Archive for February, 2010

KOM Digital Nation Seminar

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Just got back from the first digital nation seminar for 2010 and it was nice this time around! Unlike previously there weren’t 5 people on the stage talking about random things and instead we had a speaker who was relevant, fun and engaging! (dude was CEO of a media company in Dubai & spoke about social media).

I really had fun listening to him and had even more fun chatting with other people over dinner afterwards. It’s a really good opportunity for like-minded people to mingle with each other and I hope more fun people cone attend next time! It is totally free and you get to have dinner afterwards!!

Gmail+ MS Exchange + iPhone = Awesome!

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

I always had a problem with my phone and web-based address books. I have multiple entries of the same people, each with a million different numbers. Very recently I decided to sort this once and for all and have all my address books synced using Gmail’s support for Microsoft Exchange. Using Exchange making any change in either of my address books causes the other one to reflect that change INSTANTLY without doing anything but update the actual entry. As my iPhone is always connected to the internet this really works as advertised and it is just unbelievably efficient!

It took me a while to clean up my Gmail address book and have ALL my contacts on it first, I deleted many contacts of people I have not been in touch with for years and those who I am now exclusively in touch with via Facebook. Once I got my Gmail address book completed, I completed wiped out my phone’s address book and used the Exchange settings to have Gmail sync with it, in a matter of seconds the names started popping up in my address book and the process was done! Whenever I add a new contact to my Gmail address book that person appears instantly on my iPhone, making any change to any entry also appears instantly as well!

OK, what’s even cooler is that after I got both of my address books unified an sorted, I used the iPhone Facebook app to sync the photos of all of my friends with my iPhone address book, so now when any of my friends call me their Facebook profile picture shows up on the screen! AND this picture is later synced with Gmail so I can also see it inside my Gmail address book!

Besides the address book feature, I also use Exchange to push emails instantly to my iPhone so that it email and SMS become virtually the same, and best of all is that my calendar is now synced with Google Calendar live so that any event I add to my iPhone calendar appears in Google Calendar instantly without me doing anything but add the event to the calendar! It is seriously insane I love it!

Twitter Craze

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Twitter is the hottest thing on the Internet right now, yet people either do not understand, think it is silly, or are addicted to it. In Oman, Twitter is steadily gaining popularity as more people and companies join it. For those who still do not know what this is, Twitter is a service that lets you send very short messages (140 letters or less) to people who follow you. If you are on Facebook, think of it as a website dedicated to status updates, and instead of being restricted to friends you know, it is public.

The short messages of Twitter can be used in a number of ways. The most commonly understood method is to simply use it as an answer to the question “What are you doing right now?”. Your answer could be anything from “Having my famous cereal for breakfast” to “Running late for work as usual”. These are updates that enable your friends to know what you are doing at any moment.

The second function for Twitter is to use it as a chat platform. Twitter enables its users to reply to each others messages instantly using a myriad of devices. If you need a quick answer to a short question, like the location of a restaurant or an advice on something to buy, you can make an update on Twitter and get a short answer from any of your followers quickly.

The third function of Twitter is to use it as a source of real time news, whether it came from professional industries or normal people. The concept of a “Retweet”, which is the equivalent to a rebroadcast of a twitter update, makes news spread across the whole of Twitter instantly, so if you found a tweet with breaking news, you can retweet it instantly to your friends who are likely to retweet it even further down the chain.

For people like myself who are officially addicted to service (I have made more than 10,000 status updates since I registered two years ago), Twitter has become part of the lifestyle we follow. My followers know about my life more than anybody else does, and I know a lot about the lives of those who I follow in return. I have used many different methods of communication over the years, but I had never before made a connection with so many people on such a personal level like I have on Twitter. It might sound unnatural to those who don’t user the service, but I now feel that I am part of a community which I cannot abandon easily.

I have been told that I no longer have any privacy because people know every single move I make from the minute I wake up until the minute I decide to stop reading my novel in bed and go off to sleep. I have to admit that I am no longer sure about the extent to which I should disclose personal information about myself, and I do not advise anyone to tweet as much as I do, but I believe that the whole world is still trying to understand social media and it will take us a while to establish a common etiquette for using such a service. Until that happens we will have to tweet using common sense to ensure that we do not harm ourselves and those close to us by exposing too much information to the rest of the world.

Is Flash Going Down?

Friday, February 5th, 2010

The recent announcement of the iPad and the experimentation with HTML5 by YouTube and others led people argue about whether or not Flash is necessary, or even good at all, for the Internet. Apple has announced that, just like the iPhone, the iPad will not support Flash. YouTube and a number of websites have started testing the use of HTML5 video instead of Flash to playback web video.

Many people are vocally against Flash because it is a proprietary technology that is controlled by Adobe. People think the web should be built using open standards such as CSS and HTML. Images on the internet do not need a special plug to be played and are placed directly on a web page, the new HTML5 will make it possible to embed a video inside an HTML page the same way an image is placed. As Flash is the most popular method for delivering video on the internet, a lot of people seem to believe that the arrival of HTML5 will be the end of the Flash video era. A number of modern browsers such as Chrome and Safari already support the HTML5 video tag and websites such as YouTube and Vimeo started testing it for delivering video.

There are a lot of compatibility issues with HTML5 video tag and it will take a very long time (years) before it can become a serious alternative for Flash video. The HTML5 video tag enables embedding a video directly onto a web page, but there is no actual standard video format for the web and there is no consistency in the support of video codecs by browsers. The majority of video codecs are restricted by use licenses and no format is currently universally supported.

Apple refuses to have Flash on the iPhone because it fears that it will negatively affect the user experience due to its tendency to consume the system resources, however, all other smart phone platforms (Android, Palm, Windows, and Blackberry) have announced that they will support the new Flash Player 10.1 which has been developed for mobile and touch based navigation in mind. Apple also will not support Flash on its upcoming iPad tablet even though it will come with a new powerful processor that is capable of delivering a desktop like browsing experience.

Instead of waiting for Apple to reconsider its position, Adobe announced that the upcoming version of Adobe Flash Professional, CS5, will enable developers to use Flash CS5 and ActionScript 3.0, the same tools used to create Flash on the web, to create native iPhone applications. This means that Flash developers can use their existing skills and easily create smart mobile phone applications that will run on the iPhone, Android, or the desktop web, using a single SDK with very little changed between each different platform version of the same application.

It must be remembered that Adobe does not make money off the Flash Player, but by selling development tools such as Flash Professional and Photoshop. Adobe creates a number of tools, such as Dreamweaver, that work with web standards such as HTML5. The video tag is very unlikely to have any significant impact of the use of Flash for delivering video on the web anytime soon, and even if it did, it should be remembered that Flash is not just a medium for delivering video, Flash is the most popular method for creating web games and other rich interactive content. Many popular web services such as TweetDeck, Google Streetview, Picnik, are built on Flash and they don’t have anything to do with video.

The fact that the iPhone and the iPad do not support Flash is not the end of Flash, for the real customers of Adobe, the developers, Flash can still be the a good option for developing applications, especially due to the ease at which applications created using Flash can be ported to multiple platforms (including the iPhone) easily!


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