I've created a wallpaper for my iPhone that I'm liking so much, I might as well share it. Here it is. I have no idea what it is. I guess it's some kind of rainbow laser beam, which as far as I know is a physical impossibility. But it looks kind of cool as a lock screen wallpaper (especially when an alert pops up in front of it). If you have a jailbroken iPhone and use Winterboard to customize your home screen, it also looks pretty cool as a background behind your icons. It's a good fit for me because I like the default look of the home screen, so I don't want to customize it with something too crazy. This keeps the basic appearance the same, but just adds a nice extra touch (see below).
If you like it you can click on the thumbnail above and get it in full size. If you want to post it somewhere feel free, but please link to this site, and don't sell it or do anything stupid like that, and that's fine with me.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Cycorder Tutorial For Mac Users Who Hate Terminal
I mentioned in my roundup of useful iPhone apps, the video recording app Cycorder. It requires your iPhone to be jailbroken (which I'm not going to get into, but this is the blog of the team of hackers who develop the jailbreaking software, which will have the latest software and info).
I'm going to assume that your iPhone is jailbroken and you're on a Mac (there are ways to do this on the PC, I just don't have the experience or interest to do it just for the hell of it). I am also doing this in Leopard, so the part about the Finder would look a little different in other versions of OS X.
Cydia is the primary app for downloading unauthorized software onto your jailbroken iPhone. It will appear in your list of apps once you have jailbroken. The apps you will need to download in Cydia are:
OpenSSH (so you can access your iPhone through Terminal on your Mac)
Cycorder (the app we're talking about here)
Netatalk (so we don't have to use terminal anymore)
You can go ahead and install them all at once. Only Cycorder will show up as an icon with your apps. The other two are background apps.
Cycorder will function as an app on its own, happily shooting videos and playing them back for you on the phone. If you want to move the videos off the phone, this is where the other stuff comes in. Netatalk gives your phone support for standard Apple file sharing. Once it's installed, if your iPhone is on the same wireless network as your Mac, it will show up in your Finder under "shared." (If you don't have access to a wireless router, just create a network with your Mac using the "Create network" option in the airport menu, and call it whatever you want. Then have the iPhone join the network.)
So now you see your phone in the Shared section of your Finder, and when you click on it it will probably say "Connection failed." Click the button "Connect As" in the upper-right and it will bring up a username/password window. Make the name "mobile" and the password "alpine" (the default iPhone password) and it will give you access to your files. The folder you're looking for is Mobile/Media/Videos, in there you will find the videos you took with Cycorder, in handy .mov Quicktime format.
Now you have what you want. You would be done, provided you never find yourself on the same network as someone who knows something about iPhone hacking and wants to take a look at your files. So it's a good idea to change the password for the iPhone's "Mobile" user from "alpine" to, well, anything else. Now we have to use the Terminal, just for a second.
1. Make sure your phone is on the same network as your Mac.
2. On the phone, go to settings, wifi, and then click the little ">" arrow for the network you are on to bring up details.
3. Look at the IP Address.
4. On your Mac, open Terminal
5. Type ssh mobile@[the IP address from the phone] and hit enter.
6. Terminal will probably think for a minute, then ask if you're sure you want to connect. Say yes.
7. It will then ask for the password. Type alpine and hit enter.
8. You will now be at the command prompt. Time to change the password.
Type passwd mobile and hit enter.
9. It will ask for the original password (alpine), and then for the new password, and then for the new password again to confirm. Make the password whatever you want.
10. We also need to change the password for the phone's "root" user, which is also "alpine," because the same random hacker on your network could also get in there and cause lots of trouble. The process is the same. Follow the steps again, except type "root" instead of "mobile" and change the password to whatever you want.
11. When you're done, type exit and hit enter, and close Terminal forever.
From now on when you connect to the iPhone through the Finder you will enter the name "mobile" and the password will be the new one you chose. You can check "remember this password" and never have to enter it again if you like. The important thing is that some random person who connects to your network won't know what the password is.
Enjoy!
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Next Job Teaser
One of the destinations of my next job. Details to come later. It should lead to some interesting blogging.
Incidentally, this view of the topography also pretty much sums up how the walk from my apartment to the subway feels, except without the pretty flowers and sky and stuff.
Incidentally, this view of the topography also pretty much sums up how the walk from my apartment to the subway feels, except without the pretty flowers and sky and stuff.
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
The iPhone App Store and Stage Management (and Fun)
Well I'm in music rehearsals for a NYMF show (Twilight in Manchego), so this means you get some blog posts while I sit doing mostly nothing to the soothing sounds of Chuck Cooper learning his music.
Today my topic is a roundup of what I'm using on my iPhone to make my job, and life, easier. My initial reactions can be found in this post.
Time:Calc $1.99
Some people reviewing on the app store don't seem to get this. "Why would you need a calculator to work with time? Just do it in your head." These people obviously don't understand that there are people who suck at math, or the enormous amount of time calculations a stage manager does all day long, and moreover, that there are stage managers who suck at math. This app is so amazing, I use it all the time. I've gotten pretty good in my career at calculating in 1hr 20 min blocks (the standard Equity break schedule), but for more difficult calculations, like running time down to the second (i.e. 8:05:30 - 9:21:35), there is much more room for error. Some conductors will drive themselves crazy over a few seconds variation in the running time, no need to freak everybody out with bad math when it can be done with instant accuracy on the calculator. This is of course for situations where you don't enter the run times in a report that calculates it for you. But whatevs, I don't spend my whole life on Broadway, you know, and I don't need to create a database for a show that runs 10 performances or less. This app is attractive, cheap, and works exactly how you think it should.
OmniFocus $19.99
This app is pretty expensive at $20, but I find it worth the cost. I can't afford the desktop companion, but I like keeping everything on my phone in one place anyway. It also backs up to my iDisk, which is great, since I'm often updating my firmware and reinstalling my apps because the App Store/iTunes is busted. I was looking for a simple Todo app, and found all the ones I tried suck. So I decided to go for a very not-simple app instead. I won't go into all the details, but it's location-aware (so you can see a list of tasks based on which are closest to your current location), very powerful with multiple ways to organize projects and contexts in multiple sublevels, and it's a neat and clean interface that's very finger-friendly while containing tons of information. Considering I stopped using Todos altogether with Windows Mobile because the app was such a pain, I feel my life getting a bit more organized already.
iTransNYC $4.99
Much better than the cheaper alternative, it contains a very clean subway map, on which you can tap on a station to see a list of the trains that stop there and their schedules (which are never right, but I blame that on the MTA, not on the app). It can put your current location on the map. It gives you service changes as well as current alerts, like trains skipping a station because of police activity. It can also do directions from one station to another (not from addresses, but I don't find this to be a big problem in my life), and it will tell you where you need to transfer if necessary and give you a time estimate. I have no idea if the time estimate is accurate, probably not, but again that's the MTA's problem. It's got my daily commute at 23 minutes, which is pretty damn close to my estimate of 25 mins, on a good day. But if all estimates are assumed to be on a good day, at least that gives you an idea. The best part of the app is that most of the features (including the route calculation, impressively) can be used offline, which is essential for anyone living in New York, where the majority of the time I'm looking something up on my phone I'm underground. The service advisories are cached, although you have to remember to open the app above ground and download new ones if you want them to be up to date. That other app, CitytransitNYC, looks up service advisories, but does it live, it can't show them to you once you're underground, which is close to useless if you're debating whether or not to change your travel plans en route.
Weatherbug Free
I don't trust the built-in weather app for a second -- literally I don't trust it to tell me what's going on right now, much less in an hour or tomorrow. Weatherbug is more detailed and also gives advisories on serious weather conditions. At Reagle I used it to warn me when I was about to get struck by lighting in the parking lot. This isn't exactly job related (unless you're doing outdoor theatre, in which case it might be the most important app you have), but I feel it's one of those secondary jobs of the stage manager to have an answer for everything, including whether it's going to rain on our day off.
Flashlight Free, requires jailbreak
There are a number of flashlight apps. The one I use requires the phone to be jailbroken, because it makes the screen brighter than Apple will allow the official apps to be. But if you don't want to go that route, there are some on the App Store, many free. Personally I think if you have to resort to this you have failed as a stage manager, but not as epic of a failure as if you don't have a flashlight and don't have this app.
Files $6.99
When I was looking for an app to put documents on my phone, I had three requirements: doesn't require a proprietary desktop app, displays the documents well, and has a pretty interface. This app has all three, so I'm happy. If you've got your phone on the same network as your computer, it tells you what address to put in to mount your iPhone in the Finder (I assume it works on a PC, probably not as simply). I keep a PDF of the Equity rulebook for whatever contract I'm working on, the script, calendar, schedule and contact sheet for my current show, and whatever else I need.
Wikipanion Free
An app to easily search Wikipedia without having to load the rather phone-unfriendly web page. I suppose this could be used for legitimate rehearsal research, but what I find myself using Wikipedia most for while working is looking up trivia that comes up while running a show. It can be hard to do while calling some shows, but generally you can find someone on the crew who plays on their laptop while doing their not-so-demanding job. For example when I was doing Annie this summer, during the cabinet scene Morganthau is introduced as "Acting Secretary of the Treasury." Why was he acting secretary, and what happened to the real secretary of the treasury? Wikipedia can tell you. I expect this app to make it much easier to answer these kind of burning questions when it's not practical to have a laptop backstage.
UPDATE: 1 More!
Cycorder Free, requires jailbreak
This is a video-recording app which takes very good quality video for a phone camera. It did not originally support audio in its first release, but it does now. It's free, and supported by advertising which is very subtle and non-intrusive, and very much appreciated as an alternative to the other video app which costs money (which I think is rather silly for an app that is technically not supported on the phone and could be disabled by Apple at any point in the future). The app doesn't have a built-in way to get videos off the iPhone, so it requires a little more computer knowledge to do that. I don't know much about UNIX and I'm not a fan of using the terminal to work with files, so the method I prefer is to install an app through Cydia called Netatalk, which makes your iPhone able to communicate with a Mac through standard Apple filesharing, so if the phone and Mac are on the same network, you will automatically see the phone in your Finder under "shared." From there you can log into the phone and browse to the folder where the videos are stored. Check out this post for a tutorial on how to do this.
UPDATE: 1 More!
Cycorder Free, requires jailbreak
This is a video-recording app which takes very good quality video for a phone camera. It did not originally support audio in its first release, but it does now. It's free, and supported by advertising which is very subtle and non-intrusive, and very much appreciated as an alternative to the other video app which costs money (which I think is rather silly for an app that is technically not supported on the phone and could be disabled by Apple at any point in the future). The app doesn't have a built-in way to get videos off the iPhone, so it requires a little more computer knowledge to do that. I don't know much about UNIX and I'm not a fan of using the terminal to work with files, so the method I prefer is to install an app through Cydia called Netatalk, which makes your iPhone able to communicate with a Mac through standard Apple filesharing, so if the phone and Mac are on the same network, you will automatically see the phone in your Finder under "shared." From there you can log into the phone and browse to the folder where the videos are stored. Check out this post for a tutorial on how to do this.
The Penny is Relevant Again!
This may be the only thing giving purpose to coins in the 21st Century.
Coinstar has begun offering gift certificates in place of cash receipts for coins. Doesn't sound that interesting yet, right? OK, Coinstar is now offering iTunes gift certificates for coins, AND, you don't pay any kind of fee on the amount you deposit. If you have $4.28 in coins sitting in a drawer or bowl somewhere, you get $4.28 to spend on the music or iPhone/iPod apps of your choice. This, combined with the fact that Duane Reade is now installing Coinstar machines in many of their stores, has made my app purchases for my iPhone essentially free. I even bought the one that looks like a lighter, just because I can (iLightr, it's much more realistic and interactive than the others, though I don't recommend buying it with money that didn't come from your metaphorical couch cushions).
Anyway, this development has brought me great happiness, and turned change from a nuisance into an easy way to pay for apps and music.
Coinstar has begun offering gift certificates in place of cash receipts for coins. Doesn't sound that interesting yet, right? OK, Coinstar is now offering iTunes gift certificates for coins, AND, you don't pay any kind of fee on the amount you deposit. If you have $4.28 in coins sitting in a drawer or bowl somewhere, you get $4.28 to spend on the music or iPhone/iPod apps of your choice. This, combined with the fact that Duane Reade is now installing Coinstar machines in many of their stores, has made my app purchases for my iPhone essentially free. I even bought the one that looks like a lighter, just because I can (iLightr, it's much more realistic and interactive than the others, though I don't recommend buying it with money that didn't come from your metaphorical couch cushions).
Anyway, this development has brought me great happiness, and turned change from a nuisance into an easy way to pay for apps and music.
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