Saturday, August 29, 2009

One year of 'iPhone'ing

I've been using iPhone since Aug 29, 2008 last week marked its first anniversary. Overall, I am extremely satisfied with this device. There is nothing inchoate with it and that is what pleases me the most. I can get almost every task in my day-to-day life done using it. It is my favorite gadget to date and one that troubled me the least. My day begins with iPhone and ends with it :). I start my day by checking my emails and the phone alerts me about any tasks/events scheduled for that day. I also check that day's weather to be prepared for 100F+ temperatures that are normally dished out in Phoenix. And of course, I cannot help mentioning iPhone apps.

Many apps come and go and I have tried a handful of them. But some have been in my phone ever since I bought it. And these apps have been the most useful ones. I use them for day-to-day tasks. Apart from Apple's apps - Youtube, Weather, Maps, Calendar, Stocks and the flagship iPod, third-party apps that I frequently use are Dictionary, TapMeDo, Units, Word Warp, AroundMe, Mobicast, Bloomberg, BikePRO, The Weather Channel, Discovery, Midomi, Cheap Gas, and Google Earth. The list is endless and I haven't added any games to this list.

Some of these apps are very handy. Some of them worth describing are -
AroundMe: Helps you search for supermarkets, stores, gas stations, malls, parks what not that are nearby you. It searches these based on your current location and that makes this app all the more worthy.
Units: Another very useful app that helps you convert units between different systems and believe me, that really helps.
Mobicast: If you are a cricket crazy guy and want to track cricket scores on the go, then this is for you. Mobicast is from Cricinfo.
BikePRO: If you are keen on bicycling then this is a must app. This free version lets you track the distance you rode by day and time taken, max speed etc.
Bloomberg: Lets you track your portfolio.

I am yet to try some interesting apps like Evernote, Toodledo etc, but honestly, I am happy with the ones I got. They keep me busy for now. I have always been unequivocal in my appreciation of Apple products and am sure to stick with iPhone 'X'G when I renew my contract next year :)

Happy iPhoning!


Sunday, August 16, 2009

One year of 'Civic'ing!

Yesterday marked the first anniversary of my first car, Honda Civic. It has been a fun ride all the while (pun intended). I bought this car on Aug 15, 2008. I was slightly nervous on road for the first couple of months. I got honked twice in these two months. First, when I tried to change the lane in the last second near a signal. The second instance was kind of scary. It was near a Circuit City store near our house. The entrance to this store was on a curvy road and I did not notice an oncoming car. I turned on my turn indicator and was entering the store's parking when I noticed a speeding car some 20 feet away. I sped my way through but man, it was close! Barring these two, I did not face any other untoward incidents. (Touch Wood!)

The price of fuel was highest in the month I purchase the car and was lowest in Jan 2009. I started off with a decent Miles Per Gallon (MPG) and am now at a good rate. Power blended with performance is a commendable feature in Civic. This impresses me the most. Check the charts below for the fuel price variations and my Civic's MPGs over the past year. Data point for June 2009 is missing as I was in India and did not refuel my car. (Click on the charts to enlarge them).



I am not a heavy-duty user; My office is nearby and I don't hit the freeways often. Average distance travelled per day over the last year is around 16 miles. This has contributed towards the good condition of my vehicle. Overall, the pros and cons are:

Pros:
(1) Economical mileage.
(2) Exceptional handling.
(3) Stylish exteriors and interiors.
(4) Very good features - good stereo and digital dashboard.

Cons:
(1) Quality of materials in interior isn't great. Hard plastic finishes for seats, dashboard.

Looking forward to more of 'Civic'ing.

Friday, August 14, 2009

My tryst with computers!

Anyone who knows me well will concur that I am a gadget freak. I am particularly fond of laptop computers and love their company. While driving back from work today, my thoughts wandered down the memory lane. It was a good flash back that I wanted to document.

I first operated a computer in 1992. I was in the VIII grade at Loyola Public School. We were taught to program in GW-BASIC. I vaguely remember trying to build an image of a ship, programming a student mark list and couple of other programs. It was fun. We had around 10 computers in the lab. All of them had monochrome screens. There was one computer that had a green screen with black font and that was my favourite. Rest of them had black screens with white font. Coding in GW-BASIC was very interesting. It was programming in its simplest form. Click here for a sample program in BASIC.

After my Class X, I did not get a chance to work with any computer for two years. And then, I joined Loyola College for my undergrad. This was in 1997. Computer Science was not a predominant subject in our curriculum then. I had a natural flair for programming but noticed that I was only interested in the mathematical component of programming. I wasn't too keen on mundane coding. I was more interested in algorithms. It was around this time that the internet fever gripped us. My first email account was with Hotmail. I remember going to an internet cafe and typing an email for 45 min. It costed us 60 rupees an hour to browse the internet. My first email was to my cousin who came to the US in 1997. My second email account was with Rediffmail. I used to have pen friends, prior to the advent of email. When email entered my life, pen friends went out.

By 1999-2000, I became very attracted towards computers/internet. I used to go to an internet cafe twice a week (two hours), which was 'high frequency' then. In 2000, after my graduation, I coerced my mom to buy me a personal computer. I opted for a HP Brio. This was my first 'own' computer. Specs read something like this: Intel Celeron 500-700Mhz, 32 MB RAM, 10GB HDD with Windows 98 (Second Edition). It had a floppy drive, a CD drive and came with a huge CRT monitor. It costed us ~45,000 rupees to get this PC along with a computer table and chair.

I had many PC games installed. I remember Wargasm and NFS. I was fond of another game whose name I cannot recall. I had MS Office and Borland C installed. I primarily used my computer to play games. I was at IIIT for a brief period. I had an Acer computer there with which I did not have whole lot of an attachment. I wasn't motivated enough to translate my interest in algos into programming. Honestly, I had other distractions.

In 2004, I sold off my HP Brio and bought a build-to-order 'assembled' computer. This was a Pentium-4 with 256MB RAM and 40GB HDD. I loved the increased speed. I decided to never purchase a Celeron machine again. By 2004, I became a regular user of the internet (not an addict yet!). We had internet in our house too and browsing became my favorite past-time. Also, it was around this period that I involuntarily gave up reading newspapers. I used to follow news on the web. I was slowly becoming an internet addict.

In 2005, after I came to Cincinnati to pursue my masters, I bought my first laptop. Dell Inspiron. I had to compromise on the price of a new laptop and ended up purchasing a Celeron machine again. But as I was a student with no source of income, I don't think I had much of a choice. Its specs - Intel Celeron 1.4GHz, 512 MB RAM, 40GB HDD. I got it for $450. I used this laptop primarily for school but right from the day I got it, I wanted to get rid of it. Ironically, I had this laptop for the next two years. I joined US Airways before I graduated. For my master's thesis, I needed a powerful laptop as I needed to process huge search logs (~10GB data). It was processor-intensive and my Dell surely could not handle it.

On May 5, 2007 I bought one of my favorite devices to date - IBM Thinkpad. It was a T60. Specs: Intel Core 2 Duo 1.83GHz, 2 GB RAM, 120GB HDD and Windows Vista Ultimate. It costed me a bomb though - $1600. It was a huge upgrade from my handicapped Dell. My thesis went through like a breeze. As days went by, I developed a passion for programming in Python. It was partly fueled by my work and partly by the language itself. I still use this ThinkPad and have all the software and apps I need installed on this machine. I also have Ubuntu installed on it.

My fascination with laptops compelled me to sell my Dell and purchase a Sony Vaio for my wife. In Jan 2008, I purchased Sony Vaio VGN-NR110E. It came with an Intel Dual Core processor, 1GB RAM and 160GB HDD. I bought this for $550. I upgraded the RAM to 2GB. This laptop served us good. Sony Vaio was aesthetically beautiful and keyboard layout was very good. Very user-friendly. By Jan 2009, I was kind of bored with Vaio. While I still have my ThinkPad (I foresee hanging on to it for the next 2-3 years), I sold the Vaio and bought a HP Pavilion laptop. This was a significant upgrade again. It had a Intel Core 2 Duo, 3 GB RAM and 250 GB HDD, integrated webcam/microphone and with many other multimedia features. I bought this for $550. In May 2009, I bought another laptop - Lenovo G530 - for my Mom. It is again a Dual Core/2GB/160GB machine.

So, long story short, my tryst with computers will go on. I feel happy when I look at the prices of laptops these days. I am happy because, I can try different laptops whenever I want to. It gives me lot of pleasure doing so. To me, my laptop is more a personal organizer and an internet communicator. I don't have any work-related material in it, but do have all the latest software (including Python 3.1.1 that released yesterday) for my non-work related stuff. I am looking to move further on, to Mac perhaps. In all certainty, my next laptop will be an Apple MacBook. Do you want to continue to MacBook (Y/N)? Y

Sunday, August 2, 2009

iPhone 3.0 SMTP Issue. (Fix Included)

I ran into a rather annoying problem yesterday. I was in San Jose, CA and wanted to forward an email when I encountered this issue. The mail that I just forwarded resided in my Outbox forever and I got this error:
"The user name or password for SMTP: @SMTP.gmail.com is incorrect."

Funny part is my incoming mail continued to work perfect and obviously, the user name and password were correct. We thought it was temporary issue. But the error persisted and my annoyance grew in sync with my curiosity. I tried several combinations - composed an email, forwarded an email, deleted my secondary emails (GMail) on iPhone. Nothing worked and my Outbox kept growing. The only significant change to my GMail settings is that I changed my password last week. I updated the password in Calendar (Google Sync) and GMail on iPhone and was able to recieve emails flawlessly. But I did not send/forward any emails after I changed my password.

After playing with most of the settings I tried the 'default' option. Delete the existing account and create a new one. That did not fix the problem either. With some googling, and by digging into the settings I was able to figure out the issue. Not sure if this issue happened in iPhone 2.0. But, here is the fix for 3.0.

Once you change GMail password, we need to update the password in Settings-> Mail. But there is a hidden SMTP field that needs to be updated too. Else sending mails will not work.

Go to Settings -> Mail, Contacts, Calendars -> Accounts (Choose the GMail account that has this error).
Under 'Outgoing Mail Server' tap SMTP.
Under SMTP, you get to see Primary Server and Other SMTP Servers.
Tap on 'smtp.gmail.com' under Primary Server.
You will see your old password in the settings here (the password will be encoded though). Update this field with your new password and you are all set.

Again, there could be many reasons why this error happened and could depend on the way you configured your GMail account on iPhone or could be a 3.0 specific issue. But this solution fixes the SMTP issue.