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Archive for January 2009

Major new release of Phanfare Photon for the iPhone

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A new Phanfare Photon update just hit the app store that adds some great features that we are really proud of:

  • Musical slideshows
  • Image editing including Sepia, Black and White and Auto Levels, and the ability to revert to the original image
  • Much improved import from the local rolls on the phone. You can select multiple images at once and the speed is better.
  • Ability to set the music for a slideshow
  • Friend and Family content is now cached on the phone (works in airplane mode)
  • More features are available in airplane mode. Photon will synch when it next sees a network.
  • Image stabilization for the camera
  • Self timer for the camera, great for taking photos that you are in.
  • Tap anywhere for the camera, also helpful for self-portraits

With this version of Phanfare Photon, our vision of creating the wireless camera of the future is starting to come together.

Enjoy the release and leave any features that you would like to see added in the comments below.

Here is a video of some of the new features.

http://albums.phanfare.com/video.js?v=4&u=4391616&a_id=3323140&id=59419519&hash=776ae74464dd0c6826a107dca7ac088f&width=320&height=294&wmodetransparent=1

Written by erlichson

January 28, 2009 at 12:47 am

Garmin disrupted by the iPhone

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The iPhone has GPS built in with maps from google. That probably has Garmin worrying, but the truth is that the iPhone does not work all that well for street by street driving directions that it is replacing a Nuvi for most road warriors or busy moms. The Garmin device is cheaper to own (no recurring contract) than an iPhone and works really well.

Network connectivity does not yet enhance driving GPS navigators enough to make the iPhone a win there. The GPS implementation in the iPhone is slow to lock the satellite and is not well designed to use on your windshield.

Geocaching is a different story.

I have been geocaching for a few years now with my kids. For those not familiar with geocaching, it is a global treasure hunt where people hide little caches, list their GPS coordinates on geocaching.com, and then wait for people to find them. Geocaching is a lot of fun, and it can be challenging if you choose caches that include difficult terrain or a well hidden location.

To geocache, I would go to geocaching.com, find a cache that looks interesting, attach my Garmin GPS 60CSx, and download the waypoint for the cache, print out the description and hints, and then drive to the trailhead.

The 60CSx is an amazing GPS device. It is waterproof, durable, daylight readable and includes a magnetic compass so that it can tell you, even when standing still, how far away the cache is and in what direction to move.

Recently, Groundspeak, which runs Geocaching.com, came out with a Geocaching iPhone app. That app will find nearby caches based on your location, giving you the description, the hints and the ability to log field notes, all from the iPhone. You can navigate to the cache via google maps and once close by, use their simulated compass (only works when moving) to head to the hide location.

Geocaching is never quite as easy as it sounds. Even my Garmin will only isolate you to a 1000 square foot area, so you need to do some hunting. Hence, the limited accuracy of the iPhone GPS is a not a major liability. The Geocaching app on the iPhone offers an amazingly good Geocaching experience. You don’t need to plan ahead and load waypoints using a USB cable, and the built in maps support means that locally you can pretty much use Google maps on the iphone to get to the trailhead.

Of course, the iPhone is not as good a GPS device as my Garmin device, but the GPS part is good enough, and the supporting information and wireless network access to the data makes it more convenient. If a user already has an iPhone, then using it is cheaper (Geocaching app is $9.99) than buying a Garmin device. High end geocaching users probably won’t be satisfied with the iPhone geocaching experience, but it is cheaper and offers attributes the traditional solution does not. And its getting better fast. Does that sound like disruptive technology? You bet.

The iPhone is deeply disruptive to Garmin’s geocaching market. What’s worse for Garmin, they have no consumer-friendly way of adding networking to their handheld devices. They already learned that nobody will pay a subscription fee for their real-time traffic reports. They will find out that nobody will pay a subscription fee to get a data plan for their Nuvi either.

What is garmin to do? Well, to some extent, there is nothing they can do. they are going to lose the casual Geocaching market to GPS-enabled smart phones. They can try to come out with a smartphone, but this is pretty far from their knitting.

I think the only solution is to camp out at the high end and at least produce a device that is as useful as the iPhone for geocaching for those willing to pay. To do that, I would suggest they handle the data network access like the Amazon Kindle.

Rather than charge a subscription fee, let users browse for geocaches on the Garmin handheld for free. Then if the consumers wants to reveal the actual coordinates of the cache, charge a small transaction free of $1 that includes the cost of the network bandwidth. This is how Amazon handles the wireless charges for book deliver on the Kindle. Makes perfect sense.

I would be willing to pay a a small fee to get a superior GPS experience and all the ancillary geocaching information. The other obvious option is to try to create ad-supported wireless networking for the Garmin Nuvi. I doubt it would pay the freight today for access to the cell phone networks.

The iPhone (and other smartphones) won’t just disrupt the portable handheld Geocaching GPS market. They will also disrupt the point and shoot photography market for similar reasons (this is where Phanfare comes in). Canon is going to have a hard time getting consumers to pay a monthly subscription fee to get access to a data network to move their photos and video to and from the cloud, but that is exactly the convenience that smartphones are going to offer. And given that the trend is toward unlimited data plans, the bandwidth required is already sunk cost to the consumer.

Mobile photography is not very threatening to dedicated point and shoot cameras today and Canon is not much worried. Garmin is probably not seeing too many people forgo handheld GPS units for geocaching today either – but check back in two years. Things will be very different.

Written by erlichson

January 26, 2009 at 3:13 pm

Phanfare Geekazine Interview

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Andy McCaskey interviewed me at CES talking about the Phanfare app. This was an e prelease version of the app and it was not perfectly behaved during the demo.

Written by erlichson

January 26, 2009 at 12:55 am

Posted in General

PC Magazine Reviews Phanfare Photon

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PC Magazine reviewed Phanfare Photon. The review is quite thorough and captures the essence of what we are trying to accomplish on the mobile platform.

Written by erlichson

January 23, 2009 at 3:05 pm

New Phanfare mac client out

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We released a new version of the Phanfare mac client that fixes the jumping bug. Apple changed their NSTreeController selection binding update behavior in the 10.5.6 update, causing selection focus to move seemingly randomly between albums. We fixed it, tested it on 10.5.6 and on 10.4. Sorry it took so long for us to fix this. We know it was super annoying to users who hit the bug.

Written by erlichson

January 22, 2009 at 6:51 pm

Posted in Apple, General

USA Today article on Phanfare Photon

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USA today covered our Phanfare Photon app in today’s print and online editions.

The article talks about our belief that the iPhone is disruptive technology to the digital photography market. Phanfare Photon combines our industrial-strength cloud-based photo and video sharing service with the convenience of management and viewing of your whole collection from a mobile device.

We know that the iPhone is not quite there yet for acquisition of photos (and you can’t take a video) but these problems are easily solved, as many companies know how to make small form factor cameras that are awesome.

I take most of my photos with a traditional point and shoot camera or DSLR, but having my whole collection wirelessly synced is a great convenience. I hardly ever tether my iPhone. My email, contacts and address book come over the air via ActiveSync to our Exchange server. My photos and videos come over the air via Phanfare.

Written by erlichson

January 21, 2009 at 10:27 am

Per-album RSS feeds now supported

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Phanfare now supports per-album RSS feeds, useful if you want put a particular album on a photo frame, versus have all your personal content appear.

Kodak’s W1020 and W820 frames support Phanfare’s per-album RSS feed through Frame Channel. We have test both the frames.

Framechannel is based on RSS feeds. The process goes something like this. Buy a frame, follow the instructions for configuring with framechannel. Enter the appropriate RSS feed at Framechannel.com, either an album RSS feed or the feed for your whole Phanfare account. Watch the frame update automatically.

Written by erlichson

January 20, 2009 at 11:17 am

Posted in General

Initial impressions of the Canon 5D Mark II

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I got my Canon 5D Mark II last week and have taken it through its paces. I don’t feel like I fully understand all the new features and options in the camera yet, but I do have some first impressions.

Video is by far the most exciting feature of the new camera for me. I often found myself carrying my point and shoot and DSLR so that I could capture a few short video clips.

The video mode of the 5D Mark II definitely feels like it was added late in the design process, or at least requires a DSLR addict to love it. It starts by hitting the liveview button on the back of the camera, and then you can hit the set button in the middle of the wheel to start shooting. I got used to this pretty quickly but could it be more cumbersome? I doubt it.

I had hoped that there would be some sort of depth of field control for video, but as far as I can see, there is not (I could be wrong, just got started). And the camera can not reliabliy adjust focus while shooting video. Before you start the shot, you can focus by hitting a button that brings down the mirror and uses the standard autofocus hardware on the camera. Or you can have the camera do constrast detect focusing off the live view image. That is very slow and unreliable.

The reality is that you focus before the shot begins and if there is any refocusing to be done during the shot, it is going to be manual.

Others have also commented on some of the limitations of the video handling on the Canon 5D Mark II. But it hardly matters because the video you get from the Mark II is stunning. The camera records in 1080p mode spewing more than 25 megabits/second of of data. Although I can’t figure out how to control the depth of field, it is typically quite shallow, which tends to be what you want.

I can tell already that I am going to love this camera. But I can’t recommend it for someone who is not interested in the more technical aspects of digital photography. There are just too many great options to dig into.

Written by erlichson

January 19, 2009 at 2:13 pm

Posted in Canon

Interesting photos of the incoming Obama Team

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The NY Times took portraits of the incoming Obama team. They are inspiring photos and remind me how interesting still photography can be.

Written by erlichson

January 17, 2009 at 5:38 pm

Posted in General

Obama's cell phone

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Yesterday, I evaluated whether the iPhone is worthy of mission-critical use relative the Blackberry.

Apparently, the network congestion issue has been separately addressed by government and is discussed in this CNET article.

Written by erlichson

January 16, 2009 at 3:38 pm

Posted in General