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The Steve Rubel Stream

Insights on emerging technologies and trends.

Kindle Books Can Now Be Annotated on the iPhone

I have an Amazon Kindle but I never use it. However, I constantly use the iPhone Kindle reader - and it has me buying a lot more books. The Kindle Reader for the iPhone got a nice update last night (see the bottom of this page for details). It now lets you not only highlight and annotate your ebooks but also sync these back to the web, as you can see from the image above.

Unfortunately this is somewhat limited since you can't search your notes either on the web or on the phone. Barnes and Noble is coming on strong with their new Nook reader but I decided a few months ago to go 100% electronic and to get rid of all of my books in favor of ebooks from Amazon since they have the best selection. I am hopeful they will add support for other devices like Blackberries and also PC/Mac desktop readers as well. 

The Kindle feels like it should be less a device and more of a platform. However, good search is a must and it's still missing for now from non-Amazon devices.
Filed under  Amazon   ebooks   iPhone  
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Posted 4 months ago

The iPhone Gets a Solid Video Editor

Given my mobile lifestyle, slowly but surely my iPhone is becoming my primary computer. I just finished a seven-day, five-city business trip where all I took was my phone. If call goes according to plan I have hopefully taken the last trip where you will see me toting a laptop.

My phone is already chock full of all kinds of useful apps that make this all possible. However, there remain two that are missing: a good PowerPoint document editor (Documents to Go handles Word and Excel files just fine) and a video editing tool. The latter issue just got solved with ReelDirector. Check out the demo below for more. It looks terrific.

Filed under  iPhone   mobile   video  
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Posted 4 months ago

A Week in the Clouds Without a Notebook

On average I travel for business about seven to 15 days a month. Sometimes it can get a bit nuts, but I love it - I never get bored. This is one of those weeks. I will literally be in the clouds all week both virtually and physically.

I am starting my journey today in Toronto. Tomorrow I am speaking at the MIXX conference and will also participate in staff, client, industry and press meetings. Wednesday I head to Atlanta for the day for another private event and then right back up to Montreal that night. Thursday I am speaking at MIXX in Montreal. I head home for one night and then do a round-trip from NY to DC on Friday for, yes, another speaking gig. (Map above. I like maps!)

Despite the travel, however, I still need to be productive. I need to stay in touch with my colleagues and clients and also do some writing. Also, I want to stay in touch with you here on my lifestream and on social networks. Mobile technology is my friend here.

I have a couple of different laptops that I take on trips. All of them are light. But you see, I am on a quest. I want ditch my laptop on every trip and only carry a smartphone and my Iamakey for the rest. Right now I have an iPhone 3GS but I may add a Blackberry to complement it. My key files and even some portable apps are encrypted on the USB key.

The reason is simple: all of these devices are pocketable. A laptop isn't. I don't want to carry a laptop because it's mental baggage. I don't want to be thinking about where it is. Smartphones and USB keys are like appendages. I always know where they are. Plus, I know that one day soon we won't need to carry laptops on business trips because these phones - which are really pocket computers - will be able to do it all, including hook up to hotel TVs. I am trying to experience this future now.

I have gone sans laptop on business trips before but this one at three nights is the longest one yet - although I am home for one night in between trips. I have tweaked my setup so that the apps and services I use on my smartphone are identical to what I use on my Mac at home and - to a large degree - my desktop PC at work. I like the simplicity and consistency of it all.

Here's what I using... (workflow below)

  • Writing and To Do List - WriteRoom (which now has TextExpander support to speed up typing)
  • Contacts and Calendar - Address Book and iCal, which connect with our Exchange Server 
  • Notes - WriteRoom for temporary storage, Evernote for archiving (more on this in a subsequent post on lifelogging)
  • Files - Documents to Go, and if necessary, my IamaKey and Box.net/Sharepoint
  • Mindmapping - Mindjet and Mindnode
  • RSS - NetNewsWire, which syncs to Google Reader
  • Twitter - Tweetie
  • Plus, of course, Posterous and Instapaper for sharing and reading
The only thing I can't do with this setup is create or edit a PowerPoint deck, although I can view them. This is one reason I am considering getting a Blackberry too - you can edit PPT. I don't anticipate I will need to on this trip. However, I will need to write, but I can actually do so on my phone quite comfortably. If some people can write books on cell phones, then I can certainly crank out shorter stuff too.

You probably think I am nuts, but I hate carrying laptops. I have done so for years. I will keep you posted on my progress. Sometimes I am on the road seven or nine days at a time. I don't think I can ditch a laptop on these trips, but this journey might convince me otherwise. Wish me luck.
Filed under  apps   blackberry   cloud computing   gadgets   iphone   mobile   Producitivity   travel  
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Posted 5 months ago

The Pitch: Alan Warms of Appolicious

Alan Warms, CEO of Appolicious, stopped by my office today to give me a rundown of his site - a social network for mobile apps. Right now it's just for iPhone apps, but they will be expanding soon to cover Android and Blackberry. For more see this short video. It's an interesting concept, although I would be eager to see them do more to connect to Facebook and to bring the social network to the iPhone - which is in the works.

Filed under  apps   iPhone   mobile   video  
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Posted 5 months ago

AOL Integrates Lifestreaming into AIM for the iPhone

One of the big things that Facebook brings to the age of streams is instant messaging and presence indicators - the ability to see who is online right now and active on the service so you can chat in real time. I hope that sites like Twitter (and its ecosystem of apps) do the same. My bet is that they will soon tie into IM networks more in the near future.

In the meantime, I am very interested in what AOL has been up to lately in bringing lifestreaming and social content the other direction - into IM clients that millions already use. This isn't just a big user base but they're also mainstream users too. Now it's all coming in the iPhone.

With the integration of lifestreaming into the mobile IM client and the potential to create even more value through location-based social networking services, this entire space is about to get a lot more interesting. Keep an eye on the big IM nets and their massive social graphs. They are sleeping giants that are waking up to the potential here.

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Posted 6 months ago

Conversation of the Day: Facebook is the New Address Book

When it comes to personal information like email, calendars, to- do's and notes, I have super systems that keep all the data up-to-date by leveraging the cloud and keeping local copies on my computers and my iPhone. Evernote, for example, is one great tool that I use to stay in sync. 

Contact information, on the other hand, has always been a pain. 

The basic tools like the address book that comes with your computer are outdated. People move around too much these days. Enter social networking. The problem is keeping your information in sync everywhere.

The new version of Facebook for the iPhone, however, at least for me is finally a workable solution because it has an integrated dialer. Part of the reason it works is because I limit my Facebook friends only to those whom I have met or corresponded.

Like Robert Scoble, I wish that people would add their phone numbers to their Facebook accounts so that this becomes the ultimate solution. It sounds like soon Facebook will keep your contact information in sync, which will make this all easier. However, all of this depends on if people keep their contact info current - which isn't a  given because of privacy concerns.

For more, see Robert Scoble's thread on Friendfeed, which I have added below. What's your view?

Filed under  Facebook   iPhone   mobile   Producitivity   social networking  
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Posted 6 months ago

Photo: You Know You Have a Problem When....

You know you have a problem when this is your iPhone on apps. I kid you not, this really is my iPhone - all 10 screens worth! 

I was staring at these icons on the train ride home tonight, thinking how many of these little buggers I really use. The short answer is far too many. I got a fever. And the only thing that's going to fix it is more cowbell! Oh yeah, and there's an app for that too.

In case you're wondering: they are indeed alphabetized - except for the last few, which are new additions. Oh and my "desert island apps" are as follows: Evernote, Instapaper, Byline (RSS), Kindle, Birdfeed (not to be confused with Birdhouse), Satchel, Umbrella, WeatherBug and WriteRoom.

Is this a common problem among geeks or am I alone???
Filed under  iPhone apps   iPhone   mobile  
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Posted 7 months ago

WriteRoom Syncs Basic Docs Between the Cloud and the iPhone

On the Mac I have become a fan of a little app called WriteRoom. It's a very basic writing app that also has an iPhone counterpart. Last night the developer pushed an update that, among other things adds search and syncing to the cloud at WriteRoom.ws.

I tried it this morning and it worked just great. You can start a document on the iPhone, sync it to the cloud, and then continue it in your browser elsewhere. The screen shot above shows my recent Adage column on my office PC. Since it's web based, WriteRoom.ws works on Macs and PCs and, just like the Mac desktop app, it's refreshingly very basic. The web app is powered by the Google App Engine, so you log in with your Google account. It also includes version tracking and features a very retro interface!

I would like to see it have a bit more tweaks on the web side (I don't care for writing in green, but white would be nice). The site also works awesome in a distraction free mode with any browser that operates in full screen mode - like IE, Firefox or Chrome. I wonder if John Gruber thinks this could give Simplenote a run.

Filed under  iPhone   iPhone apps   mobile   productivity  
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Posted 7 months ago

Apple Docking Patent Portends Dual OS Tablet

Playing the Apple guessing game is fun. It's focused on rumors, more rumors, some facts and more rumors. The latest is that a "big" iPod Touch that runs the iPhone OS is imminent. However, I bet we'll see this docking station finally debut with it. (It was first patented back in 2008)

We need devices that have a desktop OS in one setting and a mobile UI/operating system in a mobile context. I bet that's what Apple will one day announce and - in the process - shake up the netbook space, as they promised to do.

Remember that you heard it here first!

Filed under  Apple   iphone   mobile   netbooks  
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Posted 7 months ago

Gadgets: Dreaming of Business Travel Sans Laptop

Some people dream of world peace. Other people dream of the Cubs winning the World Series. And some even dream of Jeannie. Me? I dream of the day when I can leave my laptop at home when I hit the road for business. With the three gadgets I picked up this weekend, I am a whole lot closer.

Now that the iPhone has copy and paste I can write reasonably long documents (under 1000 words) using QuickOffice. (I am even using a few apps to train myself to be a more accurate and speedy typist.) So my word processing needs are largely covered. Communications - email, IM, social networking, Twitter, RSS, web, etc. - are all addressed with either the phone itself or in tandem with a Verizon Mifi

The missing pieces have always been PowerPoint and power. 

I very rarely need to edit or create a preso on the road but almost always I have to project one. I usually carry my decks on a laptop but longed for a way to project from the iPhone (there isn't always a computer at the ready at my point of preso). Finally, with the iPhone, battery life even on the 3GS, is for the birds. So, I had to find a viable way to keep the phone juiced when it runs low.

I solved the PowerPoint issue by adding two new gadgets. If I plan ahead I now should be able to: 1) export my PPT file to jpegs, 2) stuff it in a photo album and sync it to my phone, 3) using an Apple Composite Cable ($50) connect it to any projector, TV or monitor. The other gadget I picked up is the super speedy Sandisk Cruzer Contour (about $25 for 8gb), which can store the backup preso all snug and encrypted along with a slew of portable apps in case I need to do more with someone else's PC.

The battery issue that was solved simply by purchasing one of these Duracell instant chargers, which I found for $30 at my local Walmart. It charges via USB and recharges the iPhone in under an hour! I have tried a lot of chargers, including the Mophie, but this one is the best.

I believe "the dream" is one step closer to reality. Now I just need the guts to give the laptop the heave-ho on my next long trip. See the gadget gallery below for more.

If this intrigues you, let me know and I will maybe pull together a quick video showing how this all works.

     
Click here to download:
Gadgets_Dreaming_of_Business_T.zip (81 KB)

Filed under  gadgets   iPhone   mobile   producitvity   travel  
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Posted 7 months ago