Tuesday, May 13, 2008
When the iPhone stops syncing with the Mac
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Back Home in NYC


Saturday, March 08, 2008
This is not triple easy!
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Apple TV Take 2
- Apple TV acts now as a wireless speaker from iTunes. This very elegantly allows to "remote control" an Apple TV (one item on my first wish list). Also on our last party we could play the same music in both rooms, which is kind of cool.
- The distinction between synced and streamed content has finally been dropped. This was pretty annoying, because for accessing the full media library one needed to go through several menu items to switch between the local and the remote library. This happens now automatically and you can even turn the iTunes sync settings to "automatic", which copies supposedly the latest media to the Apple TV hard disk.
- Originally we bought Apple TV mostly for watching photos on the big screen. However this was only slightly less cumbersome than pulling a projector out of the cabinet and erecting a screen: if the photos were on a different machine than the one Apple TV synced with, you needed to copy them explicitly over, ideally reducing their size for saving disk space. The new Apple TV finally streams photos from Flickr, ,mac , iPhoto or Aperture from any computer which is connected to Apple TV.
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Quicken Online: Back to Beta
- You cannot monitor your transactions, because QO will categorize them automatically, which may be, naturally, incorrect. After it's categorized nothing tells it apart from any transactions which have been reviewed. So, for example, if QO feels that it recognizes a fraudulent charge on a credit card, it will literally hide it among the other transactions.
- You cannot categorize spending, because there's no split feature. I don't know anybody at Intuit thought they can get around this. Do they expect that we sort our products at the check out an pay each category separately.
- There are reports that show how much you spend in each category, but you cannot download them or print them.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Still Missing the Sync
Apple's new product announcements are always fun to watch, because you never know what is going to happen. Steve Job's keynote on Tuesday was especially fun, because two new products were actually free software updates and the MacBook Air seems to be such a niche product that it doesn't send me to re-calculate my budget.
Still I think, something is curiously missing in Apple's shiny digital world and the MacBook Air highlights it, given that for most people it will be an addition to their main desktop computer: how do you get the data from your main Mac to your laptop. Of course you can copy files, but this does only work for document files, for example Word files. It does not work for the “library” style repositories that the iLife applications use. For example iTunes, which just got a revamp to support rental movies. Yes, you can sync the movies to watch them on your Mac, your Apple TV and your tiny iPod or iPhone screens. But you can't take it on the road on your laptop and it's 13” or more screen. Same goes for photos, where you have to maintain a separate repository on each computer.
So, Apple, you solved the syncing of persona data between computers pretty elegantly (however pricey) with .Mac. Can we now please have an universal sync that keeps certain files, including the data of iTunes, iLife applications and pro apps like Aperture available on our laptops, while we are on the road?
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Quicken Online - First Impressions
- Splitting transactions. I can't think of a reason how they could miss this. Officially this decision was made, because they wanted to assign transaction automatically, but that doesn't really make sense. Reality is, that there are transaction that fall into multiple categories and for the purpose of budgeting and controlling your expenses you have to split them accordingly.
- Security. I appreciate all measures to keep my personal data private, but logging in could be a little more convenient. At least the login page should allow the browser to fill in user name and password automatically.
- Accounts that are not backed by a bank. Common wisdom would say that they are much easier to implement than bank-backed accounts. So why are they missing, preventing me e.g. from tracking international accounts.
- Transfers. You cannot transfer money from one account to another, for example to pay a credit card bill. You have to enter the transaction two times, which is silly.