGA cable I easily connected the iPad to the projector and it connected as soon as I understood that I had to have Keynote in present mode. The iPad should be charged when you start running the prezzos as it cannot charge and use the VGA cable at the same time. A minor detail that could be devastating. And go to offline mode to avoid getting interrupted by Foursquare updates. That turns off the presenter mode and therefore the projector.

Taking notes, using Notes, in meetings is easy and a much better experience than on the Air or iPhone. The former as it actually shows what you are doing (i.e. working as supposed to checking Facebook) and the latter as the virtual keyboard is so much bigger and easier to use. I just wish I could easily share them instantaneous with the cloud. The only sharing option is email.

Creating, writing and editing documents works really well via Notes, Pages or many of the different iPhone/iPad applications. The challenge is if you’d like to access old docs from the cloud and edit them on the road. There are several synching applications available for Google Docs but none of these really rocks. The closest is the free Connect Reader which has a great user interface and let’s you access, download and read your documents.

Just tried the Office² HD (iPad version) and it does all of the above except sharing. Note that the application it’s still a little buggy (version 3.2.1).

Another option is the recently released Dropbox for the iPad. A third option is to use File Sharing and synching the documents you’d need for your trip before departure. Eventually this will be fixed by a third party developer or as early as in two weeks at the Google I/O.

So why can’t I use Google Docs via the Safari browser for editing if I’m online via 3G or WiFi? Well, the mobile version of the Safari browser does not support rich text editing. Editing spreadsheets works - as it doesn’t use rich text editing - but not documents.

I even held a Skype conference using the presentation I created on the flight. As the iPad have neither video nor screen sharing I had to email the prezzo in PDF format before the call. Maybe not a 2010 experience but it worked.

Managing my travel itinerary via the different travel applications is awesome. I booked and rebooked hotels, flights and used maps to get hotel directions. I even checked in on Lufthansa and SAS via the iPad and received a digital boarding card. The iPad even fit under the QR code reader at the airport despite the flight attendants doubt. Her first time, I guess.

I’ve been catching up on news via Reeder which is a fantastic Google RSS Reader on steroids (Thanks, Mark). It offers offline reading (caching), multiple sharing options, notes and integration with Instapaper. Reeder is just available as an iPhone app for now. 

The lengthy batteries and the fact that it starts up right away makes a big difference on business trips. I work 20 hrs per day when traveling and need to stay productive the whole time. My projects are scattered across several different time zones and when traveling this gets amplified. Working smarter is a must and the iPad provides that edge.

Key learnings from 5 days on the road:

  • The iPad can definitely replace the laptop for the basic needs I have (create presentations, hold presentations, write and edit documents, check emails, browse and manage travel itinerary, read news)
  • The only obvious shortcoming is the lack of cloud apps apart from iWork and Dropbox but as I’ve described there are workarounds for the creative user
  • Being faster with 10 hr batteries makes up for having to find workarounds. While my fellow travelers in business class (got upgraded on a dirt cheap economy ticket) saw their gray and heavy PC laptops die my iPad charged ahead like the energizer bunny
  • The 3G is a must for the road warrior. I’d like to check my emails on the iPad while I’m in transit and cannot rely on the existence of WiFi on speed trains or in transit lounges. And 3G is cheaper than WiFi for low usage
  • The iPad also replaced the need for my iPhone but that is probably something very personal. As I was mostly in-room (on flights, in lounges, in transit and conference rooms) the iPad offered the better user experience. I’m also a heavy Google Voice user, channeling all voice mails and text messages to my universal GMail inbox…
  • The iPhone/iPad applications are in many cases superior to a browser or a desktop experience. The best apps combine the best of both worlds 
  • Apple usually carries a premium but $700 for truly portable laptop including case and a few basic apps is very affordably if not cheap
  • The Apple Case is fantastic and much better than all other third party cases I’ve seen. The only additional accessory I’d look for would be a wall-mount for the kitchen or for the car…

I’m selling my Apple Air (1st Gen). Any takers? ;)

iPad Global Road Warrior Experience, Part II

In the air experience.

The first thing I realize is that the 3G is a must. Traveling and not be able to pull out the iPad to check or write emails, browse or write notes is not very productive. The new data-only plans are actually surprisingly good. The international roaming, paying $1,000 per GB, is redonkilous.

The iPad fits perfectly in the carry-on and I was never asked to take it out during security checks in San Francisco, London, Dusseldorf, Berlin or Stockholm. Might seem like a detail but just dropping your bag on the screening area and going through the metal detector without all the hassle is pretty sweet. Sans slow, and overpacked tourists of course.

Using the iPad on the flight is a fantastic experience. The Apple case should get a design award. Yes it doesn’t looks great but works both as a protective shield and a fantastic stand, either on it’s head to watch movies or lying down, angled to write. It enhances the experience tenfold.

The fact that it never overheats, wakes up in a heartbeat with batteries that lasts for 10+ hrs is a dream come true. The size is perfect if you are a frugal entrepreneur, always traveling Economy Plus. It’s actually possible to work without bumping shoulders. After getting use to the virtual keyboard I personally think it’s feels much better to use than the Air’s.

The media experience with everything from Spotify, to iTunes, Photos and Video is obviously outstanding. C’mon. I never had a doubt. I watched “I love you, man”, slept, then “Rush in Rio”, slept a little more and then while creating a presentation from scratch rocked out to Led Zeppelin, Chris Cornell, Genesis, Yes and Phish.

I created a presentation in Keynote from scratch during the flight and once I figured out how to access the toolbox, create new slides, delete text et cetera it went really fast. The fewer choices compared to the desktop version makes the experience much faster. It helps to have pre-loaded the Photos application with useful images for the flight. I love that I can import PPT and export PDF. Exporting PPT would be even better.

Doing research is obviously hard while in the air but if you gather the data that builds your story then the design of the presentation can easily be done while wasting away in an airline seat for 10+ hrs. It’s very cool to see that it works.

Creating, editing and sharing documents and spreadsheets is a completely different story. The only application that works well is Notes and Pages but can only share via in-mail. There is no application available that is letting you use Google Docs offline and then sync when online. There are workarounds with manual downloads and syncs but they are clunky and feel unnecessary. I’m confided to taking shorter notes that I then need to manually add to Google Docs (now when the email functionally is gone). This is really the biggest area for improvement. It can be done so let’s do it!

Does it beat the laptop experience while in the air? Hands down. It’s faster, lasts longer, easier and more fun to use. The only current drawback is the lack of word processing with cloud sharing but that will eventually get fixed.

iPad Global Road Warrior Experience, Part I

Five days, Four cities. One iPad.

Last time I was off to Europe in February I brought a 1st Gen iPhone as my only digital work tool. I selected a few productivity applications and relied solely on WiFi networks. It worked like a charm.

This time I’m bringing an iPad to prove or disprove my hypothesis that the iPad can replace my need for a laptop. And my needs are very simple: browse and blog; create and run presentations; access, write and edit documents; communicate via email; Skype, LinkedIn, Facebook and FourSquare; receive and send voice-mails and SMS; manage my travels and my travel literature (non-fiction PDFs and books). Pretty much keep interfacing the world as I do every day.

My iPad is packed with old presentations, 11GB movies, 3GB music, 250MB apps, non-fiction PDFs and Stanford University’s iTunes U video course in “iPhone Application Development”. The latter to see if I can use my 15+ hrs flight to learn something new. I’m also bringing the VGA cable to run my presentations directly from the iPad and the Apple case to see if lives up to it’s dual promise of protection and cradle.

All my hotels have free WiFi as have all the Airport lounges I’ll be visiting during my journey. The only time I’ll be offline will be in transit.

This is going to be great fun! :D

Read part II and III.

Packing For Business Travels

How I pack for a 5-day work trip to Europe:

  • Only one light-weight carry-on with the bare essentials: underwear, shirts, pajamas, fleece, iPhone/iPad, passport, wallet, headphones et cetera
  • SIGG box / bottle for home-made goodness and water; perfect to refill at the hotel breakfast buffet as healthy backup food
  • Planned layover in London to utilize free showers and breakfast at airport lounges (requires higher mileage status)
  • Having the hotel clean my clothes and provide hygiene articles; sandwiches to-go for early flights
  • Storing everything digital in the cloud, accessible from iPhone/iPad

There are so many benefits with traveling light-weight: it’s faster, easier and more comfortable. Anything can be bought anywhere these days so why prepare for that rainy day that might never happen. Take a walk on the wild side!

Why I Would Buy an iPad

I work in the creative economy, bringing new concepts, ideas and patterns to clients and consumers. That makes my brain and my social network my workspace. 

I’m dependent on effective and connected tools and techniques to extract, package and communicate value from concept, ideas and patterns. Value is being created when my brain is plugged into contexts of problems, insights and conversations.

My brain is pre-wired to look for new tools and techniques that create value faster and smarter. That is neither unique or common as people both embrace and resist change. But my requirements are personal.

Until I got to spend extensive time with the iPad the other day I was in the skeptics camp (actually still is). Not as an innovation but as a professional utility tool. I need it to both simplify and to expand my professional life. Here are a few requirements:

  • I need both portable and mobile capabilities, i.e. WiFi and 3G (A+)
  • I need speed, performance and endurance (A+)
  • I need online and offline capabilities and seamless sync of data (B-)
  • I need to be able to create, edit and share data online and offline (B-)
  • I need local data storage for offline usage when traveling (A+)
  • I need text and voice communication tools across WiFi and 3G (B-)
  • I need a browsing experience that enables interaction with travel services while on the road (B+)
  • I need a much better user experience than the iPhone and the PowerBook Air (A+)

The upcoming iPad Wi-Fi + 3G model almost meets all these criteria. Most of the shortcomings are really third party issues, like Google Docs lacking editing in document mode, Skype not yet offering 3G calling and certain experiences not optimized for the iPad.

The common critique of not having USB ports, lacking camera and therefore video recording and multi-tasking is fine by me. As a product guy I think those were the right prioritization, just as iPhone lacked cut, copy and paste in the first software versions (which I never use).

Entertainment is nice but productivity is a necessity. I need to be able to interact with data cross-platform, cross-team and cross-time zones. The iPad also needs to be good enough to replace my Air and my current iPhone setup. That said, I’m not looking for the iPad to replace my iPhone as one is an in-room device and the other is an on- the-move device. But certain basic capabilities must overlap, as they do.

I’m off to Europe on one of my 5-day take-no-prisoners business trips in a few days and as that coincides with the release of the 3G version I might buy one to put it to the test. The experience doesn’t need to be perfect but good enough to enable work-around solutions. If it meets my requirements I’ll sell my Air as simplicity has to be part of how we prioritize our time, attention and energy.

Getting excited about the iPad

I’m critical by nature. When I first saw the iPad I was no better than Bill Gates (“this thing will bomb”). But as I’m pushing my iMac, Air and iPhone to their limits I realize that there is a nice little need for something in-between. It’s more vision than routine which makes it hard to get your head around this new thang.

One of my buddies - ex-technical Yahoo! - painted a sweet picture today during lunch. It’s not the e-reader I’m excited about, it’s the doc reader, he said. Which is so true. It’s Byline for PDF’s with Diigo. Cached during flights to digest, highlight, annotate and share. Accelerated thinking and collaboration.

It’s both business and digital living room. It’s realtime on the cheap ($15 for 250MB). It’s cloud + apps + entrepreneurialism. It’s not just what it can do but what you’ll use it for.

I wouldn’t have realized this if I hadn’t kicked the shit out of my old iPhone with Travels with iPhone. And it’s ironic that it’s called an iPhone as the phone is what I never use. And I wouldn’t have realized it if I wasn’t working independently, defining how and when I work.

Sure, you can use these new gadgets in the old context and they will deliver incremental value or you could let it free and see where it takes you. New hardware and software is not just about what it can do for you but what you can do that you couldn’t before in your quest for world domination.

I’m more and more certain that the driver behind this technology evolution is our desire for friends, freedom and thought (a little Seneca there for ya). It’s meritocratic marxism. It’s lifestyle design.