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Archives for April 2010

Minnov8 Gang 74: Innovation is Driving Passions

April 10, 2010 By Steve Borsch


The Gang recaps the week and has on Julio Ojeda Zapata as our special guest.

Hosts: Steve Borsch, Tim Elliott, Graeme Thickins and Phil Wilson
Music by George Fletcher’s Bourbon Renewal with the The Tequila Mockingbirds and the tune is “Rumble Groove“. Brought to you by Music Alley

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The Podcast
https://media.blubrry.com/minnov8/minnov8.com/site/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/20100410_M8_Gang_74.mp3

Podcast: Download (Duration: 52:54 — 30.8MB)

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS | More

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DISCUSSED DURING THE SHOW NOTES:
+ FiRe: local iPhone audio app made by Audiofile Engineering in Minneapolis and used for last week’s podcast
+ Blue’s Mikey microphone for iPhone/iPod (Note that FiRe is available with this mic)
+ Comcast FCC ruling
+ Julio’s book called “Twitter Means Business”
+ MinneWebCon
+ Apple iPhone OS 4
+ Dan Grigsby @ Mobile Orchard shutting down
+ Adobe backlash (e.g., “Go screw yourself Apple“)
+ Quit Whining About The iPad Interface
+ Twitter Acquires Atebits, Maker of Tweetie
+ ComicTwit
+ Minneapolis CrowdPitch
+ BusinessCard2 @ AlwaysOn
+ Sh*t My Dad Says (started on Twitter, now with its own site, soon a TV show with William Shatner)

Filed Under: Minnov8 Gang Podcast Tagged With: Apple, iPad, iPhone

Minnesota iPhone App Developers Talk iPad and OS 4

April 9, 2010 By Graeme Thickins

I’m having so much freaking fun with my iPad, I almost forgot to post this week.  I started asking my developer friends about it almost as soon as I got mine last Saturday, so I’ve had this post brewing for days now.  Then, I’m finally about ready to post it, and Apple goes and holds its “sneak-peek” media event yesterday.  So, natch, I had to ask some of them for their reaction to that, too.

Here we go, then — five experienced Minnesota mobile app developers tell me, straight up, what’s up with iPad as relates to them.  And, after that,  I include some great insights from a couple of them about iPhone OS 4 — coming this summer for the iPhone, and soon after for the iPad. (Bring it on, Uncle Stevie!)

Joe Sriver, Founder, DoApp Inc. Joe, will your company be developing iPad apps?

“Yes, we do have plans for the iPad, first for our real estate product, then our other products. No ‘made for iPad’ apps are in the store from DoApp on day one, though.  But I did preorder an iPad for the team.”  In a story our friend Julio Ojeda-Zapata wrote in the PioneerPress on April 2, we learned that DoApp was frantically at work on the iPad version of it’s “Home Kenex” app, which is for home buyers and real estate agents.  Maps can be positioned alongside lists or photos of homes to make navigation easier and more intuitive than the cramped iPhone screen allows, said the story, facilitating better house comparisons.  iPad becomes “a coffee table-type of thing, with people in their agents’ offices cruising for properties on the device,” said the story, quoting DoApp’s Wade Beavers.  GPS capability will be added in an upcoming version of the iPad, so home buyers or agents will be able to pull up listings in their vicinity and “drive effortlessly towards them using satellite navigation.”

Bill Heyman, Founder and Lead Developer, CodeMorphic. Bill, what apps are you doing for iPad?  Redoing any of your existing ones?

“No existing apps.  What we’re doing are new ones for various clients.  Unfortunately, I’m not at liberty to say what they are.  I’m also working on a new game app I’m publishing myself, but I’m not ready to submit it yet. I’ll let you know when it’s getting close.”

I assume you now have an iPad in your possession? “Yes, I had one delivered to me while on vacation in Arizona this week.”

What are you finding in regard to how well your iPhone apps work on iPad? “They seem to work fine.
”

What about landscape mode?  Are you concerned that apps should work either way on iPad? “Apple has basically told developers that they MUST support rotation in their iPad apps.  Unfortunately, it can be a major PITA to support it well, but developers are going to have to bite the bullet now.
”

Any other comment? “I think iBooks is the killer feature of the iPad.  There’s been talk about the iPad developer gold rush, but no discussion about the author and independent content provider gold rush.  It’s going to happen — and I think it could be every bit as exciting as some of the apps.” …  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Mobile Technology, Startups & Developers Tagged With: Android, Apple, Google, iPad, iPhone

Comcast Wins Battle Over the FCC

April 7, 2010 By Steve Borsch

A U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled yesterday that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) overstepped their authority when it issued a citation in 2008 against Comcast Corp., the largest U.S. cable company, for slowing some Internet traffic on its network. This deals a blow to internet-based commerce, peer-to-peer usage and other forms of internet traffic which many of us in technology circles refer to as “net neutrality.”

This court ruling struck down the Bush Administration FCC’s position over Comcast throttling BitTorrent peer-to-peer traffic over their network. BitTorrent is frequently cited by technologists as a bandwidth-intensive, enormous file size sharing method which strains any internet network.

Is this truly a blow to net neutrality? …  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Internet & Society, Internet & Web

Minnov8 Gang 73: Minnov8 Meets the iPad

April 3, 2010 By Steve Borsch

Since one of the Gang was picking up his iPad this morning (it was Graeme) we agreed to meet at the Southdale Apple Store to record the podcast and check out the iPad. Give us a listen and hear whether we loved it, hated it, thought it was just a big iPod Touch, or agree that everything after the Palm Treo 750 pales in comparison.

This Week’s Show Hosts: Steve Borsch, Tim Elliott, Graeme Thickins and Phil Wilson.

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The Podcast
https://media.blubrry.com/minnov8/minnov8.com/site/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/20100403_M8_Gang_73.mp3

Podcast: Download (Duration: 28:26 — 16.5MB)

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS | More

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Filed Under: Minnov8 Gang Podcast Tagged With: iPad

Did The Ultra High-Speed Broadband Taskforce Blow It?

April 1, 2010 By Steve Borsch

Just over an hour ago I received an email blast from the Minnesota Ultra High Speed Broadband Task Force (you can see it after the jump) with a letter from the Task Force Chair, Rick King, lauding their achievement. While I’m a fan (and friend) of the member who represented the Twin Cities metro area, Mike O’Connor (and his post), I must admit that I’m not as enthused as Mike or others since I was consistently disappointed in the lack of the Task Force addressing the current state of broadband and that it is largely controlled by the private sector (e.g., Comcast, Qwest) throughout the entire Task Force adventure leading up to this recommendation report.

The ultimate recommendation is for universal access to broadband as, “…a minimum of 10 to 20 megabits per second download and 5 Mbps upload” which, in my opinion, might be fine today but will be woefully inadequate within five years and, unfortunately, was missing entirely recommendations on something much more important to the future of broadband in Minnesota: who controls it.

As I progressed through reading the report (PDF) when it was released, an interesting quote jumped out and it about sums up the importance of broadband to the future of Minnesota and came from Kate Rubin, President of the Minnesota High Tech Association (with my emphasis), “Another key aspect of an innovation ecosystem is ubiquitous and affordable broadband access throughout Minnesota. Broadband is as essential as oxygen to ensure a high quality of life and a globally competitive future for our citizens, businesses, and communities.”

Yep. Broadband is as essential as oxygen, especially for anyone in technology who reads Minnov8! The kicker? The lion’s share of Minnesota citizen’s broadband footprint has “caps” on usage and that metaphorical “oxygen” is mostly controlled by the private sector. While the Task Force invested lots of time in the report detailing everything surrounding broadband BUT private control of this essential and fundamental conduit to the internet, my hope was that the Task Force would directly (and emphatically within the report) drive the point home that the Legislature must confront the question of public/private collaboration, public broadband policy, regulation and laws with something as fundamentally important to our future as access to the internet.

Instead, here was the lukewarm description of government’s leadership role:

Role of Government
Government has, or can have, a variety of roles to play with respect to broadband policy, broadband adoption, and consumer protection. Different levels of government (federal, state, local) have differing levels of jurisdiction and responsibility in the making of public policy regarding broadband.

Government plays an important planning and policy•making role with respect to establishing and achieving broadband goals. While it has regulatory authority too, it must also be recognized that actions the government takes or does not take have direct impacts on such things as time to market, the competitive playing field, and end-users paying for broadband services. In the final analysis, perhaps government’s overarching responsibility is to ensure affordable, ubiquitous access to broadband for all those who want and need such services, while making sure our state and nation remain competitive in the global economy. Further, government has a responsibility to make sure that our critical broadband infrastructure is safe and secure.

What I took from that section was a soft cautionary message to the Legislature in favor of the private sector (“actions the government takes or does not take have direct impacts“) and that perhaps the Legislature should just focus on the “have-nots” and leave the “real” broadband to the big boys in the private sector (“perhaps government’s overarching responsibility is to ensure affordable, ubiquitous access to broadband for all those who want and need such services“).

Without minimizing the extraordinary complexity of making public policy surrounding broadband–and the steep investments made by the private sector in fast broadband while mobile broadband also continues to accelerate–it’s naive for the Task Force to think a strategic deployment of “ubiquitous broadband,” an infrastructure that is “safe and secure” and one with inherent “consumer protections” is going to happen without significant governmental involvement. There should have been an entire section of the report devoted to both sides of the net neutrality debate so the folks in our State Legislature had a grasp of the issues they should be dealing with when crafting broadband public policy, regulations and laws.

As you may already know, the MN Broadband bill passed the House (Update: Senate passage likely this week and then off to Governor Pawlenty for signature). Rather than Minnesota showing “leadership” in this area, instead those of us who know internet access and speed is vital to the future of Minnesota, our nation and, of course, your innovation (regardless if that innovation conflicts with the competitive products offered by the same provider for your internet access) will have to rely on the Federal Communications Commission and their foresight and leadership to ensure internet broadband doesn’t turn in to a tollway.

…  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Internet & Society, Internet & Web

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