An apology to my dedicated readers for disappearing the last few weeks. The flow of thoughts has been quite distracted by family, travels, and new work projects. Any day now things will simplify themselves and the updraft of new ideas will start again. Isn’t that what we always tell ourselves? Sometimes it is true. But we need to be compelled by simplicity instead of complexity so we give up the distractions as soon as they can be released.
In addition, Jim and I have stepped up our riding. 10 days ago we started targeting 100-mile weeks—and now we’ve been days with over 120 mile trailing 7 days. This can’t last as our work time grows, but it is a good transition period. (We finally did our “block”; if you leave our place and keep turning right (or left) and take the smallest loop possible—30 miles and one big-ish hill.)
some technical issues to work out, but possible
mpanttaja on July 1st 2007 in Uncategorized
Okay, it seems cheesy to talk more about the iPhone, but it is taking up a lot of mips at my house, including Jim’s post on his iPhone. So here goes.
What amazes me about the phone:
- It’s damn beautiful. Really. The unit is beautiful, the images are beautiful, the interface is beautiful. The box it came in is beautiful, as is the bag the box came in. Wow. Every bit of it is a pleasure to look at and hold.
- The color and resolution enable the images to just glow; and I love the way the images flip when you twist the unit 90 degrees.
- It’s fabulous to actually just pull up a web pages and browse them. Extra fun that our website, which is so sparely designed, looks elegant on the iPhone. And you can actually read our blogs easily.
- But what I really love, which is only mentioned in all the writeups, is access to the maps of the entire world with corresponding satellite images. I can see houses in villages in Spain—on my phone. So clearly. The waves coming in from Alaska off the coast of California are as clear as the eddies and drops in the Urumbamba River that surrounds the walls of Machu Picchu—also visible on the phone. Of course, this is just what Google maps does, but to have it always with me is like having a atlas to dream over whenever I want. Very cool.
I’m sure that there will be things wrong with the phone in the long run, but the initial experience really is quite joyous. Now we’ll have to deal with data synchronization (which applications can be made to work, etc) and more nitty-gritty details of contacts and calendars (though musics, photos, email, bookmarks all work easily).
So, is it worth it? Not clear. But if you really enjoy seeing beautiful technology that can change how we think about things—maybe so.