iPhone Tweak Request: Contact-Centricity

June 29, 2007

Rather than tapping on the SMS icon to answer any pending text messages, then the Phone icon to deal with missed calls, then the Mail icon to reply to your latest emails, perhaps iPhone 1.1 could add another option.

How about also combining them all under the context of your known contacts? In the Phone app you can right now view recent calls, and press the Missed button to filter to just the missed calls; there could be an extra button here (perhaps called All Media) that could show contacts, and icons to represent all the methods by which they are awaiting replies.

In this mode Ricardo Stuckey might have a Phone icon with a “2″ super-imposed representing two missed calls, an SMS icon with a “1″ and an Email icon with a “3″ and so on. Tapping on, say, the Email icon would show you only the pending email messages from Ricardo.

After reading, and optionally replying to his emails you would be taken to his other open messages, of all types, until you were squared away with Ricardo. Of course you have the option to back out of this contact-centric option at any time…

…But the option would be there, and folded into the existing interface; the only immediate clutter being one extra button, for whenever you’re in a people-centric, rather than a method-centric frame of mind.

iPhone Apps Wishlist: Outliner

If there ever comes a time when proper applications can be written for the iPhone — this is the first one I’d like to see. I don’t know the first thing about writing software; I’m just throwing this out there into the ether…

After tapping the Outliner icon on the home screen, you will be taken to the Outliner overview. Here you will see the first line of each entry; tapping on a line will cause the entry to slide into view from the right.

The entries are pure text. The first line of the text is the header of the entry — that appears in the overview, so an entry could be a large body of text with a descriptive first line — or just a few words, to be used as part of a list of bullet points to be dragged and re-arranged when in the overview screen; as in a checklist, or shopping list, or ideas list.

To make it easier to scroll through the text of a long entry one page at a time, a simple tap on the lower half of the displayed text will advance the entry one page. A single tap to the top half will take you back one page.

To edit the text of an existing entry, first tap the edit button, then tap where on the entry you want the insertion point.

Whenever you go back to the overview, or return to the home screen, Outliner will remember your position within the current entry.

Back in the overview, you can drag the headers up and down to re-arrange them. You can also nest headers within other headers; by holding, say, Get toothpaste over When shopping, a space will be made below When Shopping where you can drop the entry. Get toothpaste is now a child of When shopping, and a triangle now appears to the left of When Shopping. Tapping the triangle causes the new outline to collapse or expand.

Tapping on When shopping will reveal the When shopping entry on its own — tapping on the symbol to the right of the entry will reveal When shopping together with its child entries.

When you are typing within a entry, you can create a new entry, simply by starting the next line with a space. Press Return, then a space to start your new entry; pressing space twice will cause the new entry to be a child of the current entry.

Entries are synchronized between your iPhone and your Mac every time you charge the phone. Applications and context menus on the Mac have the option to Export as an Entry; placing a new entry in the Outliner Folder that syncs with the phone.

Opening the Outliner Folder on the Mac reveals an interface similar to that on the phone, for re-arranging and editing the entries. You could select the text from several sequential web pages and export them as entries, those entries can be found within the Outliner Folder, selected and combined into a single entry for reading.

Using Outliner:

You could simply use it as somewhere to jot down ideas and reminders, creating new one-line entries, then jumping back to the overview to re-arrange them or nest them within other entries, making those other entries into categories. It would be useful just for that.

You could use it to write a blog entry or an article. Write a header, then Return andSpace for each new paragraph; jump back to overview to re-arange or delete paragraphs before publishing.

You could take massive text files on your Mac and add spaces to the start of new paragraphs to create new sections and sub-sections — dropping the modified file into the Outliner Folder for export as a nested collection to the iPhone.

As described above, this app could be eminently useful — obvious and straight-forward, while at the same time adaptable to your imagination. For those who want more, an advanced version might enable the following features:

  • A button to turn the text of an entry into an email message
  • An Urgent button to color an entry header red, along with a way to filter the Overview to show only theUrgent items
  • A Set Reminder button to set a due date and time when an alarm would sound and the Outliner icon in the Home screen would show the number of due entries

iPhone Interface in JavaScript

June 13, 2007

A very cool iPhone emulation…

iPhone Interface in JavaScript

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Screenshot Helper

June 10, 2007

…I may be working on a project and find myself with, say, three Safari windows open on the screen, and three Tofu windows. In order to concentrate on one thing at a time I could hide one of the applications, but even then I’d still have three windows showing. What if I want to just have one window of the three showing at a time, from a single application?…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Review — Screenshot Helper

WWDC Predictions

June 5, 2007

Gosh darn. If only I’d bought those Apple shares at $90 instead of putting the money in a term investment. But then there’s always that risk factor to think of. But to heck with risk; it’s too late to risk the money but not too late to risk making a fool of myself with my latest keynote prediction.

No-one will read it, as usual, but at least it will be there for posterity.

So here it is: At the WWDC, Steve Jobs will introduce the almost-final version of the Leopard OS. The final pieces to fall into place will include — an all-new Finder.

This Finder will have an additional outline, or tree view. You will be able to Ctrl-Opt-Double Click on folders to have them appear in new tabs. You will have the option of dropping files to have a dialog appear that shows how they will logically be processed (move, copy, create alias, create archive etc.) along with all the alternatives from which you can click one in the two to three seconds before the dialog disappears. Another option will be to have the file info always available within the finder.

There will be an application launcher in the menu bar that will hold dropped apps, recent apps and documents, and a Spotlight input field that only searches for apps and documents… But enough of Leopard.

The big announcement will be the all-new iMac. As mentioned here, it will be quieter, sleeker, probably metal. Forget what I said about the super remote. Most of those features will be enabled using the iPhone.

Finally, expect two versions of Mac.com to be announced; one being a premium paid version with much greater available storage and enhanced iWeb features, and one being a light version available to all Leopard users. The lite version will be free.

Now I REALLY wish I’d bought that Apple stock.

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Library Books

June 4, 2007

Library Books is an icon that sits in your menu-bar. Once you’ve set up the preferences by entering your library and log on information, Library Books will keep a track of everything that you have borrowed, and reserved, and present that information to you via a drop down menu…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Review — Library Books

Extending the iPhone…

June 2, 2007

In store windows and on counter tops and on displayed products, there’d be a placard with the header: Add to iPhone Safari Bookmarks. Below the header is a barcode type of graphic with four distinct marked corners.

Line up the camera on your iPhone so that the graphic fills the screen and take a shot. The phone recognizes the image as a target and takes the information from the barcode to add a new bookmark to Safari, taking you to the website of the placard the next time you tap it.

The Apple website has a page in the iPhone section where anyone can enter a title and a URL for a new placard to be produced online; then they can simply print it out.

Magazines could include the placard in ads (if the camera is good enough to focus that close.)