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One popular article

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There is no doubt about the iPhone being a popular news item, and I, as many, have lots of hits on articles about this phone. I have over time also had lots of readers of the articles I have about Lotus Notes, and devices that can sync with Notes. In the last couple of days my article Lotus iNotes Ultralite on my iPhone has had 163 hits so far, and yesterday 77 hits.

I find iNotes Ultralite brilliant. It has helped me a lot.

Top Posts on my blog yesterday

The Google Owns You Term

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I am getting more and more sceptical to using any products from Google. I love their simplicity, but for Google it is all about indexing information about you. I try to be quite practical about it, I only use them when there isn’t anything better around. So for that reason I still use Google for searches, maps, chats and mails. I don’t use Picasaweb or their online office applications.

When it comes to their newly released browser, Chrome, I have not tried it yet. I didn’t get that far. The license told me not to accept it:

11.1 You retain copyright and any other rights you already hold in Content which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. By submitting, posting or displaying the content you give Google a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Content which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Google to display, distribute and promote the Services and may be revoked for certain Services as defined in the Additional Terms of those Services.

By using the browser to write a personal blog entry, Google would have ownership to the content. WTF? Imagine you something worse. You edit web pages at work, and suddently your company/office/organization doesn’t have the full ownership of the information any more. A mistake from Google? Of course not. But when they saw that they wouldn’t get away with it, they changed the license pretty fast.

What scares me is how fast people have started using it, just 2-3 days after release, Betanews could report that Google’s own analytics engine Google Analytics had started tracking Chrome. A Google Analytics report run by BetaNews at about 2:00 pm on Sept. 5 gave Chrome a 6.83% browser share, in contrast to 42.85% for Firefox (all versions and platforms), 39.38% for Internet Explorer (all versions), 4.63% for Safari (all platforms), and 3.97% for Opera (all platforms). All additional browsers got lumped together under “other.” I guess that means that a lot of computer technicans were fast to try out the new browser. Question is will they continue using it?

Net Applications’hourly statistics for estimated worldwide Web browser usage share, conducted at around 2:00 pm today — showed that Chrome achieved its peak penetration of 1.73% of the world’s HTTP requests on Sept. 5 at 4:00 am EDT. The statistics also show the useage of the browser is going down, and that perhaps users are going back to their old prefered browser.

Having said that, I am impressed how fast Chrome managed to pass the Opera browser in usage.

A review of Locly, a Geosearch application for iPhone

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I’m currently working on a web project at work, where one of my tasks is to look in to trends. One of the trends I have looked in to is smart phones with great web experiences and another is mashup technologies. During the project I came over an iPhone application called Locly.

locly-1

Ask yourself, how many times have you been in a new place and had no travel book or map with you. I guess your answer would be quite a few. Locly is an application that can find attractions, cafes and shops near by you, by making use of the inbuilt GPS of the 3G iPhone, or your local base station data if you have the first generation iPhone. With Locly you can also look at local photos from Flickr, and pull up Twitter or Wikipedia entries that are close to where you are now. Locly is reported to work in many countries throughout the world, but I can only say that it has worked surprisingly well for me here in Oslo, Norway.

locly-2

Locly is simply the best combination of geobased searches and mashups I have seen so far, and that not only on mobile devices.

locly-3

The mandatory screenshots are of course published on Flickr.

Geotagging Photos: A Review of Sony GPS-CS1 and HoudahGeo

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sony_gps_unit_gps_cs1_kit_-1934067126_0_BigI have since spring this year been working with trend analyzes on where the Internet is going. There are many great Web 2.0 applications out there, and some of them combines great hardware, desktop and web applications in ways that 2-3 years ago were unthinkable.

On Friday I bought a Sony GPS-CS1 at FOTOVIDEO. So why this device? GPS-CS1 officially only comes with support for Windows, but being a USB device that mounts on your desktop like a USB Pen Drive, should make it close to platform independent! No advanced Bluetooth driver is needed. I’m keeping my private photos on my MacBook Pro, so for me MacOS X support was a need. Having said that you might get problems with mounting the device on older versions of MacOS X, but Apple have confirmed that the latest Mac OS X Leopard release, from 10.5.3, has support for the device. But I don’t want to only use it to geotag my photos, I also want to use the device to track my bike trips – http://www.mapmyride.com/.

Sony also only list support for various Sony cameraes, but the device syncs well with non-Sony cameras as GPS location data and jpeg metadata (EXIF 2.1) are standards. I used an old Konica Minolta camera for my first tests, and will later test it with a Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX35 camera. The unit weights 55 g and can store your geographic position four times a minute, which makes about 15 days worth of trackpoints on the 31 MB of internal memory. Battery life should be about 10 hours on AA batteries. GPS-CS1 make it a great deal for those of us who only want a photo tagger, don’t need a full-size GPS unit, and don’t want to buy a GPS camera.

The GPS-CS1 device lets you attach it to a backback or belt loop, so that you carry around while you shoot. It records your GPS location and this information can later be synchronized with your digital images to provide a map of where your photos were taken, by using date and time information stored in the image headers. For this reason it’s important to make sure the clock on the digital camera is correctly set. No setting is needed on the GPS device because the time is also transmitted on the satellite signal.

HoudahGeo

I use Flickr for photo sharing. There’s a setting there that you have to manually change before you upload EXIF-geotagged photos; once you do this, it’ll map all newly-uploaded photos automagically! I have long wanted to arrange my pictures geographically on Flickr. This can of course be done manually, but that is taking a lot of time. With a GPS you can import the logged data in to Flickr, but first you must enable “Import EXIF location data” in your account settings (see screenshot above).

I chose HoudahGeo as my preferred application for merging photos with geo dato. The application has a lot of potential, and I find it to be the best one available on the Mac platform. And the price? Yes, great software rarely comes for free. The application costs 25 euros, and is worth every cent! I have a few words about their support service as well. I fired of a question to their published e-mail address last Sunday morning, and got it answered a few moments later. Unexpected and very pleasant! I have a few suggestions for improvements of the application that I have included in this blog entry.

HoudahGeo

The first button lets users import photos directly from iPhoto. The window that appears should be familiar for all users used to using the iLife applications. A great feature is that drag and drop from iPhoto is supported too. Even the name and comments fields from iPhoto are imported too! Photos can also be imported by clicking on the second button in toolbar.

HoudahGeo synchronizes the images on your digital camera with the latitude, longitude and time readings from several GPS devices (Garmin, Magellan and Wintec) over Bluetooth, but it can also read the data from files from devices mounted with USB (as the GPS-CS1 device). The Sony device stores the geo data in .log files, so it’s just to choose the correct file:

HoudahGeo

Adding the geo data to the photos are done in a matter of one or two seconds, and you are then ready to go the three last buttons in the toolbar. The first button writes the saves the geo data to the pictures, the second exports the EXIF data and the pictures to Google Earth or Google Maps, and the third one uploads the photos with geo data to Flickr.

HoudahGeo

HoudahGeo supports upload of selected photos to Flickr. You can also set it to only upload photos that have been geocoded. Just as the official Flickr Uploadr, you can define the maximum image size (resolution) for the photos when uploaded in Flickr. The last option “Include machine tags” shows the geo data as metadata in Flickr.

HoudahGeo

Before it starts uploading the photos to Flickr, you are asked to authorize HoudahGeo as a trusted Flickr application (the app can later be deleted in your Flickr settings.

HoudahGeo

I would like to see a better integration with Flickr. I truely miss not being able to add the photos that I am about to upload to an existing set or create a new one. It would also be great to add other tags than machine tags.

HoudahGeo

PS! You don’t need to purchase a GPS device to enjoy the wonders of HoudahGeo, the application can also be used to manually add geocoding to photos by using Google Earth or Google Maps.
A geotagged photo

IBM to release Lotus iNotes for iPhone later this year

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I guess that I must admit with Ars Technica that Lotus Notes is the office software everyone loves to hate. Despite that I am happy to read that I will be able to access my e-mail, group calendars, and contacts direct from my newly upgraded iPhone.

Having been involved in projects the last year, and therefor running to and from meetings most of the time, there have been times where I have had to make use of the web client called iNotes to access Notes info remotely. And I must say that the latest version has gotten a great facelift.

IBM has now announced that they are to add an iPhone-optimized web client for Notes, called Lotus iNotes Ultralite, later this year. The client is built on the IBM Lotus Domino Web Access infrastructure. Screenshots are available on their website.

Full article can be read on Ars Technica.

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