The Daily Exercise in Futility

When news about The Daily iPad app first surfaced, I thought that it would be the best of both worlds. My hope was that it would combine the traditional tone and long form journalism of the old guard (NYT, WashPost apps) with the realtime and social nature of the web (Flipboard).

The great thing about these three apps is that they have intuitive user interfaces that load quickly and allow you to browse efficiently to get to whatever you are interested in at a particular moment. I can get in, get what I want quickly, and get out, like those hilarious Windows Phone commercials. Or, I can just browse around and find articles that I wouldn't normally select out of a list. Overall, these apps replicate my pre-Internet newspaper reading experience (Yes Virginia, there was a world before the Internet).

My hopes have been dashed. After using the Daily ... well, daily since it released, several things have irked me about me. Some of the more glaring issues have already been patched, most notably the constant crashing.

These two problems rank the highest on my list of irritations:

 

1) Load time is sloooowwwww!.

I tried to update the app at 5:30pm after work, and it took about 3 minutes to download. This is WAY too long. I ruled out any network issues because performance was fine before and after the update. To make it even worse, I previously updated the app this morning at 6am. After the painful update, there were only minor additions in te paper. WHAT was it downloading all of that time!?

 

2) The audio feature is borked

I love, love the idea of having audio. When I am getting ready in the morning, I usually listen to the NPR hourly update and a few on demand stories that I can easily see in a menu and quickly add to a playlist.

Unfortunately, none of this exists in the Daily. There is no menu implementation of any kind to see what stories have audio - there's just an audio button on the main screen. Press that, and it automatically scrolls to the cover page of the first article with audio. Want to read that article while the audio plays? Too bad, that shuts off the audio. Want to skip past it? The only way to do that is to turn audio off, and back up. If you press the forward button, which is located next to the audio button, it simply scrolls to the next story (that may or may not have audio) and shuts off the audio. Ugly, ugly, ugly. Oh, and how in the world can a high profile release not support background audio while multitasking?

In it's current implementation, I don't get much use out of the Daily. The slow loading time makes it impratical to use while not connected to wifi, and the rudimentary audio features does not allow me to easily listen to audio from stories of my choosing. If these two issues are fixed, I'm all on board. Your move, Murdoch.

Get Ready for Christmas in March

 

March 2nd is an iPad Apple event.  BGR has a supposedly exclusive pic that it now admits may be a render, but its pretty clear from the invite that new iPads are coming soon.  Yes!

At first I didn't really care much for cameras on an iPad, but after using Facetime a few times I can see the utlity.  It's pretty cool to show someone what you're doing while on the phone, as long as you are using a headset. The last time I did this I showed my hungry friend some chicken I was cooking (i.e. making sure the chicken my wife prepared doesn't burn).

I hope Apple hasn't wasted time and resources on a Retina display.  It was a significant expense for the iPhone 4, but the iPad's screen is already beautiful.  I'd rather see a screen that stands up better to sunlight, because the iPad is a pain to use outside.  I'd also rather see a thinner and lighter iPad, which should be expected since Apple always slices off some fat with each revision.

The new iPad definitely needs a faster processor, because multitasking is noticeably slower than on my iPhone 4, which has double the RAM.  As applications get more complex, swithcing between them requires more juice.

Finally, an SD or USB port would be nice, but not necessary.  DropBox and Goodreader have pretty much solved any file transfer issues for me.  I agree that a native Apple solution would be superior, but I'd prefer the iPad to be left without a file system.  The simpler, the better.

My next post will have some rants about some of my favorite and least favorite apps.  The Daily, I'm looking at you - shape up or ship out if you want my subscription!

Oscar Buzz

 

I'm usually not a fan of award shows. However, I tuned into the Oscars tonight for one reason - to see how The Social Network does. Like it or not, Facebook has revolutionized the way that people communicate. I've been integrated in social networking since Friendster (I skipped MySpace and its horrible site design), but Facebook has taken the original idea of social networking and ran with it. I don't go a day without visiting a website that has Facebook integration so that I can see what articles my friends have liked. It's a huge help in filtering out the immense amounts of content that I sift through as a tech nerd living in 2011.

I was initially concerned with the idea of the film - wouldn't it just be about a bunch of college kids coding on a diet of pizza and Mountain Dew? My concerns were alleviated a bit after reading Masters of Doom: How Two Guys Created an Empire and Transformed Pop Culture by David Kushner. This book covered the creation of id software by John Carmack (one of the true geniuses of our time and John Romero. It kept my interest by focusing on their personality and why they were the perfect people to channel the tech and gaming industry forward. I hoped that The Social Network would take this same approach.

David Fincher did a great job with the movie by focusing the movie on something that everyone can relate to - get screwed over. This made a film about coding immediately accessible to people that don't understand what Facebook is or how it has changed our world. Even thought it didn't win Best Picture, The Social Network is a fabulous movie that should be seen by anyone who has used Facebook. Yes, even my mother, who has probably used the site for just a few minutes. You're not off the hook mom!

Liftoff!

 

Welcome to my blog!  I will use this space to post my thoughts on technology, pharma, and anything else that comes to mind.  Please feel free to comment on this post as well as future ones.

Today was the final launch of Discovery.  I have never been to a shuttle launch, but I felt a part of the action today thanks to SpaceFlight Now's live coverage.  People may have become used to Shuttle launches, but think about - we've developed a reusable peace of technology that's been active for over 40 years.  That's pretty amazing.  There has been human loss, but considering the amount of shuttle launches performed by NASA, it has been a successful use of technology.

The closest that I've been to a shuttle was the Enterprise at the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center.  If you haven't been and you have any positive thoughts about planes, I would strongly recommend that you visit.  In addition to the Enterprise, they also have a Concorde, the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird, and the Enola Gay.  I spent a day after a business trip in Reston, VA walking around the facility and came away impressed with the collection.

Some day I'll make it to a shuttle launch!