“The Samsung Instinct, which has many of the same features as the Apple iPhone, differs from the iPhone in one major way: Its monthly price plan, which will dramatically undercut the iPhone plan announced last week by Rogers Wireless.

A subscriber can buy the Instinct for as low as $149.95 and then pay less than $40 a month for a modest voice plan accompanied by an unlimited data plan on Bell’s high-speed data network.”

The Globe and Mail - Jack Kapica

This does make things rather interesting. I am an Apple fan, and I’ve lusted the iPhone ever since Steve stood on stage and unveiled the first generation (I was set to drive to Buffalo to get one), but this has made me stop and think.

Unlimited data at 3G speeds and a modest voice plan for $40/month.

I’m going to stew on this. I’m sorry Steve, but this could be my magic bullet. Time for you to smack Ted around and knock some sense in.

Posted in Apple, Technology at July 3rd, 2008. No Comments.

Canada’s in an uproar, and once again Rogers is the cause.

It’s not very often that Canadians speak out about anything. But now the country is speaking, and the country is upset with the rate plans Rogers introduced for the iPhone.

There are only 2 other instances I can remember of Canada being this upset. One was in 1995 when Rogers (big surprise), introduced 7 new cable channels via negative option billing. The other when the CBC mentioned that they would not be renewing Don Cherry’s contract in 2004.

High mobile rates have always been on Canadians minds. We are the 3rd world of mobile technology, and to thank for that we have the Canadian Government, the CRTC, Rogers, Bell and Telus.

Rogers is a mobile carrier monopoly in Canada. They are the only GSM provider after the Canadian Government allowed their purchase of Fido, which provided the 3G network Rogers now touts.

We held a lot of hope that Apple would be able to strong arm Rogers into reasonable data rates (unlimited) with the iPhone, as they had done with AT&T. However this is not the case, and the usage cases that Rogers is providing for emails/web pages downloaded are unrealistic in today’s world.

While I’m not convinced that this protest will amount to anything, I’m still holding onto a hope that Rogers may finally see the light.

Posted in Apple, Life, Technology at June 30th, 2008. No Comments.

I’ve recently started watching video on my iPod Touch while exercising on our elliptical machine. I place the iPod on the book holder, plug in headphones, and off I go.

I had been watching TV or movies on the TV near the elliptical, but the whole view is blocked by a post, and I had to turn the volume way up to be able to hear it over the movement, and distance. There’s also the problem of either stopping or calling someone to change DVDs for me as the TV shows would sometimes span DVDs during my workout.

My workouts are 45 minutes in length, normally I can fit in an hour long episode (wonderful without the commercials), 2 half hour episodes, or an episode of diggnation.

Recently I’ve been converting Futurama episodes for the iPod, and loading them into iTunes. I’ve run into a couple of speed bumps.

First, iTunes doesn’t like adding 22 episodes of video at a time. While my system and network are no where near taxed, iTunes slows to a crawl. 5 to 6 episodes at a time it handles no problem.

Second, while iTunes 7 has added features for video specifics, it still expects the audio track name and number filled out for display. This means updating information in 2 different tabs in iTunes. I had started entering this information manually, but today I grew tired of copying and pasting and started looking for an easier method.

As always, looking for an easier method with iTunes starts with Doug’s AppleScripts where I found this script, that’ll allow me to update multiple video tracks at one time, something iTunes doesn’t do.

Now this only gets me part way there, but my job is much easier. I still need to edit the Episode ID with the name. There’s no way around doing this manual, so I just did it.

This still didn’t put the name of the episode into the iTunes TV Shows list though. For that, the information needed to be copied from the Video tab to the Info tab. I wrote this quick and dirty AppleScript to help with that:

tell application "iTunes"
    set sel to selection
    repeat with i from 1 to (count sel)
        set t to item i of sel
        tell t
            set album to show as string
            set disc number to season number as number
            set track number to episode number as number
            set name to episode ID as string
            set genre to video kind as string
        end tell
    end repeat
end tell

The time to process new shows in iTunes has now dramatically decreased.

Third, smart playlists and the Video Kind setting don’t allow me to exclude any video from a smart playlist. I keep a smart playlist of all recently added tracks, this allows me to easily see what has been recently added, but also because my music is stored on a NAS, I can use some simple AppleScript to automatically add recent tracks to other Macs throughout the house. To get around this, I ended up using the genre to specify the video kind and filter based on it. The script above handles setting the genre to video kind for me.

Those are the issues I’ve found with iTunes, so far, and how I managed to work around them.

Posted in Apple, Technology at February 6th, 2008. No Comments.

Last week we placed 2 orders with the online AppleStore. Due to availability Apple broke the orders into 3 separate shipments.

On Monday we ordered a new 24″ iMac to replace my aging 1.25Ghz G4 PowerBook. The shipping lead time was 1 - 3 days, with a 2 - 3 day ship time if we paid extra. Which we did so my wife wouldn’t have to listen to me complain about FedEx and Memphis.

Wednesday afternoon I placed an order for a second power supply for my MacBook Pro, and a Griffin Elevator. The lead time on the power supply was 1 - 2 days, with a 3 to 8 day shipping time, the Elevator had a lead time of 2 to 3 weeks with the same 3 to 8 day shipping time.

Friday afternoon, the doorbell rings and it’s Purolator delivering the Griffin Elevator.

Today at lunch FedEx dropped off the MacBook Pro power supply, all the while the iMac is sitting in Memphis waiting for it to be the day that Apple committed for it to be delivered on.

Posted in Apple at January 28th, 2008. No Comments.

How to Convert a MacOS X 10.5 Leopard Upgrade DVD into a Retail MacOS X 10.5 Leopard

Having recently gone through the process of installing 10.4, only to erase it immediately and install 10.5, this would have come in useful and saved me 2 to 3 hours.

(Via Uneasy Silence.)

Posted in Apple, Technology, Tumble at December 29th, 2007. No Comments.

Zip Quick Look Plugin

Quick Look has to be one of my favourite Leopard features. It looks good, works, and does so quickly. This plugin adds Quick Look for zip files.

Posted in Apple, Tumble at November 28th, 2007. No Comments.

Creating a Leopard Volumes Stack

Now that network mounted volumes no longer show on the desktop, nor in the left hand bar of a Finder window. I’ve been looking for a quick easy way to see what volumes I have mounted and this does nicely.

This is the only way I have found to see MacFusion mounts.

Posted in Apple, Tumble at November 28th, 2007. No Comments.

I often come across “Top $x OS X Applications” blog posts. I usually take a quick look, see the usual suspects and move along. Every once in a while I’ll find an application that fills my need. This happens enough times to keep me coming back.

Today I came across Top 100 best open source mac software. The biggest find in this batch was AppFresh.

AppFresh searches your hard drive in all the usual places (unusual places can be added in the preferences) for applications. The application list is compared against the application list at iusethis.com, checking for updates. Each application lists the current version number, the last time it was accessed (doesn’t seem to work that well), the up to date status, and if the version is not current, and its iusethis.com.

The iusethis.com integration allows you to see what is offered in the newer version, how many other people are using this application, plus, if you configure your iusethis.com profile, you can update your profile from within AppFresh.

While most of the software I use does automatically check for updates, it’s not always running, nor do I launch all the software daily or even weekly. Having one central place to check for all application updates is well worth the download.

The software is useful, it is still rough around the edges, but still worth installing.

Posted in Apple, Technology at October 11th, 2007. No Comments.

I came across this tip on Hawk Wings for speeding up Mail.app, with some simple database maintenance. I find it odd that Apple doesn’t run this command every so often on mail startup/shutdown.

Quit out of Mail, open a terminal window and run:

sqlite3 ~/Library/Mail/Envelope\ Index vacuum index

When it’s done you should notice a huge improvement in speed on Mail.app startup at least.

The article and comments claim disk savings too, however prior to running the database file was 31MB and after 28MB, the speed increase made it worth it.

Posted in Apple, Technology at March 2nd, 2007. 2 Comments.

This morning I decided to install MacFUSE. I’d heard about FUSE before, but only with Linux. I never mount remote filesystem Linux system I just ssh, or scp what I need. With my Mac however I am always connected to remote filesystems. When MacFUSE was announced I was quite excited. There are multiple boxes that I only have ssh access to, that I maintain various files on. The ability to treat my home directory on those servers as remote filesystems is very appealing.

There are binaries available but I wanted to do an install right from the subversion repository, knowing as MacFUSE spread updates would be made. Luckily Jay Savage at downloadsquad put together comprehensive instructions.

The instructions were excellent, and the install process went very smoothly. That is until I tried to mount a remote connection. I immediately received this error message:

kextload: extension /System/Library/Extensions/fusefs.kext is not authentic (check ownership and permissions)

It took me a bit to backtrack through the instructions, and check my work. I finally noticed the permissions on the fusefs.kext directory:

drwxrwxr-x 3 root wheel 102 Jan 19 08:27 fusefs.kext

I had previously set the umask for my user to 002 (the default is 022), to allow group access to different files I create on remote servers, and during the install process this umask was used when creating the fusefs.kext directory. OS X didn’t like group write access to a kernel extension. A simple sudo chmod g-w fusefs.kext and all was fixed.

Posted in Apple, Technology at January 19th, 2007. No Comments.