USB Power Outlet for Recharging Your Mobile Devices, Like iPhones, iPods, iPads

How many times have you found yourself with your USB sync cable, a dying iPhone, but no USB power adapter? If you’re like me, it’s happened enough time to want one of these.

The new TruePower U-Socket power outlet not only works as a normal three-pronged AC wall outlet, it also lets you plug in your mobile devices via USB, so you can recharge them.

TruePower U-Socket Power Outlet Details (Model: ACE-7169)

The TruePower U-Socket power outlet solution includes two Universal Serial Bus (USB) charge ports in addition to the two standard three prong power outlet ports.

Perfect for charging any USB powered device including- mobile, iPod, iPhone, iPad, PDA, MP3, PSP, MP4 player & digital camera.

Specifications for the TruePower U-Socket Power Outlet

  • Input voltage: AC 100 to 240V 50/60Hz
  • USB input current: 80mA
  • Output voltage: USB: DC 5.0V 600mA
  • Operation temperature: -15 to 45 Degrees Celsius
  • Relative humidity: < 95%
  • Air pressure: 86 to 106kPa

TruePower U-Socket Installation

This item can be installed on any existing wall outlet.

Hitler Responds to the iPad

Weren’t happy with the iPad announcement? Neither was Hitler. This video is hilarious and is worth watching in its entirety.

iPad User Experience Guidelines

Apple iPad
When I wrote about the significance of the iPad, one of my main points was usability. The UI of the iPad is significant, because it changes how a user interacts with a computer. I wrote:

The user interface is designed to do what you would expect it to do. Beyond the most simple functions, like button pushing, the iPad user interface allows you to swipe, pinch, and rotate objects. If there are a stack of images, and you want to get a quick sample without selecting all of them, you touch the stack and slightly expand your fingers. If you want to put away or close an object, you pinch. If you want to turn a page, you swipe.

Luke Wroblewski highlighted the iPad’s User Experience Guidelines, all of which describe a new way of interacting with data.

Apple’s Human Interface Guidelines for the iPad outline how to create user interfaces optimized for the iPad device. According to Apple, the best iPad applications: downplay application UI so that the focus is on content; present content in beautiful, often realistic ways; and take full advantage of device capabilities to enable enhanced interaction.

The list includes:

  • Support All Orientations
  • Enhance Interactivity (Don’t Just Add Features)
  • Flatten Your Information Hierarchy
  • Reduce Full-Screen Transitions
  • Enable Collaboration and Connectedness
  • Add Physicality and Heightened Realism
  • Delight People with Stunning Graphics
  • De-emphasize User Interface Controls
  • Minimize Modality
  • Rethink Your Lists
  • Consider Multifinger Gestures
  • Consider Popovers for Some Modal Tasks
  • Restrict Complexity in Modal Tasks
  • Downplay File-Handling Operations
  • Ask People to Save Only When Necessary
  • Start Instantly
  • Always Be Prepared to Stop

The guidelines are available from Apple’s iPad SDK.

Letting Go of the Old; Making Way for the New.

Milind Alvares has some very interesting thoughts on the idea of multi-tasking as it relates to the iPad. The entire article is worth the read, but this conclusion sums things up well.

Instead of holding on to your old notions of how computers should work, take a look at what the new offers. The iPad is a half inch thick device, with multi-touch, forever connected to the internet, simplified, focussed, affordable, and most importantly, can be superbly productive. Sure it won’t be just as efficient and productive as your desktop or laptop, and that’s why they will continue to remain production machines, but given the iPad’s size and mobility, I think the lack of traditional multi-tasking is anything but bad design.

Smoking Apples: Understanding Multi-tasking on the iPad: What is it really?

Why the iPad is Significant

The reason Apple has been so successful with their devices is because their products solve problems. The iPod (coupled with iTunes) solved the problem of music distribution and portability. While the iPhone solved the problem of mobile Internet access and smartphone usability. Just like its close cousins, the iPad solves several longstanding problems with data portability and usability.

A Computer for Everyone

While many will see the iPad as a consumer electronic gadget, at its core it’s a computer. It just doesn’t look like a computer. The iPad is what Microsoft Bob dreamed of being. It’s a computer that’s easy enough for a child, but also has all of the functionality that people expect from a computer.

The functions you can do on the iPad include, but are not limited to, e-mail, Web browsing, word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, media playback and manipulation (including music, videos, and images), and calendar and contact management. And as developers start to write software for it, it will soon do everything a desktop computer or notebook computer can do.

The significance of the iPad is not that it mimics a computer, it’s in the fact that it doesn’t mimic a computer, at all. The software and user interface have been designed in a way that anyone can start using it without any training whatsoever. It’s also a computer that no longer requires technical support. The device either works or it doesn’t. There’s no longer the need for certified computer technicians or company IT staff, because the iPad simply works.

Intuitive and Natural Interaction

The keyboard and mouse are being replaced right before our eyes. The iPad still has a virtual keyboard, and an optional physical keyboard with dock, but the main user interface is controlled through hand gestures.

The user interface is designed to do what you would expect it to do. Beyond the most simple functions, like button pushing, the iPad user interface allows you to swipe, pinch, and rotate objects. If there are a stack of images, and you want to get a quick sample without selecting all of them, you touch the stack and slightly expand your fingers. If you want to put away or close an object, you pinch. If you want to turn a page, you swipe.

What are gone are invisible keyboard commands to remember, and being at the mercy of a mouse. Instead of using and moving an external device to manipulate objects, your hand becomes the device. There is no more device (mouse) middleman, just the natural gestures of your fingers against the objects on the screen.

Lifestyle Portability

Traditional computers—desktops and notebooks—may be able to access and view libraries of data, but there isn’t an easy way to share that data conveniently and naturally. For example, if you’ve been reading an interesting blog entry or article, and you want to share it with a family member, you have to coax them into either coming to your desktop, or get them to hold your large seventeen inch clamshell notebook computer. Neither is ideal. With the iPad, you can easily hand the device to them, and they can hold and read it just like they would a regular book or magazine.

The same is true for traveling. Holding and using an iPad in a car, at an airport or anywhere else will provide the best experience for consuming media. With the long battery life, form factor, and light weight, it can easily replace traditional books, magazines, and newspapers. While at the same time, providing the same rich multimedia experience traditionally experienced on a computer.

Steve Jobs Snubs McGraw-Hill in iPad Presentation

I made an easy prediction to my wife yesterday about Steve Jobs’ iPad presentation. I predicted that McGraw-Hill would be intentionally removed from his presentation, because of Harold McGraw’s gaff on CNBC the day before. Around minute 2:50, he spills the beans about the announcement, and looks completely clueless about it.


That move kept Jobs from including the McGraw-Hill logo in the list of publishers participating in the iBook store on the iPad. It also contributed to Jobs completely glossing over how the iPad would be useful to the educational market – something I’m sure he was going to include in his presentation. In fact, the only statement that Steve Jobs made about textbooks was this:

We think the iPad is going to make a terrific e-book reader not just for popular books, but for textbooks as well.

Ouch!

Apple iPad Images

Here’s several iPad images. I’m looking forward to getting my own iPad and reviewing it here on Mobile Meandering.




















iPhone Remote Control for Your TV

It looks like L5 Technology may have a hit on their hands. They’re releasing a remote control for the iPhone called the L5 Remote. The cost is going to be about $50 when it’s released in February, 2010. It will also come with a free iPhone app.

How Does L5 Remote Work?

Consumers purchase the L5 Remote hardware – an adaptor measuring 1.25 x .85 inches – and plug it into the iPhone or iPod touch docking port. They will then be prompted to download a free app from the iTunes App Store, which allows them to simply drag-and-drop to create their own customized remote control interface. The app will guide them through a short process of programming the app to control the infrared devices.

Using infrared technology, the L5 Remote can control any number of devices in any number of rooms. Consumers can easily set it up to control products in the living room, bedroom, office, or any other location. The L5 Remote will work to a distance of approximately 30 feet.

The L5 Remote is portable and does not require batteries, Wi-Fi or external power to work. The product can control thousands of devices, including TVs, cable boxes, stereos, DVD players, ceiling fans, air conditioners, and many other products.

The Kindle is Like a Rotary Phone

The Kindle is the rotary phone of e-readers. Similar to the rotary phone’s requirement of turning a dial for each number, so is Amazon.com’s joystick and non-touch screen. When I’m not engrossed in book, and I’m trying to navigate the system or content like a newspaper, I’m constantly annoyed by the limitations and slowness of the controls. I can’t help thinking how I wish I could just tap the screen to get what I want.

The iPhone has set the precedence for a portable, mobile device. The ability to easily access, navigate, and manipulate data with a tap or swoosh of my finger(s) has made a UI that relies on joysticks and giant buttons obsolete. I also find myself wishing for a more interactive and unique experience with the content. Instead, there’s no visual difference between any of the content. All books, magazines, and newspapers look exactly the same, and I can’t easily interact with the copy.

Apple is coming out with a tablet soon, and I have no doubt it’s going to include the interactive experience I’m longing for. There’s also a very good chance that it will include the ability to use it as an e-reader. Knowing Apple (as I do), this will most likely be a Kindle-killer (among other things.)

Even with the Apple tablet out of the picture, I’m still not pleased with the Kindle. I simply can’t get past its antiquated UI. And regardless of the fact that it offers the ability to live more simply by replacing the need to have hundreds of books on shelves, it’s not good enough to play a daily role in my life.

I’ve only had the Kindle DX for about three months, and I haven’t used it very much, so it’s still in excellent condition. The Kindle DX is also on backorder for 2-3 weeks at Amazon.com and used Kindle’s are selling for as much as $700. So I’ve decided to sell my Kindle on eBay and use the money to buy the Apple tablet when it’s released. That way I’ll make a couple hundred dollars profit off my Kindle and be able to put my money towards a product that’s relevant, modern, diverse and usable. Basically, a product I can integrate into my daily life.

Will Apple’s New Tablet Be Called “iSlate” or “Magic Slate”?

According to MacRumors, it looks like the domain islate.com was registered by Apple in 2007. I checked out the domain on DomainTools, and the domain was updated as recently as October, 2009. While that activity could explain a simple update to the management of domains, it’s suspiciously close to the upcoming January 2010 announcement, which is believed to be the unveiling of their new tablet computer.

Wikipedia describes a slate as:

A writing slate is a piece of flat material used as a medium for writing.

If that really is the name for their new tablet, then it would suggest that there’s more to their tablet than entertainment. Could it be that the tablet will also be a productivity device–a minimalist computer designed for reading and writing? And if that’s the case, does the killer new user interface include a tactile interface, as described in Apple’s patent, “Keystroke Tactility Arrangement on a Smooth Touch Surface“?

If that is the case, and they’ve solved the problem of battery life, then the so-called iSlate may end up being several things:

  • Portable Multimedia Device
  • Reading and Writing Instrument
  • Kindle Killer (oh Kindle, we barely knew you)

Update: More evidence for the “iSlate” trademark is coming in, including “Magic Slate”.