January 2007

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WordPress announced a security update and it’s recommended that everyone with 2.0.6 and below to get the update.

I decided to go for it since the upgrade patches a potential security vulnerability. The upgrade itself took about 15 minutes and most of the time was spent backing up and loading the new files up the server. I do wish that the Plugin Admin screen had “Deactivate All” and “Activate All” functions so that I didn’t have to manually deactivate/activate each plugin during the upgrade.

I took the chance to also upgrade the WP Tiger Administration plugin to v3.0. This was a design overhaul and also fixed a couple of minor UI hiccups that the older version had on WordPress 2. Nice.

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While blog-surfing, I chanced upon this post on SinGeo (a very interesting site that focuses on Singapore-related Google Maps mashups) and found, to my delight, that detailed street maps for Singapore are now available on Google Maps. Awesome.

The maps on Google are way more detailed than those for Singapore on Yahoo Maps. The Hybrid view in Google Maps also works beautifully. You still can’t search for landmarks like “Newton, Singapore”, or for business and directions, and it may not be worth Google’s while to provide these services for a country as small as Singapore, but there’s hope yet!

Google Maps - Singapore

Yahoo Maps - Singapore

If Google does work in the detailed search for Singapore, that’s a plus point to getting the iPhone when it launches in Asia next year. :) The iPhone has a snazzy Maps application which can help you locate businesses or get directions on Google Maps. Very nice.

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Phone Clams

iPhone - ThumbnailAny geek who hasn’t been living under a rock for the last 2 days would have heard about Apple’s announcement about the iPhone, a complete touch-driven convergent device combining a phone, iPod, and internet communications device.

First impressions from the usually online sources: Without a doubt, it looks sweet (multi-touch… ooh). It appears slim enough, but could be a tad big for my girly hands. I especially like that fact that it has a host of sensors (accelerometer, proximity, and ambient light sensors) which would usually spell hack-ity goodness if not for the fact that the iPhone is a closed platform. Still, I can imagine the fun that the Apple designers must have had working with the inputs from the various sensors to create a kick-ass user experience.

No reviews yet of course (the iPhone launches June 2007 in the US), but I wonder how the iPhone will hold up to multitasking especially when all that MacOS UI goodness is bound to take a significant chunk of processing power. I can forgive the lack of 3G support (3G hasn’t really arrived in the North American markets yet) but no removeable battery? No way.

I’m also a little paranoid about how the iPhone will stand up to long term use. I’m known to give my gadgets a pretty rough ride, and I wonder how drops, knocks, and dirt will affect the sensors. As for my stand on protective cases, why buy a gorgeous iPhone only to hide it in a case?

The iPhone is scheduled to launch in Asia in 2008, but given the pace at which mobile devices are released in Asia, a year is plenty of time for the incumbents to match/trump the iPhone with new rollouts (then again I could be wrong; look at how long it took for Nokia to come up with their Motorola Razr clone). I do expect that it will be iPhone v2 by the time it hits our shores or it’s current set of features will be looking decidedly dated by then.

The iPhone will retail at US$499 and US$599 for the 4GB and 8GB models respectively, and is tied to a 2-year contract with Circular. Converted to local terms, the 8GB will be going for approximately S$1,000 with a 2-year contract. The contract price usually represents about a $200-250 discount, so a new contract-free phone will go for about S$1,250.

There’s alot of clam shells.

So will I shell out 1250 clams for the iPhone v2? Stranger things have been known to happen. ;)

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For some unknown reason, the number of spam comments rocketed overnight (nothing close to the 1,000,000 on Techcrunch.com of course) but thanks to the loveliness that is Akismet, my blog stays spam-free and lemony-fresh.

I know I’m just asking for it.

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