Monday, September 10, 2012

Google Drive for iPad was updated

Today Google pushed out an update for their Google Drive for iOS application. Now you can edit and create new documents in the application itself. Why they didn't launch the application with these features to begin with still stumps me, but if you are a Drive user be sure to update your app. If you are like me and deleted the application maybe now is a good time to re-download it and take it for a spin again.





Starting today, if you’re using the Drive app on your iOS device you can now edit Google documents, just as you can with the Android app. From your iPhone or iPad, you can create a new document, edit an existing one, or format text. And just like on your computer, you’ll be able to see other people’s edits instantly as they’re made.



Read more about the update on Google+.

Blue Snowball Microphone

Several months back I wanted to try to record a podcast on my iPad, so I plugged in my white earbuds that came with my iPhone 4S and opened Garageband. To my dismay, the quality of the recording was just terrible, you could hear the mic rubbing up against my shirt as well as my breathing into the microphone. I then tried to use the built-in microphone on the iPad and that recording turned out even worse. If I moved my head the slightest, I sounded far away.  It also picked up every background noise imaginable.

I decided to do some research on USB microphones that did not need an additional power supply to work with the iPad. Enter the Blue Snowball microphone. I found a few other microphones when searching for USB microphones, but something about the Snowball attracted me to it. Price and the design were the likely candidates. I wanted something I know was going to be a great microphone, but I didn’t want to pay through the roof.



Trying to podcast on the iPad is tricky though, the quality of the recording is not the same as it would be on the Mac, but that should have been obvious to me. On my Mac, I can open System Preferences, tap on "Sound," and navigate to "Input" to adjust my Input Level. I cannot do that on my iPad. On the iPad I am stuck with only application settings, yet on the Mac can adjust microphone levels in the application. I am currently using Amadeus Pro on the OS X side of things. I can adjust every aspect of my recording with numerous “Effects Settings.” With Garage Band on the iPad, I only have a couple of settings:

  • Solo = On/Off

  • Track Volume

  • Echo Level

  • Reverb Level


What happens then is the microphone does 2 things, it will pick up a ton of background noise and it will pick up any heavy breathing. After you record on your iPad in Garageband, you do have the option for a few additional effects such as:

  • Small Room

  • Large Room

  • Dry

  • Several other sounds


You can also adjust the Compressor and Original Volume of the recording as well in Garageband, but honestly the quality of the recording is still just “okay." The recording leaves a lot to be desired. You can really get a sense for how bad the recording sounds if you have a decent set of headphones on. If you are listening through your computer speakers the sound is decent, but with headphones on you can really tell a huge difference in quality.

Back to the Blue Snowball, if you are looking for a great microphone at an affordable price, then you can’t go wrong with the Snowball. It is designed beautifully, very sturdy, and offers an overall great sound on your desktop/laptop and your iPad. You will get a much better sound quality with the Blue Snowball than you will with the built-in microphone or earbuds with microphone.

Features:



  • Condenser, Pressure Gradient

  • Omnidirectional or Cardioid

  • Frequency Response: 40–18kHz

  • Sample/Word Rate: 44.1 kHz/16 Bit

  • Weighs 460 grams

  • OS X or Windows XP, Vista, 7


Pros:



  • Plug n’ Play

  • Great sound quality

  • Use from all angles

  • Adjustable stand

  • Works great with the iPad or Mac


Cons:



  • USB cable was cheaply made

  • Bulky on the desk


Final Thoughts:

I am very impressed with the overall sound of the Blue Microphone.  The iPad has a few limitations as far as settings go, but that is not the Snowball’s fault. It does perform much better than the built-in microphone.  Since I can also use it on my iMac, it delivers a higher quality sound. If you are wanting to do YouTube review videos or start your own podcast, the microphone should be the first thing you upgrade.  If you do upgrade, I'd highly recommend giving the Blue Snowball a look. I am sure you will be just as impressed as I am.

The sound quality is terrific. The microphone is lightweight and comes apart easily if you need to travel with it. The stand it comes with is built of a high quality plastic and has rubber bumpers on the feet that keep it from sliding on your desktop.  This will reduce any vibration that could cause additional background noise when recording. The design will set it apart from other microphones, but the quality is where the Snowball may out perform the competition.

Where to buy:
Purchase the Blue Snowball on Amazon
Purchase the Camera Connection Kit on Amazon
Purchase the Pop Filter on Amazon

Blue Microphone Website
Blue Snowball Manual

My Apple Store experience

I originally posted this on my personal blog, but it is about the iPad so I figured I would share it here.

I bought my iPad 2 on day 1, which I believe was March 11, 2011. I can't quite recall off the top of my head, but I am pretty sure that was the official release date. This time around I bought the 64GB 3G iPad (AT&T). I probably had the iPad for about 2 months before I noticed something on the top left of my iPad, LIGHT LEAKAGE. At first it was not that bad, it was a slight yellowish tint/light bleeding through the side of my screen. No worries, or at least I thought, after 3 more months or so I noticed more light leakage in several more spots going down the right side of my iPad, if you were viewing in landscape mode with the home button on your right when facing the screen of the iPad, I now had significant light leakage on my iPad 2.

In the beginning of December of 2011, I picked up my phone and called Apple Support to see what I could do about my problem with my iPad. At first I was told my 90 day complimentary technical support period had already passed and when talking on the phone with the Apple Support assistant I started to think that I was screwed. He was friendly but he kept trying to sell me Apple Care for an extended period of time since my "1 year limited warranty" was due to expire in about 3 months. I was told it would be best to take it to an Apple Store and have my iPad looked at and if it was a hardware issue then I could have my iPad possibly replaced, I was then given an Apple Support case number and asked if I wanted to set up an appointment to take my iPad in. My problem is where I live, the closet Apple Store is in Albany, NY, which is about a 1 hour and 45 minute drive. I told the Apple Assistant my situation and was told that I could hold on to my case number and if I wanted to set up an appointment a later date to just use that number as it was already on file.

At this point I am thinking that I am now the owner of a $829 piece of shit! This past week for the holiday my relatives come to visit me for a few days and it just so happens they want to go Albany for a day of shopping, I decide not to call the Apple Support number to set up an appointment and just decide to bring my iPad 2 with me on the trip and decide what I will do about my iPad when I get there. This is 2 days after Christmas and yes the Apple store was wall to wall with iFans. I walk up to an Apple employee for assistance and tell him problem, he tells me I need to see someone at the Genius Bar so he walks me over to a Macbook Air on display and has me enter my email address and name on a support page for a Genius Bar appointment. He tells me it will be about 15 minutes before anyone can see me, I wait 10 minutes and my name is called. I talk to the Genius and explain my problem with my iPad 2, I have a hard time really showing him the light leakage as you can only see it when you are viewing the iPad in a darkened room and when the screen is dark or black, it will really show up then. He tells me he has seen this problem before, which really surprised me to hear an Apple employee admit that an iPad has a known problem, or any Apple product has a problem for that matter. He takes my iPad into the back room and comes out about 3 minutes later and says he can see the problem areas on my iPad. He tells me that he can exchange my iPad for a new one but he can't promise that the new iPad 2 will not have this same problem, also tells me once he opens it for the exchange that it is mine, I am skeptical as I am thinking he is just trying to keep me from exchanging it, but I explained to him that I use my iPad 2 basically as my 2nd computing device behind my iMac and this flaw was unacceptable. He was very understanding and went into the back room again and returned with a brand new boxed iPad 2 in hand, opened it up in front of me, activated it, restored the new iPad 2 from a back up from my iCloud back-up data then proceeded to wipe my original iPad 2, hopefully my iMessage are not getting sent there still though.

I guess the moral of the story is I walked into an Apple store with a 9 month old iPad 2, no box, no receipt, no proof that I was even the original purchaser of this iPad 2 and I walked out of the Apple store with a brand new iPad 2 with ZERO light leakage from what I can tell so far. Let me see you do that with any electronic device or computer. It is the little things that make Apple products so great, the buying experience is one them, the design of the product down to the way the products are perfectly packaged, the craftsmanship that goes into every device is spectacular, but the customer's buyer satisfaction is 2nd to none. I have been an Apple fan for about 10 years now, ever since I bought my first iPod, I have now amassed 3 Mac's, 6 iPods, 3 iPads, several other Apple devices such as trackpads, magic mouse and keyboards. I have been satisfied with everyone of my purchases. Now I know if I do happen to get that rare dud that Apple will do everything possible to make it right as they did with my iPad 2.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Buy an iPad now and get $50 iTunes card

Purchase a new iPad from Apple in the Education Store and Apple will give you a $50 iTunes Store app gift card. The credit is only good in the iTunes app store though, you can not use the card to knock $50 off the iPad purchase price. You can use the card to purchase: Apps, Music, Movies,  and iBooks.

The Back to School offer will expire on September 21, 2012.



 

Visit the Apple Education Store: http://j.mp/QxAbTw

Top iPad Stories (September 3 - September 9)

Thinking about trading in an old iPad or iPhone? Now is the time. Adobe finally updates Photoshop Touch after 6 months, open Gmail links in Chrome now, do not buy a Kindle Fire HD and check out Grandma's iPad. A great review of Magellan by MacStories for you music lovers. Also, my tip, app and bonus of the week.


Top iPad Stories:
Will Twitters new API affect your favorite app? (Yes, but listen to Iconfactory co-founder discuss some of the changes).
BBC allows mobile iPlayer downloads
FioWriter brings Mac editing shortcuts to your iPad
Controlling Your Home With The Touch Of An iPad
More iPhone and iPad trade-in suggestions
Rovio to launch Bad Piggies on September 27
Apple's iPad now definitively replacing PC sales in education
Manual Transmission and the iPad Mini
Wedbush ups Apple target price to $885 on iPhone 5, iPad mini prospects
One Year Later, the iPad Is Still My Favorite Computer
Adobe Photoshop Touch finally updated for Retina on the iPad
Hands-on learning with iPad
Amazon Is Sucking The Profit Out Of iPads
This is why I'm sticking with Nexus 7 and iPad (Google+ Post)
Get FireFox on the iPad with Foxbrowser
Apple May Have To Cut E-book Prices Within Three Months
Inkling: Bringing O’Reilly Books to iPads, iPhones and the Web
Gmail for iOS now opens links in Chrome, what’s next?
Grandmas iPad



iOS Development:
NSLocale
Shrink your iOS app by turning PNG compression up to 11
Why I teach Kids to code
Two Kinds of Gestures
Irksome, but Nothing New
Free embeddable fonts for iOS apps

Review of the Week:
Magellan Virtual Analog iPad Synthesizer

Tip of the Week:
Disable Gmail Archiving on the iPad

App of the Week:
Byword for iPad

Bonus:
The best video speeches/interviews by Steve Jobs






Follow me on Twitter @iCrizzo
Follow Total iPad on Twitter @totalipad

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Total iPad Interview - Talos Tsui

We sat down with Talos Tsui, co-founder of the Iconfactory. We discussed how the Iconfactory got started in the industry, changes to the Twitter API and how it may affect Twitterific going forward[1]. Thoughts on the App Store. Some of the other terrific applications the Iconfactory has for the Mac as well as their great iOS Apps.

It was a terrific discussion and we thoroughly enjoyed having Talos as a guest on Total iPad. If you are curious about how these new changes to the Twitter API may affect your favorite 3rd party Twitter client then have a listen. Talos did an excellent job in helping us understand how things will work for Twitter clients moving forward.

You can find Talos on the web:
Iconfactory
Twitter

You can subscribe to Total iPad in iTunes.

[divider_full]






  1. Talos wanted to make sure I noted that he made an error discussing authorizing apps in Twitter, Twitterrific and Twitterrific for Mac are two separate authorizations.  ↩


Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Episode 26 - The Seed, The Root, and The Tree

On this episode of Total iPad, Jennifer and I discuss the FBI having millions of Apple UDID numbers or did they? We also discuss some of the upcoming changes to iOS 6 and what that means for the new iPad. Been in a Best Buy lately? Noticed that the tablet section is almost as big as the laptop section? Thank Apple for that. They took a dead tablet market and evolved it into what we have today, the future of computing.

Show Notes:
AntiSec hackers leak 1,000,001 Apple device IDs allegedly obtained from FBI breach
Apple says that it did not give the FBI any UDIDs, and that it’s banning them anyway
Here’s how to check if your Apple device UDID has been compromised by the AntiSec leak
FBI Issues Denial About Leaked UDID List
Twitter Refusing to Hand Over Tweets in Occupy Trial
iOS 6 Preview

App Picks:
Drafts for iPad - Agile Tortoise
Drafts Review
Drafts Demo Video
Terminology - Agile Tortoise
Frenzic - The Iconfactory

Tip:
Increase text size in Mail.app