How to use native Screen Sharing in Mac OS X 10.7 Lion

Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion) has an excellent screen sharing app built right into the operating system. The screen sharing app enable you to access and control the screen of another computer on your network. I like using in on my MacBook Air when I want to quickly access our family iMac. It’s perfect for troubleshooting the computer outside of the room or doing a function that’s not available on my notebook computer.

Enabling Screen Sharing

The first step in setting up screen sharing is to enable it on the Mac you want to connect to. Go to System Preference and then click on the Sharing icon. Then check Screen Sharing to turn it on.

Sharing in System Preferences

Sharing a Screen

Change to the computer you want to use to access the other computer. Go to the Finder and look for the computer you just turned screen sharing on for. Click on the computer and then click on the Share Screen button.

Share Screen Finder Window

If it’s the first time you’ve connected to the computer, it will request that you authenticate with an active account on the target computer. Once you successfully authenticate, it will start sharing the screens.

Activating Full Screen Sharing

One of the key features in Lion is its ability to display apps in full screen. This of course is perfect for sharing the screen of another computer. To activate full screen mode, click on the full screen icon/button on the upper-right side of the shared screen app.

Full Screen Button

How the “Starbucks Card Mobile” Payment System Works

Up until today, I’ve used the Starbucks Card Mobile app for iOS to check the balance and reload my Gold Reward card. The only other functionality that I’ve found useful was the ability to easily find Starbucks stores, especially while travelling. However, today the app gained an entirely new feature, payments.

Today – Wednesday, January 19, 2011 – Starbucks launched their mobile payment option across the entire US. You can now use the Starbucks Card Mobile app in lieu of your physical card. While using the screen of my mobile device – versus a secure, wireless device-to-device communication – isn’t the ideal method for mobile payments, it still works quite well. The images below show you how the app is used for payments.

Touch to Pay

Starbucks Card Mobile

Click on the "Touch to Pay" to bring up the barcode

Scan Barcode

Starbucks Card Mobile Barcode

The POS scanner scans the barcode for purchase

Neer Takes the “Suck” out of Social Geo-Location Apps

Facebook Places, Gowalla, Foursquare, Britekite, and all of the other social geo-location services suck! Why do they suck? Because they don’t automatically keep track of my location, and because they’re designed to tell everyone where I am.

My dream geo-location app is one that runs in the background and frequently updates my location. It’s also an app that’s crazy about my desire for privacy. It appears that my dream has come true with the debut of Neer for the iPhone 4.

Connect with your Inner Circle

Neer doesn’t try to connect you with all of the assholes you’ve friended on Facebook. Instead, it looks for people they think are related to you – your parents, spouse, siblings, and kids. It then makes it super easy to add them to your Inner Circle.

Neer Inner Circle

Neer makes it easy to set up common locations, like your home and work.

Neer My Places

It then provides alerts letting you know where your connections are.

Neer Alerts

Another nice, simple feature is its ability to tap on a contact, and then call or text them.

Neer Call or Text

There are a few more features I would like to see that would make this the perfect geo-location app. The main one is the ability to notify me when I’m in close proximity to a friend. For example, if I was passing by a coffee shop, and my friend was there, I’d like for Neer to push a message to me, alerting me to their presence. Then I could decide if I wanted to stop by and say hi.

Review of Pages for iPad

When I wrote about why the iPad is significant, I stated that the iPad is a computer for everyone. While many people still see it as a media consumption device, I predict that it will ultimately replace the need for traditional computers. This is especially true for casual, non-business users.

The iPad goes well beyond an entertainment device. It supports the most common functions that one would expect from a desktop or notebook computer, including:

  • Email
  • Web
  • Music
  • Books, Magazines, and Newspapers
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Gaming
  • Word Processing
  • Spreadsheets
  • Presentations

It also simplifies the user experience by hiding unnecessary operating system layers, like the file system. Instead, the user is presented with icons that represent the application and task they want to perform. And with the introduction of iPhone OS 4.0, common computing elements, like multitasking, will complete the necessary features required to make it compete with traditional computers.

Apple Pages for iPad

iPad Pages Portrait ViewOne of the most common computing tasks is word processing. Apple made an iPad version of Pages, which is supposed to bring word processing to the iPad. I put it to the test to see if the iPad could truly work as a word processer – negating the need for a traditional computer.

The iPad version of Pages has most of the commonly used features of its Mac OS cousin. Documents were easy to style, and many of the page layout features that people are accustomed to on the Mac OS version are there. In fact, they’re fun to use. For example, you get to move and rotate images with your fingers.

There are some features missing though. For example, there’s no view for Page Info. So if you wanted to know your word count, you’re out of luck. However, Pages for iPad makes up for missing features with its minimalist functionality. Most of what you need is there, and unlike a traditional computer, working in one application helps keep you from getting distracted.

Once you’ve finished writing your document, and you want to share it, you can easily email it, export it (for syncing with a computer), or make it available on Apple’s iWork.com. One notable feature that is missing from the iPad is printing. I’m not sure how they plan to handle this in the future, but it’s certainly going to become an issue if the iPad has a chance at replacing the need for a traditional computer. This problem may also be solved by Google’s Cloud Print initiative.

Pages for iPad Document Export

Writing Pages documents on the iPad is a breeze, especially if you’re using Apple’s keyboard dock for the iPad. It makes writing a pleasure, but it’s also great for using on other applications. I plan on leaving my seventeen inch MacBook Pro at home, and taking the keyboard dock and iPad instead. It’s a lot lighter, the battery lasts longer, and it’s the perfect size for airplanes and coffee shops.

Keyboard Dock for iPad

My Ideal Mobile Social App for iPhone

I’ve tried every social app for the iPhone (at least the ones with a fighting chance.) I’ve even given some of them multiple chances, because I really wanted them to succeed–Brightkite (iTunes) being one of them. Right now the shining star is Foursquare (iTunes), but I’ve already lost interest in that one too.

I think part of the problem is me. I’m not that social. That’s not to say I don’t have any friends or never go out. It just means I’m in my mid-thirties, I have kids, and I don’t get out that much. If I were a teenager, or single and in my twenties, then mobile social apps might be more appealing to me.

The Perfect Mobile Social App

There’s one huge problem with social apps that affect everyone. You have to manually update them.

Even old anti-social guys like me would use social apps on their mobile devices if we didn’t have to manually update our presence. So with that being said, I probably won’t use a social app again until it can solve the problem of manual updates.

For me, the perfect social app would automatically update my presence to a central server every five minutes or so. The same would be true of my friends. That’s it. That’s what I want, and what’s missing from all of the social apps out there.

There’s a beauty to auto-updates. The main thing is that I don’t have do anything to let others know where I am. But there’s also other advantages. They include:

  1. Automatically pushing a notification to me and my friend if we’re in close proximity to each other
  2. Automatically pushing a notification to me if there’s a person in close proximity to me that I want to avoid
  3. Automatically publishing my location publicly for places I’ve designated

Badges are cute, but I want my lazy problems taken care of first. Once that’s solved, I’ll be back.

TomTom Navigation for iPhone Made Even Better with Support for “Real Time Traffic”

I’ve been using the TomTom iPhone App since it was first released and have been very pleased. Life got even better when they finally released the TomTom Car Kit for iPhone (there’s also a TomTom Car Kit for iPod Touch).

There’s a few things that have happened since then. First, the software got cheaper. TomTom for iPhone used to be $99, but it’s now only $69. Not great for me, but great for people who haven’t bought it yet. Second, it’s become much more stable and reliable. They’ve done an excellent job at listening to user feedback and greatly improving the software. The third and most exciting thing is the additional support for real-time traffic.

Real Time Traffic Support on TomTom iPhone App

I commute to work every day, and my drive home is almost always hit or miss. There’s a point in the beginning of my commute back home where I have to decide if I’m going to take the highway or a main off-the-highway route. I’ve tried using Maps on my iPhone to gauge the traffic, but it’s almost always way off!

With the addition of real-time traffic, my TomTom app now provides the best route to my home based on the current traffic conditions. Now I can get home in a reasonable amount of time–or at least take the quickest route each time–which gives me more time to be with my kids, and less time being frustrated in traffic.

Learn more about the TomTom iPhone App.

“Real” Foursquare Badges

It was only a matter of time. The merit badges that make Foursquare and unique and fun, have infiltrated real-life. John Young took a picture of a tray-full of them.

Image Source: Foursquare Nerd Merit Badges!!! by tikaro