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Filed under: iPhone

A quick look at peephole: The Twitter Photo Discovery iPhone App

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I found an interesting app today on the iTunes app store. It's a Twitter Photo viewer and discovery app. Like Twitter, it helps you discover photos in twitter trends, public timeline, friends timeline, favorites and open searches.

It's one of those apps that you can hardly put down after loading it up and it's detrimental to the health of the battery life. They have thought about how to present and navigate the photos quite well. I like they way it is organized and it's close to how twitter is organized.

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I really like the fact that I can discover photos that were tweeted by my friends that I might have missed out when I was not watching the Twitter timeline. With the search function, I can easily search for photos of an event like the #openhackday in Bangalore or the time I decided to tweet a few retro photos of mine with the hash tag #retromikef.

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The photo view is very well designed with scrollable tweets, swipe and even selectable in-tweet links. Other functions include the ability to retweet, reply, email and save the photo to the camera roll. Because it's a discovery app, it has a nice follow feature that allows you to follow anyone interesting that you might have discovered.

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It also has a filter capability that filters out retweets, replies and duplicates. Which quickly eliminate the duplicated photos that could be quite annoying sometimes. However I must warn that by filtering retweets, you might miss out on discovering some new photos as your friends will be retweeting other twitterers.

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I only found 1 minor bug, when you @reply, the app don't indicate that you are replying to another tweet, so will might miss out on the conversation view because it does not reference the previous tweet. In fact when reply a tweet, the title of the app shows retweet instead.

Overall I love this app. Now i can keep track of all photos on my timeline. So the 600 or so people please don't send a pic or twitpic all at once ok?

A video review will be updates on matechulous.com later

 

SyncML is so underrated

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SyncML or XML for sync is an have been fairly important to me. It has in many occasions saved a lot of time trying to retrieve and update my contacts on all my devices.

I recently lost my phone and i had no trouble getting another phone up and running quickly as most phones supports SyncML by default. A quick configuration and all my contacts are synced again with all my contacts. This was also particularly useful when I bought the new iPhone 3GS and syncing contacts on both the iPhone was again seamless as all the contacts are availble on the cloud. You've got to love cloud services.

This is something I have been using for years. SyncML is seen as an insurance to me at the moment and it's value is only realized in the situations I have just described. Unlike insurance, services like ZYB.com doesn't really have a business model. I have yet to see it get monetized. I really wish services like these are kept around. There are other ways to keep your contacts in sync and google provides another way but for now it doesn't support all phones.

SyncML is the only non propriatary way for now. I have yet to check out soocial.com. They might have a solution. Will update soon. So for now you can check out my previous post on ZYB.com here - http://mikefoong.posterous.com/review-zybcom-mobile-sync and let me know how you keep your contacts synced and backup. Leave me your feedback

Review: zyb.com - mobile sync

zyb logozyb.com started off as a internet sync provider that allows you to sync your contacts and calendar. It also provides a SMS backup service. All these for free.

There are quite a few Online Sync Providers that have more features than zyb. There are also commercial paid services for online sync as well. However I find zyb to have the most potential and as the name suggests, very web 2.0ish. The new refreshed zyb integrates with other social networks like facebook and twitter. zyb itself also incorporated some basic social features like status updates.

zyb uses a platform independent synchronisation standard called SyncML(Synchronisation Markup Language). What makes this great is that it is widely accepted as an open standard and is currently implemented in phones that dates as far back as 2004 in my own experience. Which means, it does not matter what phone you use, you can always sync between them. It makes switching phones and keeping devices in-sync pretty much easier. For a list of phones that supports SyncML click here or go to https://zyb.com/info/help?pagemode=phones. It also shows you the phones that are supported by zyb.

I have been using zyb as my events/calendar and contacts synchronization platform for over 5 years now and in that 5 years, i have used 5 mobile phones, 2 of my phones had water damage and my latest phone is the Apple iPhone 3G. I moved from a Nokia to a Motorolla Razr, to a Sony Ericsson w880 to a Sony Ericsson w890 and currently using the Apple iPhone 3G. I used zyb to retrieve the contacts on the internet when my phone had water damage. When I got a new phone, after configuring 3G services and the Sync settings, i was able to sync my contacts and calendars over the air. It saved me a lot of trouble of waiting to get back from the mobile phone retail shop to my pc, export my contacts (if I am using a different brand of phone), re-import them, sync with my phone and check for duplicates and other mis-matched information. Using zyb, I could easily get my new phone fully operational in 10 minutes. You can imagine the possibilities.

The web interface is quite easy to use and it has all the essential contact management features. You can edit multiple contacts and merge them. While merging, you can choose which information to retain and which to discard. It has quite a granular control on the information within the contact. This helps when you switch phones and the way they retain information is different. One of the feature which i use quite often is the “Merge Duplicates” feature. It finds related contacts for you through zyb’s algorithms. It is quite smart as it not only find matching contact information but also some fuzzy logic to determine if one contact can be related to another because of similar sounding names. This became even more useful when you import contacts from Facebook, Gmail, mySpace and a host of other social networks.

The social network import feature is unique, new and exciting. zyb figured out a way to merge your social network with your phone contacts. That is why I said this has the best potential to be the single source of contact management for any device. I am sure there are equally number of reasons why you don’t want to do that  (like what if your facebook has 4000 people – A little more indepth post on that later – zyb does not sync all the information) but for me, zyb makes the connection for me, from the name to the contact information, emails and etc. At least i can now fully utilize all the fields in the contact page of my phone :) . With the facebook integration, it even imports the profile pictures, unfortunately it does not sync to my iPhone 3G yet, i hope it will someday. I have not tested if the pictures get sync’ed on the other phones. If you care to donate your phones, I will try :)

I started this post a day earlier but needed to refresh the features in zyb, I ended up importing facebook and gmail contacts, merging them and then cleaning them up the whole night. Also found out that a new iPhone app was released for zyb. So ended up refreshing contact information on my iPhone 3G.

So by now I can hear you guys and gals screaming “What about security/privacy/etc?. zyb promises not to use your contact or sell them without your knowledge, consent or permission yadda yadda yadda. So does Google. So far I have not had an incident with zyb but there is no gurantee. Even secure pentagon laptops can be hacked into and so can Google. So if you are really paranoid, quick surf away. :)

Here is a run down of the features and why I like it:

  1. Over the Air Sync – You need to have WiFi, EDGE, GPRS or 3G services to do that.
  2. Open Synchronisation standard – Which means it support most phones today
  3. Imports Contacts including facebook, GMail, mySpace and a host of other social networks
  4. Imports Calendars including Google Calendar, Outlook and Apple iCal (using Google Calendar/Outlook/iCal sync app – yeah its a workaround but it works)
  5. Contact Management – Granular editing features
  6. Contact Merging – Finds duplicates and lets you edit them before merging
  7. Contact Groups
  8. SMS backup – Just send important SMSes to a phone number provided. It’s intelligent enough to know its from you and store it for you and from the SMS was from whom. It can match the senders information from your contacts
  9. MMS Backup? or Picture Upload? I am not sure but you can send an MMS to zyb and it can store only the picture or the entire MMS. Sorry iPhone 3G don’t have MMS yet. Again if you would like to donate your phone… :)
  10. Multiple Calendar Support – Usually your phone only supports one.
  11. For non-iPhone users, they have a zyb phonebook app. Looks quite social with maps, status updates and contact updates. Supports Nokia and Sony Ericsson and probably more. Anyone can borrow me a phone?
  12. Twitter integration :)

Here is what I think they can improve on and my personal wish list:

  1. Sync and not import from Social Networks – From time to time you have to log on to zyb web to import your new contacts. It does not provide a sync feature. Maybe that is how they keep you coming back to the web.
  2. Sync and not import from Calendars. Same rant in point 1
  3. MMS backup
  4. Support for multiple mobiles. This was a feature before where if you own more than 1 mobile service or different lines, you could list it in zyb, its now a single phone number only
  5. Does not yet support Apple iPhone Calendar. This is more Apple, it is because they have not open up to the idea yet. But I do wish I can directly sync it instead of doing a workaround
  6. Expand on the list of contact that can be imported or synchronised

Overall, this is a great web service to have on your cloud computing belt.  I would reccommend it to anyone who would want to keep their contacts in sync, who changes their contacts often and have tons of social networks to keep in sync (for now Facebook, GMail and mySpace – Ok GMail is mail contacts)

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