StyleAssist is now available on the App Store!

StyleAssistHandelabra Studio LLC is announcing the release of StyleAssist 1.0 for iPhone.  As of August 3rd, 2010, StyleAssist is available on the app store for $4.99.StyleAssist™ is the iPhone app from Handelabra Studio™ that is used for storing, tracking and sharing your hairstyles.  You use iPhone’s built in camera to document every hairstyle you ever get, building up a searchable history of your looks over time in your personal Style Journal.

You can also share every Style you create with bump™ built in.

$4.99

StyleAssist on the App Store

Legal and in the wild, on the current iDevice Jailbreak

So the web is all abuzz today as a a new jailbreak has been officially released that allows ALL (according to what I've read) iDevices to be jailbroken with a simple trip to a website.  And following the DMCA rule changes handed down last week, the legality of iPhone jail breaking is no longer grey but pretty black and white.When I first jumped on the iDevice bandwagon a few years back with a first gen iPod touch, I did the jailbreak just to see what was out there.  At the time, there wasn't much that interested me and I soon after took it back to "blessed".  When I got my first iPhone (a 3G), there was one, and only one feature that tempted me to jailbreak - custom SMS ringtones.  I once again waded into the jailbreak waters and found that, while I did manage to get the custom ringtone I wanted, the battery life of the device suffered overall so I once again went back to "blessed".  This was more than a year and a half ago.

Now that jailbreaking is declared legal, and now easier than even for end users, I find that the one feature I still want has yet to make it into the official version of iOS - custom SMS ringtones.  So do I jailbreak or not?  While the reasons behind the decision to keep this oft-requested feature out are undoubtedly typical apple "we just don't want to" fare, I find that I have no real desire to follow the masses down the rabbit hole anymore.  Part of it comes from a desire to keep things on the up and up on the developer side of things but honestly, the multi-tasking brought by iOS4 answers the only other real complaint I have so for the time being, I'll sit tight.

What about you?  How many people are going to jump on this most recent and simplest jailbreak?  If so, what features are drawing you to it?

Weighing in on "Antennagate"

I've been avoiding weighing in on the iPhone antenna problems for one simple reason - I have no antenna problems. I said it the day I got my iPhone 4, and I'll say it again today - the iPhone 4 is the best iPhone Apple's ever shipped. I can now make calls in my basement which is something I could never reliably do with the 3G or 3Gs.In my humble opinion, the Antennagate phenomenon is simply the media taking the first legitimate problem with the iPhone and running with it. Headlines like "New iPhone still great!", and "iPhone has ANOTHER record breaking launch!" only draw so many clicks after you've run them 3 or 4 times. I chalk it up to the "teach the controversy" philosophy. Everyone knows that there are Apple haters and Apple lovers and if you can just find a way to stir the pot a bit, the twitterverse, blogosphere and facebookalaxy (to coin a neologism) will grab ahold of it and run.

Most of the (completely and totally non-scientific) polls I have seen indicate that a very slim minority of users are experiencing serious problems using the new iPhone. What is driving the controversy is the fact that it is easily reproducible by gripping the phone in a way most people never will.

Some people will inevitably jump ship to android or others and that's fine. The truth is, what will keep Apple on their toes is good healthy competition. And given the current production constraints, the traditional idea of "one more person buying the competition is one less person buying the iPhone" is frankly just not accurate. Apple will continue to sell every iPhone that comes off the line and the iphone market will continue to grow by millions a month.

If you are having legitimate antenna problems and decide that now's the time to jump ship to android, I wish you well. There's lots of cool things happening in mobile and the iPhone is just one of them. But the media circus is just that, a circus. And at the end of the day, a circus is just an entertaining event that passes through town, takes your money, and moves on to the next town.

The most effective tool I've ever bought

What's the most effective tool you've ever bought? These days, I'm starting to think it's my iPad. At $499, it seemed at first like an expensive toy. I knew there was potential there and I mostly got it so I could start to get a feel for the device and how it could be used.  But I'm finding that I'm using it more and more.When it first came out, there was a lot of talk that it wasn't as useful as a laptop and too big to effectively replace the iPhone.  This discussion belied the exact type of flawed thinking that always greets truly new paradigms.  Is typing on the ipad as flawless as it is on a laptop?  Of course not.  But it is better than typing on an iPhone.  If the pre-iPad me had to return an email, I would take mental stock of how long I expected it to be; quick line or two, iPhone is fine, any longer and I'm breaking out the laptop.  But now, I don't even hesitate, it's the iPad every time.

And more and more tasks are falling into the "iPad every time" category.  Wikipedia search?  IMDB search?  Google search?  While the iPhone ushered in the era of "there's an app for that", the iPad is what's making it truly worthwhile IMHO.  What the iPhone did was pull us away from our computers and allowed us to do things we traditionally needed a PC for, anywhere we happened to be.  What the iPad does is pull some of these things back to the middle.  LIke it or not, there are some things that we forced onto the iPhone that maybe didn't need to be there, or at the very least, could benefit from having more screen space.

This is why I tweeted the day after I got it that the iPad is the first portile computing device. That is to say: more portable than a laptop (which can't be held in one hand effectively) but not quite as mobile as a phone (try putting it in your pocket without added stitching).  Some people thought it was nothing but dead space between laptops and phones but the iPad proves that thinking wrong.

So what makes it "the most effective tool I've ever bought"?  The simple fact that it becomes the tool I need, when I need it, and I always have it.  Email, wikipedia, books, music, movies, games, even apps for playing with and reading to my kids.  All in a package that is never more than an arm's reach away.  In less than two months, the iPad went from "an expensive toy" to something that I consider more indispensable than my iPhone.  And FSM knows I NEVER thought that would happen.

Redefining productivity

I used to work exclusively as a server in restaurants.  It's pretty easy to define productivity in such a setting, if you have a second to breathe, you're not being as productive as you can be.  As a server, your job is to be the conduit between the kitchen and the floor.  The kitchen can make food at certain rate and you need to make sure that the kitchen is fed orders at a rate they can keep up with and then deliver the food at a rate that allows people to enjoy their meal without feeling rushed.When I started a desk job, productivity began to be measured in output.  The amount of "stuff" that could be held in your hand, printed out, emailed to a client or posted to a webpage.  Without "something to show for it", you might as well have been watching youtube for 8 hours.  After doing that for years, I found I was having a hard time re-difining productivity from the point of view of an entrepreneur .

In my new role, productivity has a whole different meaning.  You see EVERYTHING I do now can be made to be productive, depending on how you look at it.  I spend at least an hour every morning just reading; Following links from twitter streams, seeing what's being dugg, reading press releases, etc.  Do I have any "output" after this time?  Maybe not.  But as the "head cheese" or "frontman", I have to measure productivity in more than just "product".  Maybe what I've produced is the knowledge that a competitor is going to beat us to market.  Maybe I've discovered a new market and I'm going to produce a brief for a new app that might serve that market.

One thing that does keep me grounded though is the fact that I still take some time each day to "produce" in the more traditional sense.  I make graphics, setup UIs, build models, etc.  Having some time each day dedicated to "something to show for it" style productivity helps me to keep from loosing my mind during the rest of my "non-traditional productivity" time.