 TidBITS#998/29-Sep-09
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/998>

  Testing: Please check to see what happens with the embedded YouTube 
  video (can you see it, can you click it?) and the normal images 
  further down (can you see them, can you click them?). Thanks! 
  cheers... -Adam

Articles
    Boris & the Woodchuck
    Images in TidBITS HTML Edition
    TomTom Prices Car Kit for iPhone App
    Comparing Two Early iPhone GPS Navigation Apps
    Gmail Flaky; Try IMAP
    Find My (Wife's) iPhone


------------ This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by: --------------

* READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today! 
  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html> 
  Special thanks this week to Jerry Keller, Cal Clift, 
  Dietrich Kessler, and Tait Elder for their generous support!

* Fetch Softworks: Fetch 5.5 has WebView, the easy way 
  to view files in a browser and copy web addresses from Fetch. 
  Also Quick Look support, droplet shortcuts, and more. 
  Download your free trial version! <http://fetchsoftworks.com/>

* WebCrossing Neighbors Creates Private Social Networks 
  Create a complete social network with your company or group's 
  own look. Scalable, extensible and extremely customizable. 
  Take a guided tour today <http://www.webcrossing.com/tour>

* THE MISSING SYNC: If you have a smartphone, we can sync it! 
  Sync your address book, calendar, notes, music, pictures, and 
  more between your BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, Symbian OS or 
  Palm OS phone and your Mac. <http://www.markspace.com/bits>

* VMware Fusion. The most seamless way to run Windows on 
  your Mac. Backed by nearly a decade of proven virtualization 
  technology. Try VMware Fusion today for only $79.99. 
  Visit: <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/vmware-fusion.html>

* Microsoft's MacBU: Supporting Mac users with Office 2008. 
  Is your Office up-to-date? Make sure you're running the latest 
  versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage by choosing 
  Check for Updates from the Help menu of any Office application!

* It's time to speak up with MacSpeech Dictate! Get the all-new 
  MacSpeech Dictate with spelling and phrase training. Speech 
  Recognition so good, the only thing it can't do is speak for you. 
  Learn more at <http://tidbits.com/about/support/macspeech.html>

---------- Help support TidBITS by supporting our sponsors ------------


Boris & the Woodchuck
---------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10608>

  Here's an article in which I link to a YouTube video.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXE6I62nP18>

  And use Exposé to look at prices in £99 and €88 with possible a 
  müssen.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10608#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10608>


Images in TidBITS HTML Edition
------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10610>

  As those who read TidBITS on our Web site or in RSS are aware, 
  we’re increasingly using screenshots of Mac and iPhone 
  applications to illustrate what we’re saying in the article. In 
  the text edition of TidBITS, those graphics are represented purely 
  by normal links to our /resources directory. Until this week, 
  we’ve replaced the images in the HTML edition with a [View Image] 
  link to the original on the Web.

  Those [View Image] links weren’t terrible, but they’ve been 
  bothering us, so we’ve finally replaced them with the actual 
  images, loaded from our Web site when you open the email message 
  containing the issue. If you’ve turned off image loading, you’ll 
  see whatever placeholder your email client uses. Clicking an image 
  (or probably the placeholder) displays it at full size in your Web 
  browser.

  We’ve also tweaked the encoding on our issues so we can finally 
  use accented characters and other special symbols in both the text 
  and HTML editions of TidBITS. That’s right, we can now spell 
  Exposé properly, and we can give prices in pounds as necessary. 
  There’s only one minor caveat — the euro symbol displays 
  properly in the HTML editions of TidBITS, but is replaced in the 
  text edition by a ? because it isn’t supported in ISO-8859-1 
  encoding we’re using for text email. (And did you notice that em 
  dash back there? And the “curly quotes” throughout? Yay!)

  If you’re currently subscribed to the plain text edition of 
  TidBITS, and you’d like to switch to the HTML edition so you can 
  see images inline, click the Email link under Get TidBITS Via in the 
  nav bar of our Web site (or just visit our mailing list management 
  page), login using the email address with which you’re subscribed, 
  select “TidBITS Issue (HTML),” deselect other editions as 
  necessary, and click the Submit link.

<http://www.tidbits.com/list>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-10/TidBITS-list-formats.png>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10610#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10610>


TomTom Prices Car Kit for iPhone App
------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10606>

  TomTom will sell its car kit - a complement to its iPhone app - for 
  $119.95 in the United States, £99.99 in the UK, and €99.99 in 
  Europe. The car kit will ship in October. The iPhone software is not 
  included; TomTom offers several apps, each for a different part of 
  the world.

<http://investors.tomtom.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=411360>
<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewArtist?id=326055452>

  In what appears to be new information, the car kit will work with 
  every model of iPhone, including the original 2.5G (EDGE) model that 
  lacks an internal GPS radio. That means that TomTom is embedding its 
  own GPS chip and antenna into the car kit. That's good news. In my 
  testing of the TomTom app on an iPhone 3GS over several hundred 
  miles in the Pacific Northwest recently, GPS lock-on time, signal 
  quality, and refresh intervals were the weakest elements in using 
  TomTom's turn-by-turn navigation.

  An iPhone plugs in via its dock connector to the holder, which uses 
  suction to attach to a window. The dock includes a microphone and 
  speaker as well as a USB port for charging (via an included 
  car-power adapter), and an audio output jack.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10606#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10606>


Comparing Two Early iPhone GPS Navigation Apps
----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10600>
  4 comments

  One of my favorite gadgets of the last four or five years is the car 
  navigation GPS. Enter an address or pick a point-of-interest from a 
  database, press the Go button, and it not only provides turn-by-turn 
  directions in real time, it speaks the instructions out loud so you 
  can focus on driving. I've reviewed numerous models from GPS 
  manufacturers Garmin, Magellan, and TomTom, but my first experience 
  with GPS navigation came from a cell phone in a rental car during a 
  Mac user group tour in the Southwest.

<http://db.tidbits.com/series/1264>

  When the iPhone 3G first appeared with a GPS chip in 2008, I was 
  ecstatic, thinking that would mean iPhone users could avoid buying 
  yet another gadget. But as much as the Maps app is useful, I found 
  it devilishly difficult to use while driving, and it wasn't until 
  Apple announced iPhone OS 3.0 that a turn-by-turn GPS app became 
  possible. I have yet to hear why that should have been true, but it 
  was.

  Although we've seen additional apps from TomTom and Navigon (and 
  probably others) appear since I started this review, the first two 
  GPS navigation apps for the iPhone were AT&T Navigator and G-Map 
  from XRoad, and those are where I'll start. I hope to look at the 
  others soon. 

<http://www.wireless.att.com/source/gpsservices/navigator/>
<http://www.xroadgps.com/Maps/GMapforiPhone/tabid/2463/Default.aspx>

  AT&T Navigator is a free app from AT&T, but requires a $9.99 monthly 
  service charge. I hate that. G-Map costs $34.99 and consumes 846 MB 
  of space, but requires no monthly fee. During a recent trip from 
  Ithaca, NY to Boston, MA, I tested both, sometimes simultaneously 
  with a Garmin nuvi 255W, which I reviewed a year ago (see "Garmin 
  nuvi 255W Focuses on Navigation," 2008-08-07).

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/Both-GPS-apps.png>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9725>


**Online vs. Offline** -- The first major difference between AT&T 
  Navigator and G-Map - and all other standalone GPS devices, for that 
  matter - is that AT&T Navigator stores hardly any information on 
  your iPhone. Instead, it requires constant communication with AT&T's 
  servers to download route information. 

  Needless to say, this can be a significant limitation if you drive 
  in areas that lack cellular coverage, as is true of parts of upstate 
  New York. There were a few times that AT&T Navigator was unable to 
  connect, but luckily, none of those times coincided with a turn. 
  During later testing in Ithaca, where cell service is often spotty, 
  there were times I couldn't even get AT&T Navigator to load, due to 
  the lack of service.

  I'm surprised that the AT&T Navigator app doesn't download and cache 
  the entire route upon starting, so that it could rely at least on 
  cached instructions if connectivity was lost, throwing up its hands 
  only if you deviated from the cached route.

  G-Map didn't suffer from the same limitation, of course, but the 
  tradeoff is that it requires 846 MB of space on the iPhone... for 
  just the East Coast of the United States. That's a large percentage 
  of the iPhone's space to allot to a single app, although you could 
  of course load and unload it as necessary. If you want additional 
  maps from G-Map, you must buy separate apps.

  In contrast, the Garmin nuvi 255W contains maps for all of North 
  America or Europe (depending on model), and a card slot lets you add 
  even more maps. Score one for the standalone GPS.


**Finding Destinations** -- Aside from actual navigating, the primary 
  interaction you have with any GPS is locating your destinations. 
  GPSes offer several basic ways of finding locations, of which 
  entering addresses and looking up points-of-interest are the most 
  common. 

  Here's where I hoped the iPhone apps would prove significantly 
  easier to use than the Garmin nuvi 255W, because, although it has a 
  touch screen and a large database of points-of-interest, there's no 
  question that its interface is clumsy, and it doesn't integrate with 
  your normal contact database.

  Although I could swear this wasn't true of the initial release of 
  AT&T Navigator, the app now offers direct integration with your 
  contacts list, which is huge. Most of the time, when you're going to 
  someone's house, you already have their address in Contacts, and if 
  you don't, it's easy to enter, either via the iPhone itself or in 
  Address Book on the Mac. 

  If you do need to type an address into AT&T Navigator, it provides a 
  screen with four fields - house number and street, city, state, and 
  ZIP - and a keyboard for entering information. It's easy to move 
  from field to field, and the app even guesses at likely results as 
  you type. You don't even have to fill in all the fields: city and 
  state or ZIP is sufficient to go to a town. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/Navigator-address-entry.png>

  There is an alternative - you can call an AT&T voice response system 
  that will attempt (poorly) to do speech recognition and walk you 
  through finding your destination. I'm sure there are people who like 
  using these systems, but I prefer ingesting lumps of wasabi when I'm 
  feeling masochistic. 

  Oddly, G-Map has no integration with Contacts, which is a shame, 
  given that its awkward interface makes the Garmin nuvi look 
  polished. Instead of the fields in AT&T Navigator, G-Map makes you 
  enter the street name and the house number on successive screens, 
  and if you need to change the city or state from the previous 
  search, doing so requires entering data on two more screens. Since 
  all the screens look pretty much the same, you have to read 
  carefully to figure out which screen you're on at any given time. 
  Score one for AT&T Navigator.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/G-Map-address-entry.png>

  AT&T Navigator also won out when it came time to find businesses and 
  other points-of-interest. Since G-Map must carry its 
  point-of-interest database along with it, it isn't nearly as 
  comprehensive as AT&T's, which can live on AT&T's servers. Some 
  categories I searched - like car rentals and hardware stores - were 
  completely barren for Ithaca in G-Map, but had numerous entries in 
  AT&T Navigator. In other categories, such as gas stations, both apps 
  performed acceptably. 

  Plus, AT&T Navigator showed ratings for at least some businesses, 
  which is a help when you're on a trip and trying to decide between 
  restaurants. Unfortunately, you cannot rate business from within the 
  app itself, which would be helpful; AT&T claims in its FAQ that you 
  can do so from the Tools/Extra menu, but that's apparently untrue of 
  the iPhone app.

<http://www.wireless.att.com/source/gpsservices/navigator/rules_popup.aspx>

  G-Map did have one significant advantage over AT&T Navigator when 
  searching points-of-interest. Since it didn't have to query remote 
  servers over what could be a slow or nonexistent cellular 
  connection, results were instantaneous. Many times I found myself 
  annoyed at how long it took for AT&T Navigator to retrieve the 
  results of my search. 


**Time Delay Navigation** -- Here's the real crux of the matter - 
  would I rely on these apps for directions in an unfamiliar city. The 
  answer is yes, but not without some hesitation. Here's why.

  The iPhone's GPS capabilities are certainly the stuff of science 
  fiction when viewed from the perspective of what was possible 10 or 
  15 years ago. But compared to a modern-day car navigation GPS unit, 
  the iPhone simply doesn't compete. To be specific, it's not as 
  accurate as the Garmin nuvi 255W I was using as my control, and as a 
  result, the GPS apps are more likely to get your position slightly 
  off and take longer to notice if you make a turn that deviates from 
  the current route.

  Although it varied, my experience was that G-Map recovered from an 
  unexpected turn more quickly than AT&T Navigator, often within 5 
  seconds, undoubtedly thanks to its local database. 

  AT&T Navigator had to notice the incorrect turn, transmit the new 
  location to AT&T's servers, receive the new route back, and display 
  it. That could take up to 30 seconds, which I found highly troubling 
  in some situations.

  If you're on a slow-moving freeway with few exits, 30 seconds may 
  not matter, but if you're on a busy city street, you could miss an 
  important turn or simply be more at risk of an accident. My 
  experience with the standalone devices is that they usually recover 
  within a few seconds, and in any event quickly enough that there's 
  no more stress added to the situation.

  G-Map wins on two counts here, in fact. Its route recalculation is 
  faster, and because its maps contain more details - specifically 
  more street names - than AT&T Navigator's maps, you can glance at 
  the screen and see more of what's around you.


**Routes** -- Some trips aren't simple, if you need to make several 
  stops along the way, and in other situations, you may need to 
  consult a route list to ensure the directions make sense. 

  AT&T Navigator offers useful route summaries, both in text and in 
  map form. You can also see a traffic summary that supposedly shows 
  traffic delays, and you can ask it to avoid particular segments of 
  the route. It's a clean interface, and easy to use under pressure, 
  which is often the situation when you're consulting the route list.

  In contrast, G-Map can show you a list of intersections along with a 
  closeup of the turn, but the list lacks distances and turn 
  directions, so it's not useful on its own. It can also preview a 
  route graphically, showing how you'd drive. You can increase the 
  speed so it's not as slow as actually driving would be, but it's 
  still tedious to watch.

  G-Map also enables you to create multi-point routes. I find that I 
  generally just go from one point to the next, reprogramming the GPS 
  once I'm ready to head out to the next destination, but I'm sure 
  there are instances where a predefined route would be useful. AT&T 
  Navigator has no such feature.


**Speak Up** -- I appreciate the visual maps provided by these apps, 
  and both are totally usable, but the real utility of a car 
  navigation GPS is its capability to speak directions to you, so you 
  can keep your eyes on the road. 

  AT&T Navigator works as expected, reading both directions and street 
  names (this is optional, though the default). Unfortunately, and 
  this may be because of needing to download data from AT&T's servers, 
  the voice quality is poor. I had no trouble understanding the AT&T 
  Navigator voice, but the difference was obvious once I switched to 
  G-Map, which has a much clearer voice.

  Alas, G-Map can read only directions audibly, leaving you to glance 
  at the map if you're uncertain which of two upcoming left turns it 
  means. It does play a two-note tone every time you come to a turn 
  (an audible interface element pioneered by Magellan), which helps. 

  AT&T Navigator won out in another way as well. If you want to listen 
  to music or a podcast while driving, you can run the iPod app in the 
  background, and AT&T Navigator will pause the music to speak some 
  directions, then start playback again. The only downside is that 
  AT&T Navigator is one of the chattiest GPS navigators I've ever 
  used, so the constant pausing and playing was almost more annoying 
  than it was worth. On one trip I shut it off entirely because I 
  couldn't stand the constant interruptions from the low-quality 
  voice.

  Weirdly, G-Map not only wouldn't allow me to play music in the 
  background - it just didn't work - the app's voice directions 
  stopped working entirely if I plugged my car's cassette adapter into 
  the iPhone's headphone jack. Since it was impossible to hear AT&T 
  Navigator unless I ran it through the car stereo, this threw me for 
  some time. 

  Neither app offers choices of voices, as do the standalone GPS 
  devices, most notably TomTom's units, which let you download custom 
  voices and even record yourself. Both apps offer a basic female 
  voice, which is fine. AT&T Navigator does offer the option of 
  English or Spanish.


**More Power, Scotty!** One area in which neither iPhone app could 
  excel was in power usage. Actually relying on the app to give you 
  directions requires that it keep the GPS chip and the screen active 
  at all times, which drops battery life to about 2 hours. 

  The battery-powered standalone GPS units I've tested aren't notably 
  better, but of course, if you let your iPhone run out of power, 
  you've lost more than just your navigation help. 

  AT&T Navigator can dim or even black the screen, but that may not be 
  safe, since you're most likely to want to see the map when you're in 
  a confusing situation, and that's the worst time to need to fiddle 
  with the iPhone.

  So if you're going to use any iPhone GPS app, make sure to get 
  yourself some sort of car charging device so you can be sure your 
  iPhone will be fully juiced up at the end of the trip.


**Various Nits** -- Along with the criticisms I've noted so far, they 
  also suffer from a number of minor nits, some which may disappear in 
  future versions, but others of which are artifacts of the iPhone 
  platform.

* All standalone car GPS units come with mounts and power adapters and 
  all that good stuff. Neither iPhone app does, of course, which means 
  that you need to acquire a mount and power adapter separately. I 
  ended up getting the Arkon IPM129-ST Removable Air Vent Mount, which 
  is a cheap (in every sense of the word) mount that attaches to an 
  air vent; it works, but was hard to install and fit only on the side 
  vent in our Honda Civic, which means the Griffin Technology 
  PowerJolt SE power adapter cord barely reaches. 

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001OMOTAA/?tag=tidbitselectro00>
<http://www.griffintechnology.com/products/powerjoltse>

* Both apps present a splash screen on every launch that tells you not 
  to interact with the app while driving (standalone GPSes do this 
  too). I understand why the lawyers require such an interface 
  abomination, but it's still an abomination. Perhaps it could appear 
  on a random sequence, but with fewer appearances as you used the app 
  more and more. 

* G-Map's content - addresses, business names, and so on - is entirely 
  uppercase, which makes parsing it visually difficult. AT&T Navigator 
  uses mixed case, which is much easier to read.

* Neither app was very good at what is often the most confusing part 
  of a new route - figuring out how to get started. That may be due to 
  the lack of accuracy in the iPhone GPS chip, but if I'm in a 
  driveway, I'd like to have an instruction to turn right or left out 
  of the driveway.

* Once, when returning home from a location near Cazenovia, NY, G-Map 
  simply couldn't give me a route home. It displayed a dialog saying 
  that the route calculation had failed, and then crashed. AT&T 
  Navigator worked fine in that situation.

* On several occasions, G-Map failed to pick up my current location 
  right away when starting a new route, which was annoying if I'd 
  travelled some distance since I last used it. Other times it was 
  nearly instantaneous to find its new location.

* Neither app worked in landscape mode, which all of the standalone 
  GPS devices use. It wasn't a huge problem, and might not work well 
  with various iPhone mounts, but it would have been nice. AT&T 
  Navigator's iTunes page claims it has this feature in version 1.3i, 
  but 1.2 seems to be the latest version available.

* Although AT&T Navigator can seemingly detect traffic problems and 
  route around them, all this seemed to entail was hearing it say 
  "Checking traffic" ad nauseam - I never saw it actually change its 
  behavior.

* AT&T Navigator's extreme chattiness was exacerbated by the fact that 
  if it could come up with a different name for a street, it would, 
  unlike G-Map and the Garmin nuvi 255W, which seemed to map better to 
  how the streets were actually labeled in the real world.

* Although G-Map shows how far to your destination and how long it 
  will take, it does so in such small type that it's nearly impossible 
  to read while driving. AT&T Navigator uses larger type and toggles 
  back and forth between arrival time and distance to destination.


**Still Looking** -- Overall, although both apps would clearly do the 
  job in the end, neither gave me the confidence to drive in the 
  Boston metropolitan area - I continually wimped out and retreated to 
  the Garmin nuvi 255W, which has never let me down in a major way.

  The skinflint in me can't stomach recommending AT&T Navigator unless 
  you're really good about canceling the service when you won't be 
  needing it. At $9.99 per month, a year of use would make it more 
  expensive even than the pricey TomTom ($99.99) and Navigon ($89.99) 
  apps. 

<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=326075661&mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=321506742&mt=8>

  And while G-Map's (introductory) $34.99 price is more appealing, its 
  clumsy interface, lack of integration with Contacts, and inability 
  to read street names make it a less-than-ideal choice. Plus, if you 
  regularly travel on both coasts and Canada, you'd need multiple apps 
  that would cost the same as the TomTom app. G-Map does have apps 
  that cover more limited areas - California, New York/New Jersey, 
  Florida/Puerto Rico, Texas, Wisconsin/Illinois, Minnesota/Indiana, 
  and Canada - and that cost only $19.99 and weigh in around 100 MB.

  But in the end, I'm canceling the AT&T service - I just don't need 
  to pay $9.99 for a trip or two per month - and I'll be using G-Map 
  until it's time to review the next iPhone GPS app.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10600#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10600>


Gmail Flaky; Try IMAP
---------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10592>
  3 comments

  [Update: As of 1 PM Eastern, Google is reporting all problems with 
  Gmail as resolved, and indeed, the banner about Contacts being 
  offline is gone, and sending and receiving mail appears to be 
  working normally. -Adam]


  Although Gmail isn't rejecting connections for me, as it did the 
  last time it went down three weeks ago (see "Gmail Web Interface 
  Down; IMAP Working," 2009-09-01), we're seeing distinct problems as 
  of about 10 AM Eastern. 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10522>

  Mail is slow to come in, but more troubling is that Gmail's Web 
  interface is having trouble sending messages. And since sending 
  email is essentially a modal action in Gmail (you can't do anything 
  else in the Web interface while it tries to send), sending problems 
  render Gmail unusable. I was able to save drafts several times, and 
  messages would sometimes send and would sometimes display errors 
  claiming they couldn't be sent.

  Gmail is also displaying a banner that says Contacts are offline, 
  which Google explains means that auto-complete may not work, the 
  contact manager may not load, and chat may not work. Apparently, 
  I've become highly dependent on auto-complete when sending messages, 
  to judge from my stuttering when faced with an uncompleted name in 
  my To field.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/Contacts-offline.png>
<http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&ctx=mail&answer=106432>

  As of 10:30 AM Eastern, Google has updated the Apps Status Dashboard 
  to indicate some issues with Gmail, and a banner on the Gmail Help 
  home page indicates that Google is working on the problem.

<http://www.google.com/appsstatus>
<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/Gmail-banner.png>
<http://mail.google.com/support/>

  As with the previous outage, IMAP access to Gmail seems unaffected, 
  and whether or not it would be in any future scenario, keeping an 
  email client like Mail downloading messages from Gmail via IMAP 
  would mean that you'd at least have access to your older messages 
  for reference while Google fixes the online problems.

  As I wrote last time: 

    "The moral of the story - backup, backup, backup. The smart computer user who can't necessarily afford to be offline for a long period of time backs up not just data, but access methods. If Gmail's Web interface goes down, I can use IMAP. If Gmail stops working entirely, I can use my own server or my MobileMe account. If my cable modem goes down, I know where I'll take my MacBook for Internet access. And so on..."

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10592#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10592>


Find My (Wife's) iPhone
-----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10589>
  8 comments

  Don't get me wrong, I'm all in favor of privacy. But there are times 
  and places when you very much want certain other people to know 
  exactly where you are, without you having to do anything.

  The release of Find My iPhone with iPhone OS 3.0 came at a perfect 
  time for us, since Tonya got an iPhone at the start of the summer, 
  just as she was beginning to train seriously for the 100-mile AIDS 
  Ride for Life, an annual fundraising event around here. As the 
  summer progressed, Tonya needed to do ever longer training rides 
  that would take 3 to 7 hours and cover 30 to 75 miles. (For the 
  record, on 12-Sep-09, she did the full 100 miles - an amazing 
  achievement!)

<http://www.aidsrideforlife.org/>

  During those rides, she always had her iPhone in her seat pack, 
  turned on, but not attempting to run any special apps. When she 
  stopped to drink or have a bite to eat, she would sometimes use 
  Twitter to send me direct messages that would pop up on my iPhone 
  courtesy of Boxcar, just so I knew she hadn't suffered a breakdown, 
  injury, or accident.

  But she didn't stop often, and it wasn't always convenient for her 
  to pull the iPhone out, particularly if it was raining. So although 
  I didn't particularly worry, there were a few times when she was 
  quite late in returning home because she'd decided to ride further 
  than expected, or she stopped longer than she thought she would.

  On those occasions, and every so often during those long weekend 
  rides, I'd log into her MobileMe account and use Find My iPhone to, 
  well, find her iPhone. It was an easy way to check in and make sure 
  everything was all right without interrupting her with a call or 
  waiting for her to stop. Sometimes I'd even use Find My iPhone to 
  display a message on her iPhone for the next time she pulled it out. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2009-09/Tonya's-location.png>

  (The most annoying aspect of Find My iPhone is that MobileMe times 
  out your login quickly, so if you want to check an hour later, you 
  have to log in again, and the entire Web interface for that is 
  fussy. Another annoyance is that Apple prevents you from accessing 
  the Find My iPhone Web page from an iPhone, so once when we were 
  meeting at friend's wedding party 60 miles away, I couldn't find her 
  because I had only my iPhone for Internet access. It would have been 
  helpful that time too, since she took a wrong turn and needed a 
  pickup, but luckily there was sufficient cell service for a call to 
  get through.)

  Before I hear any outraged gasps - how could I invade Tonya's 
  privacy in this way! - let's be clear: she explicitly asked me to 
  check up on her with Find My iPhone and made sure I knew her 
  MobileMe password so I could log in to her account to do so. We're 
  happily married and while we don't go poking into each other's 
  computers on a regular basis, we're both entirely fine with the fact 
  that the other should have full access to everything, just in case. 
  I'd hope that's more the norm than the exception among married 
  couples.

  Tonya was much more comfortable biking long distances from home on 
  rural roads knowing that I would be likely to find her if she broke 
  down in an area with extremely minimal cell service, and she felt 
  less anxious about real threats like drunken target practice and 
  hotrodding pickup trucks, not to mention intangible fears like swamp 
  monsters.

  I wonder if this tension between wanting privacy and wanting certain 
  people to know your whereabouts at any arbitrary time might be 
  somewhat gender-based. As a guy, I don't often worry about making 
  sure people know where I am when I go on long runs, and I'm not 
  really afraid of anything out on the roads. But a number of the 
  female athletes I know prefer to have someone know where they are 
  when they're training alone, and if carrying an iPhone enables a 
  spouse to check in from afar, that's a good thing.

  I'd go further and suggest that Apple should open up Find My iPhone 
  slightly, so you could give select people access to it without 
  letting them into your entire MobileMe account. Of course, you'd 
  have to be able to revoke those privileges easily too, and it should 
  probably alert you whenever your location has been requested, and by 
  whom. 

  Even better, Apple could make an iPhone app for it so you could use 
  it while out and about with the people you trust. After all, if I'd 
  had to go find Tonya 30 miles from home, I wouldn't have any way of 
  determining if her location had changed from when I left the house, 
  and in a scary accident scenario, I could see wanting updated 
  location information.

  Another nice addition might be a Map My iPhone feature that would 
  display your iPhone's location at user-specified intervals, again, 
  only to those to whom you'd given access. Especially in rural 
  upstate New York, where cell service is often poor or nonexistent, 
  being able to see a last known location with a time stamp could be 
  useful.

  If you're looking for features along these lines now, AT&T does 
  offer the FamilyMap service for locating your family's phones. It 
  works with all AT&T phones, including the iPhone, though it doesn't 
  take advantage of the iPhone's GPS capabilities and is thus limited 
  to less-accurate cell tower triangulation. It costs $9.99 per month 
  to locate two phones, or $14.99 per month for five phones.

<https://familymap.wireless.att.com/finder-att-family/howWorks.htm>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10589#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10589>


$$

This is TidBITS, a free weekly technology newsletter providing timely
news, insightful analysis, and in-depth reviews to the Macintosh and
Internet communities. Feel free to forward to friends; better still,
please ask them to subscribe!

Non-profit, non-commercial publications and Web sites may reprint or
link to articles if full credit is given. Others please contact us. We
do not guarantee accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication,
product, and company names may be registered trademarks of their
companies. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.

Copyright 2009 TidBITS: Reuse governed by Creative Commons license.

Contact us at:	  <editors@tidbits.com>
TidBITS Web site: <http://www.tidbits.com/>
License terms:    <http://www.tidbits.com/terms/>
Full text search: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
Subscriptions:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/list.html>
Account help:	  <http://www.tidbits.com/about/account-help.html>





