Posts Tagged ‘ipad’

Face-To-Face Engagement On An iPad

April 7th, 2010 - Jeff Turner

My two oldest boys asked to play with my iPad last night.

That’s not breaking news. What may be breaking news is what I found them playing an hour later. It wasn’t RealRacingHD, a great first-person perspective 3D racing game. It wasn’t ESPN Pinball, the most realistic pinball game I’ve seen in a long time. It wasn’t Labrynth 2 HD either.

It was Checkers. RealCheckers HD to be exact.

And I couldn’t have been happier. They had the iPad on the coffee table between them. One was sprawled on the couch under a blanket and the other on the floor, taunting his little brother with his skills, “I own you!” They were laughing, taunting, being boys. They were engaged with one another.

The size of the iPad, the realistic 3d board graphics and the ability to move the checker pieces with your fingers make this game feel like real checkers. And it is real checkers. It’s “real” because it enables the exact same user experience that a board made from paper and checkers made from wood or plastic would allow – Face-to-face engagement. Only there were no pieces to put away.

This is what I hoped would happen with my iPad. How about you?

The iBooks App & The Grand Itch To Publish – A Test

April 2nd, 2010 - Jeff Turner

As I was reading through my feeds today, a post about the iBooks app availability caught my eye. So, before even reading the post I downloaded the free iBooks app from the iTunes app store and almost went about my business. But I took a moment to read the post and this comment got me thinking. (scary)

“The app’s page also states that only the ePub format is supported and to add ePub books from outside of the iBookstore to the iBooks app, they must be DRM-free and synced to the iPad using iTunes 9.1 or later. The iBook app is free. I think I just heard Jeff Bezos shaking in his reading jacket.”

A Free App To Display Free Books That Anyone Can Create

The “shaking in his reading jacket” comment had me puzzled for a moment. Then it hit me. What the iBooks app is doing is proving anyone with a way to get their book onto the iPad. Of course, you need to know how to get your book into the ePub format, but that’s appears to be a fairly minor obstacle. There are lots of conversion tools.

If you can get your book into a PDF document you can use a site like ePub2Go to convert the pdf to the ePub format. It would be nice if the next release of Pages on the Mac added ePub to its list of export options, but I’m not going to wait for that. Instead, I’m going to do a little test for myself.

The fact that they are shipping a free children’s book with the app, Winnie The Pooh, is really what triggered my thinking. Ines Hegedus-Garcia worked with me on a kids book project a few months ago that will be perfect to test. The book, The Grand Itch, is really a poem I wrote over 25 years ago while working on my Masters Degree. I don’t remember what compelled me to write it, but I found it in a box in my garage and decided to do something to raise money for Mothers Fighting For Others. Ines provided the illustrations, and I did the layout and typography while driving her crazy with my art direction. It was fun (for me at least). And the idea was to give the book away and simply encourage a donation.

The Grand Itch As An iBook.

So, I’ve decided to make the ePub format of the The Grand Itch available over on the MFFO website as soon as I test it on the iPad that should be delivered to my house tomorrow. I’ve already converted the PDF into ePub using ePub2Go and will install it using iTunes on the iPad as one of my first tests. On the back page will be a link that should open to a donation page. Perfect.

I’ll document the process and let you know what technical issues I run into, if any. I know other devices have been able to read the ePub format. But this just feels different. Or maybe I’m just that much of an Apple fan boy. I don’t care. If it looks as good as the iBooks video demonstrations, and feels as good as I hope it will, Mr. Bezos may indeed have something to worry about. The potential applications are mind boggling.

What would you do with this capability?

The iPad And My To Do List – A Match Made In Heaven

March 23rd, 2010 - Jeff Turner

Old habits are hard to break. Perhaps some of them shouldn’t be broken.

Sometimes I just want the digital world to mimic the analog world. Exactly. It’s rare, but there are times that I don’t want an “vast improvement.” And I don’t want innovation. I just want to continue doing what I’ve always done, without having to change my behavior. I just want to do the same thing, only digitally. And this is the hope I have for the iPad for one specific task – my to do lists.

I have tried to migrate my paper to do lists to a digital format for years. It never works for me. Things begin to fall through the cracks and before I know it, I’m back to pen and paper. I’ve been keeping paper lists on and off since the early 80′s. I have files filled with old to do lists. They’ve come in handy when I want to remember a detail about a transaction. And, they work for me.

Every digital solution I’ve tried has failed. And it’s not really their fault. I simply have not been able to make the changes necessary to adopt the new methods of creating and managing to do list. So, the question I always end up asking is, “if my old way works, why change?”

Enter the iPad.

I’ve really enjoyed reading Russ Leseberg’s “Countdown To iPad” series. His use cases have sometimes been genius and sometimes humorous. They all make you think a bit. And almost from the moment I saw Steve Job’s initial presentation, the notion of creating an iPad application that exactly duplicated how I use my paper to do list has been on my mind. And why not? I can’t be the only person in the world who’s having a hard time giving up the paper to do list. What I’d like to do is keep the feel and mimic the process while adding some digital functionality.

There’s no reason why my process can’t be replicated exactly. Part of the reason my process works for ME is that when a page get’s full, I move the unfinished items to a new page and save the old list. The process of looking at all of my unfinished tasks spurs me to finish more of them. I also like the look of a page with a lot of items crossed off. Yeah, I’m a bit mental. But it works.

The iPad version of my to do list will give me the benefit of typing the to do item in, but the pleasure of swiping my finger across it to mark it as done. I like that feeling. And since I like seeing that I’ve actually finished something, I’ll be able to  leave the finished items visible. Of course, I could still opt to have them removed the moment I swipe, if I wanted. The beauty of an app is preferences. Finished items would be saved and I would have the ability to search them. Only I wouldn’t have to go through my pile of papers. When I fill the page, I can start a new page and move my unfinished items in mass, or choose which ones to move forward one by one, as punishment for not finishing. If I want to change the order, I’ll just drag an item to the top of the list. Simple. Easy.  It should feel just like a paper to do list. And I think Zeek should build it and sell it for a buck.

Anyone else want a to do list app that just works like a paper to do list? Raise your hand.