Thursday 25 November 2010

Tuna strainer, it does one thing and does it well...

 

Before you cry out 'OMG' and run screaming for something cool, just think about it for a second. This little baby does one thing, and extremely well.

There are so many useless kitchen gadgets in this world. I've walked around shops full of pretty looking crap that will live out its days sat on kitchen work surfaces unused and unloved, aside from the odd cursory glance and the promise of doing more. So what gadgets do we use often in the kitchen? Aside from the coffee bean grinder (I freeze the beans and then grind what I need for a pot, it stays fresher that way) I tend to use things that will help me RIGHT NOW. Is that a guy thing? You don't see many men craving bread makers for Christmas, let's just leave it at that. There's something in the male genetic makeup that needs the cause and effect to be as close together as possible. It is for this very reason that the tuna strainer is my gadget pick for today. What do I want to do? Strain the tuna tin. Do I want to get stuff all over my fingers? No! Bish bosh bish, job done.

Monday 22 November 2010

Apple TV...Star Date 4.1...


It's updating right now. Kind of exciting really. It's something Apple have really got right isn't it, free software updates. In the olden days when phones had reliable batteries and actually made phone calls, it was a case of putting up with the phone you had for the duration of your contract. Nowadays our devices are updated fairly regularly to satisfy the insatiable hunger of us consumers. Oh, and to compete with the other platforms of course. I don't know about you but I'd certainly consider one of those Googledroid phones if Apple wasn't around. They're looking pretty tasty nowadays. Sorry, I digress.

I've had the Apple TV for a little while. And before you start shouting 'Apple-whore' over your glass of Chateauneuf-Du-Pape, I readily admit it's something I wanted rather than needed. I love the interface, it's so easy to navigate, although the remote does interfere with the MacBook, so I find A-Ha starts playing when I switch it on. The internet section is good, although I would like to see the inclusion of a streaming service here in the UK. We don't get Netflix like you brothers and sisters over the pond. The streaming from other computers is, as they say in the Bridworks naming department, 'awesome', and I'm guessing in about ten minutes time I'll be able to stream video straight from my iPhone.

Wow. Hasn't technology come a long way. If you'd told me five years ago that I would be able to shoot HD video on my phone and send directly and immediately to my TV, I would have probably accused you of watching too much Star Trek and called you an ambulance.

Thursday 18 November 2010

Awesome Note...

Awesome Note - named by a teenage surfer?
Yes, ok, I have an iPhone. Don't roll your eyes and tut. Lots of people have them you know, so don't give me that look. Aside from being the new crackberry in terms of addictiveness it's also pretty much anything you want it to be, owing to the highly successful app store on iTunes. In a way, the app store has been an ever-so-slightly victim of its own success. Although it prides itself on being a walled garden there have been a truck load of highly dubious apps passing through. Also, lots of apps just don't take advantage of the design potential of the iPhone. You really have to wade through the slurry of design awfulness to get to the good stuff.

Now let's get one thing straight, I think whoever was in charge of the naming meeting at Bridworks was either a teenage surfer or Australian (maybe both). If I was choosing apps on names alone, I don't think I would have ever bought Awesome Note. But, oh, what a lovely interface. It's really what the iPhone was made for as far as marrying design and productivity. You can make notes with a gazillion choices of background, include photos and maps and sync it seemlessly with Evernote or Google Docs. It's certainly made my life easier with it's alarm notifications, and kept me interested with its customisable interface.

Bridworks, I salute you. In future though, could you put a grown up in charge of naming your apps?

Wednesday 17 November 2010

The new Facebook messaging system...

Now this is something I imagine I'll come back to once it's been rolled out properly, but I thought it needed mention as something to potentially make online lives easier.

I know people who over-use Facebook, showing they're undergarments to anyone who can stomach them, tact and self-respect cast aside like a drunk at a party. I know people who detest Facebook and feel they are basically a data-mining company, doing everything they can to get their filthy mitts on your stuff. Then there are the common sense users who take privacy seriously and show themselves online much as they would in the real world.

I believe all parties have to agree that the idea behind Facebook's new messaging system is an attempt to make people's lives easier. I was going to say users then, but I mean people. The idea is to connect people, whether they are Facebook users or not. You'll be able to email, SMS and IM each other in an entirely integrated way. In fact, labelling these different types of messaging should just melt into the background - you'll simply be sending someone a message.

That's the idea anyway, and I like it. Will some people still drop their drawers in public? Of course. Will Facebook expect something out of it? Of course. Will we look back at it as a milestone in communication? Well, I hope so.

Tuesday 16 November 2010

The Beatles on iTunes...who cares?

So the Beatles have finally made it onto iTunes have they? It has made me wonder, with all the hype surrounding the item, who cares? Beatles fans will have a bunch of their CDs or vinyl already (er, cassette?). That leaves, well, everyone who couldn't really care less about the Beatles. I love 'em. Got their stuff. Couldn't give a monkeys about the announcement today. So Apple: please please us by saving the front page for something that at least some of your consumers are going to care about.

Sunday 14 November 2010

Remembrance Day poppy, the one with the sticker...

A friend of mine said it the best: "For those who gave their tomorrows for my today I remember you. For those still serving I'm thinking of you". I can't think of a better way of putting it really. For years people have paid they're respects to the armed forces by dropping money in the collection boxes and pinning their new poppy on. What of those pins though? I don't know about you but I always seem to lose the pin after the first day of wearing my poppy. In recent years the Poppy Appeal has offered an alternative: the stick-on poppy. Genius if you ask me. Sticky enough to get a few days wear out of it, and you're not left with holes in you (if you're clumsy like me) from the pin.


Go and take a look at the British Legion website and see how you can help further.

Car Poppy

Gadget...

Well, I looked it up in the dictionary. It said 'a mechanical contrivance or device'. It's origins come from the French 'gâchette', meaning the catch of a lock. Today we think of gadgets as things you plug in or charge up to use, but that's not necessarily the case. I like to think of gadgets as things that make our lives easier. Some are electronic, some aren't, but all save us time and effort in a clever way.

If you want to review a gadget, please do and send it to me. If you would like to comment on any of my posts feel free, we're all gadget monkeys at heart.