Sunday, August 24. 2008
    
iPhone apps have catapulted the wireless mobile industry into a new millennium. Everyone will benefit: Apple of course, the app developers now having a platform to make good revenue quickly; the other wireless device vendors and developers as they now also have a path to tap into the market of the billions of mobile phone users, allowing them to profit, too, if they move fast. - the neutral app recommendation site www.appvee.com contains lots of copied and neutral info on iPhone apps, plus reviews. This site helps with finding your applications.
- there are apps restricted to use in North America only: WeatherBug (temperature in Fahrenheit only), Pandora radio (does not run in Europe), AirportStatus (also keeps crashing on startup, latest: now it works!), NWA travel...
- my favorite apps right now are (a snapshot as things change daily):
- Evernote, great notebook that also has a website that lets you better organize and share your notes
- MProfs, nice short marketing tips and how to stories, with some good contributions in it
- SBB Timeplan, giving you fast access to the Swiss public transport timetables
- 20min, free Swiss news source, best are the available news videos, I think
- Bloomberg, this has proven to be the so far best stock market news and tracker application for me, its counterpart Swissquote lacks basic usability features, which is a shame, as otherwise they could be even better I think, so right now I'm still using Bloomberg
- WinWeinReb, a big database in German for wine grapes, after you key in the wine grape name you get infos about its major locations and also a description of its to be expected taste, a database that gives access to the wines itself would be a great extension, hope they do that for free then too
- AeroWeather. There are many other -- it seems great -- to-be-paid for tools for pilots available, but AeroWeather is for free and provides the latest reported weather at all major aiprorts worldwide, including METARs and TAFs in both raw and decoded versions: very nice tool!
- nice stuff for just playing around: Mandarin phrase book, Cocktails, Brain Tuner, Newtons Cradle, Blanks (new English words), PangeaVR (3D panoramas), Midomi and Shazam (recognize songs)
- more useful tools: Currency, ZIPcodes, Units, Translator, Cards, WeekNumber
Friday, August 22. 2008
Two days ago American Airlines launched as the first airline in the US Wifi access aboard three flight routes from New York to San Francisco, to LA and to Miami. Next airlines to follow will be Virgin America and Delta Airlines. Delta will offer it even on all their domestic flights. The technology company behind this is Aircell who is in business since 17 years and is the provider of the inflight telephone communications.
The Wifi service is called Gogo and it seems to work very well as this test report here shows. Unlike its European counterparts (I have yet to find any flight with this service although they all talk about it for quite a while) who use satellite links, Aircell's Gogo service uses ground base stations scattered across the US. This seems a much better, for sure higher-speed service than going over the slow satellite links. Maybe an idea for the European community to think about building such an infrastructure as well. I will for sure try to check out Gogo on my next trip in the US and then report back my experience with it. One time flat fee is 13 USD BTW which is not that cheap but also still affordable.
Monday, August 18. 2008
 One year ago I already trialed Genius.com organizing initial e-mailings to prospective clients. At first I was excited - as far as I remember - but then I decided to drop it anyway due to a lot of missing features and also lack of stability. Now I am impressed with it and Genius.com got much closer to deserving its name. As with many good software tools usability makes the difference. Exactly this is what the Silicon Valley based VC funded startup does extremely well now and most importantly very reliably and stable. Investment into the platform and into the Ajax client user interface have paid off.
They also addressed the spam filter issue now very well. No cookies are used. Genius.com solves this problem, at least for now, by giving your websites a unique new URL which is all that is needed to identify who, for how long and in what order clicked onto your websites. You can even replay what someone did on your website showing its path and time spent on each page, so you can draw real conclusions that help decide what to do next with each prospect. Equally well done is the management of emails and contacts organized in SmartGroups. Here a lot of goodies have been added compared with a year ago. One nice feature is the possibility to add a remove footer when you send out the e-mail to more than 20 recipients. This complies with US anti-spam regulations and is also in Europe good to have. Overall Genius.com is a very good tool that solves a current problem very nicely. I will have to test the integration with salesforce.com still but also here it appears the company's product management is eager to provide a complete user experience. With regards to it's business model one can expect that they position themself for a trade sale to one of the BIG players such as Microsoft, salesforce.com or maybe Google. I can so far fully recommend Genius.com to create, execute, analyze and coordinate your business e-mailings and have it all integrated with other website analytics or CRM tools.
Thursday, August 7. 2008
More than 2000 applications are available already for the iPhone. My own favorite ones right now are:
- Salesforce Mobile, in case you use salesforce.com as a CRM tool, access is available with the iPhone now too
- Swissquote, leading Swiss online broker
- Currency, showing you the latest exchange rates
- 20min, nice online version of the popular free Swiss newspaper
- NetNewsWire, RSS reader providing me with the latest online news
- Bloomberg, news headlines and a quick overview of the world stock markets
- NYTimes, New York Times news, business articles and latest photos
- PangeaVR, great tool to see 360 degree panoramas, amazing what's technically possible already
- GottaGo, front end for all public transportation in Switzerland, great tool
- iOlympics, latest news, events, schedules, sports and country specific news
- ZIP codes, let's you find zip codes or towns and provides quick access to maps
- Labyrinth LE, my kids liked it!
- DizzyBeeFree, dito
- Shazam and midomi, in case I hear a song on the radio that I like and want to buy, I can identify it now within a few seconds...
Monday, July 28. 2008
This here is a list of some of the very best latest electronic gadgets I found in PC and Mac magazines in the US.
- Pentax K200D, DSLR for just $ 800 with excellent image quality from ISO 100 to 1600 in dark alleys and bright lit beaches
- Logitech Harmony One, universal IR remote control that is real fun configuring it
- Lenovo X300, best ultraportable notebook PC, price is now just 2,500 USD
- New Firefox 3 is available as a beta and it seems it is the best browser ever in terms of security, usability, and performance
- MacBook Pro was selected as best notebook in the $2000-2500 professional category
- Nike + SportBand let's you view calories, distance, pace, and time when you run for just $ 60, via USB you upload the results to your PC and can use it with the excellent website at www.nikeplus.com, to avoid having to use a Nike sports shoe you can simply get a shoe pouch for $7 to hold the sensor on your shoelaces from www.granteodtechnology.com
- NEC NP 100 or 200 most impressive only $500 projector with replacement lamps that are also cheap with $180 lasting 3500-4000 hours
- TomTom ONE 130S which I just bought myself is a great inexpensive GPS with a clever mount, the NAV740 seems to be even better though with larger display and 11 million points of interest db, both offer TMC traffic as an option: I use it and it works extremely well

The August 2008 edition of the MaximumPC magazine did a nice comparison between the best PC notebooks in each of the Apple MacBook categories: MacBook Air in the ultraportable max. 2 kg, MacBook in the mainstream max 3.5 kg and MacBook Pro in the professional max 4 kg category.
Only the MacBook Pro landed a victory although it was 500 USD more expensive and had a less exciting screen compared with its contender the Dell XPS M1530 notebook.
The winners in the two other categories were Lenovo X300 (see also CNet review) as best ultraportable and the AcerTravelMate 5720 as the best mainstream notebook PC for just $1050. It seems the right time also to buy as pricing for the Lenovo notebooks dropped now in the US e.g. from 3200 to 2500 USD for the X300 model. I assume newer models (probably with a HDD instead of flash) are on the horizon. Latest comment: yes there is. Lenovo announced the X200 model and is very low priced started at 1200 USD. It is available in August. 
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