Geek iPhone App: Wordpress 2

 If you have a WordPress blog and an iPhone (a winning combination I think :) , then you should try out the new(er) version of the WordPress iPhone app.
WordPress iphone app

WordPress 2
Cost: free
Company: WordPress.org 

You can manage, moderate and respond to your comments, create and edit posts (in fact I did most of this blog from the app, than saved the draft so I could add the iTunes link later).You can also send a picture from your camera phone and upload it directly into your Wordpress gallery.

One drawback is that there is no toolbar, i.e. no kitchen sink for formatting, which means you have to use HTML code if you are want something besides just plain text. But if you’re writing a quick draft or don’t need any special formatting, this app works well. You can manage multiple blogs and it works with wordpress.com sites and self- hosted Wordpress sites.

Note: Make sure you check the box in Settings->Writing->XML-RPC before you launch the app so that it can connect.

© 2010, The Geek. All rights reserved. Click here for the Disclosure Statement

Geek iPhone App Review: Comcast / Dish / DIRECTV Mobile Apps

Comcast, Dish and DIRECT TV all have apps that are great for managing your services with them. These are particularly nice when you are out for the day or traveling and want to keep track of your cable.

  

Comcast mobile App

 

Name: Comcast Mobile App
Cost: Free
Company: Comcast

UPDATE: Comcast has released a new version of thier app. You can see details here. They have added the “control your DVR” feature – currently only in selected areas.

The Comcast app makes life easier (well my life). If you are a Comcast subscriber, particularly to all 3 of their services (cable, internet, and voice), then I recommend it.   You can check your Comcast email, listen to your voicemail and look at cable listings. The only thing it does not do (yet) is let you set something to record on your DVR. Just a matter of time I suspect. Comcast claims that this feature is “on the roadmap” in future releases, but has not given a date yet.  

You can also look at your outgoing and missed calls, which syncs with your iPhone address book you can call or text people back. Click on the icon above for more information on iTunes.

 

DISH Remote Access

Name: Dish Remote Access
Cost: Free
Company: Dish Network

If you are a Dish subscriber, you can manage your DVR from your iPhone. You can browse listings, schedule recordings, and manage your existing recordings. Click on the icon above for more information on iTunes.


 DIRECTV
Name: DIRECTV
Cost: Free
Company: DIRECTV Inc.
 

If you are a DIRECTV subscriber, you can manage your DVR from your iPhone as well. You can browse listings, and schedule recordings. Click on the icon above for more information on iTunes.  

Did I miss any? I searched for some of the other major cable companies, but did not see any apps for them. If you know of others leave a comment and let me know.

© 2010, The Geek. All rights reserved. Click here for the Disclosure Statement

2010: The Year We Make Contact

Photo courtesy of photoxpress.com

 

The decade we just said good-bye to produced a lot of technology.  And I mean A LOT.  But just because it arrived in our lives, homes and vocabulary doesn’t mean it has been useful.  If technology is designed to improve our lives, it begs the question—does it actually?  Lets take a look: 

 2000 

  •  The Sony Play Station 2 came out this year (followed by the Xbox in 2001).  When does a gaming system become good enough?  They have become more realistic, more interactive, and more addictive. I think this is fodder for a whole other blog…

2001 

  • Wikipedia is launched. Providing a nice consolidated location of all that is truth provided by none other than… anybody who wants to write something. I have seen a shift in the use of Wikipedia, even with myself, to it being a bit of a joke source to being a trusted primary source of information. Remember kids: just because it’s online, doesn’t mean it’s truth…unless it’s my blog, of course.. ;o)

2002 

  • My middle daughter is born. I really can’t remember much else after that due to the amnesia induced by sleep-deprivation.  Where is the technology to fix colic? Where?  That would be useful and would improve lives. Trust me.

2003 

  • NASA’s Spirit and Opportunity Mars Explorer Rovers (MER) land on Mars. To date, they have exceeded their one year mission life by 7 years. That makes them 433 years old in NASA years. Sweet! The Geek in me has been fascinated with Mars since I did a research paper in middle school on the Viking spacecrafts. I think the world expects that one day, we will actually send people to Mars. You can find out more about all the NASA missions with their iphone app.

2004 

  • Facebook. Now, we are all “friends”.  I believe this has been the most interesting social experiment to date. The idea for it was conceived by a Harvard student, Mark Zuckerberg, while  he was blogging (drunk) about his girlfriend who dumped him (you can read the story onWikipedia ;o) . You, too, can share even the most mundane events and musings throughout your day with all the people you are “friends” with. Like the best friend from elementary school, the ex-boyfriend/girlfriend from high school, college friends, co-workers, etc. It’s a brilliant way for companies to gather information about you and your group of friends. Everything from political views to the number of children you have, to your favorite movie. Pure marketing genius that has not been seen since 1994 when Jeff Bezos started creating ways to market more products and services to  you based on everywhere you clicked and all the products you searched for or bought on Amazon.com. Facebook did it in just a couple of years without selling a single product to you vs. the almost 10 years it took Amazon to figure it out.

2005 

  • 2005…..2005….meh.

2006 

  • Nintendo’s Wii is first introduced, thus creating a group of people trying to figure out how to bowl while sitting down.
  • Twitter is founded…  Now @caseycaddell txts & talks in140 chrs, and a whole new vocabulary of words is created revolving around the word Twitter and tweet. It’s Twitterific.
  • Planet 134340 (i.e. Pluto) was downgraded from a planet to a dwarf planet because the International Astronomical Union (IAU) decided they were all powerful and voted on a formal definition of a planet. I still have not accepted it. In fact I don’t know of anybody over 30 who has. It’s just wrong. Who demotes an entire planet?
  • My youngest daughter is born.  Things really start to get interesting in the geek household now. The Drama runs strong in all my daughters.  And the eldest (who turned 7 in 2006) is old enough to use and desire technology.  Go geeks!

2007 

  • Apple introduces the iPhone, forever changing the world and creating a whole class of people learning to read 2pt font and type with their thumbs in a 2 in by 1 in space. (reviews of some cool geeky iphone apps)(reviews of some great iphone apps for toddlers)
  • The Kindle appears. I heard somebody mention they use it for a bookmark for their paper books. I do not have a Kindle but I have the Kindle app for the iPhone. I like it. There is a lot of talk about eReaders now, but it will be interesting to see if people use them or prefer paper books). My mom has a Sony e-Reader and she used to love it until a Windows update made it so it wouldn’t download books anymore.  The Sony Corp. was no help, so I suppose she can use it for a bookmark now.

2008 

  • The Nintendo Wii Fit is introduced and it becomes another piece of exercise equipment that never gets used.  And you can’t even hang laundry on it—what’s up with that?
  • NASA’s Phoenix spacecraft successfully lands on the surface of Mars (cool!). Significant because NASA hasn’t done a controlled (emphasis on ‘controlled’) landing on Mars since Viking 2 in 1976 (see 2003).  After 5 months of research by Phoenix, we are still arguing if there is water and life on Mars.

2009 

  • 2009: NASA crashes into the moon. I still don’t know how I feel about this one. Feels a bit like those people who demoted Pluto without asking
  • 2009: My oldest daughter turns 1 decade old and now really has technology needs and desires.
  • 2009: The SDG Group Inc. is founded. (Yes!)

  

Don’t forget 2010 is the year the monolith comes back and we get a second Sun. (If you are really geeky you will get that with the title of the blog. If not you can IMDB it.) 

What technology impacted your life in the past decade?

© 2010, The Geek. All rights reserved. Click here for the Disclosure Statement

Its been 15 years!

c&m_wedding1995Today I am celebrating my 15th wedding anniversary to my best friend, the amazing @melissacaddell.

 Wow, 15 years has flown by. Fifteen years ago we were in college. I had 9600 baud modem to upload programs for my computer class (and it took forever), a 486DX computer (an upgrade from the Tandy 1000), and a Motorola cell phone with a battery the size of a small shoe. I recorded most of my music off of CD’s to a cassette tape and our social media was watching Star Trek TNG and eating frozen pizza with our friends in our small mobile home with the $200/month rent we could afford in the middle of a sand pit. Some of you reading this have no idea what some of that is, so let me recap with the equivalent in today’s life:

 trailerNow we have cable modem, 3 laptops (one the kids share), an iPhone (that I have to pry out of the chubby hands of my game-playing toddler) and a Centro (that is half the size of the batter of our first cell phone).  My kids have no idea what a cassette tape is, we talk to all of our college friends via Facebook, and I follow Wil Wheaton, Levar Burton & Brent Spinner (Star Trek TNG) on Twitter.  We still like frozen pizza (though a better brand), watch tv when we want to off of our DVR and live in a comfy house in the ‘burbs. 

 There have been too many technology changes to mention in the last fifteen years.  Some technology has actually been useful and improved our quality of life (raise your hand if you love your iPod).  But some technology has made our lives much more complicated and/or cluttered (like why won’t The Wyf’s computer remember it has the print driver installed? Without having to be reinstalled for every print job?)

 The struggle with how technology can actually be a hindrance to humans has led me to my focus for The SDG Group in 2010.   The problem with most technology is that humans have to adapt to it instead of technology adapting to you.  Stay tuned for some upcoming websites and software products that will address the human-technology interface problem.

I pray you all have a happy new year and live long prosper this year!

The Geek

© 2010, The Geek. All rights reserved. Click here for the Disclosure Statement

How cold is too cold for bubbles?

Negative 6 degrees is cold.  As The Wyf and I stared out at the cold night, my eyes landed on a bottle of bubbles the geeklets had left out.  Hmm…I wonder  what happens to bubbles when it’s really cold? So, The Wyf and I stepped outside to test our ideas.  (As an FYI, -6 is really, really, really cold.  Even the dog wouldn’t hang out with us.) 

We blew bubbles and I assumed they would just pop when they started to freeze.  But they didn’t. If they were mid air when the froze (5-10 seconds) they dropped and broke. If they landed on something before they froze, they would stick and you could watch them freeze.  They looked a little crinkly with dents in them when the warm air inside them cooled and compressed.  Some would crack when they froze, but still retained their shape, so it looked like a broken egg.

 That was fun.  :)

© 2009, The Geek. All rights reserved. Click here for the Disclosure Statement