Great-looking note-taking app for iPhone offered for free download

If you love old-school paper notebooks like Moleskine and use an iPhone, install Meernotes. The beautifully-designed app allows you to take down notes on your phone on an interface that mimics a paper notebook. It’s easy to use — you just tap on the screen and then type your notes.

Meernotes lets you take notes on your iPhone using an interface that mimics old-school paper notebooks. Click on photo to enlarge.

Meernotes lets you take notes on your iPhone using an interface that mimics old-school paper notebooks. Click on photo to enlarge.

Meernotes also allows you to insert photos into your notes by swiping up. You can then choose different frame designs for the photo.

The app allows you to keep several notebooks with various cover designs. Some of the designs, however, can only be used after you pay for upgrades.

Meernotes automatically synchronizes notes with your iCloud account. It also has Evernote export and Dropbox import/export capabilities.

Meernotes costs $.99 but is currently offered for free download.

The post Great-looking note-taking app for iPhone offered for free download appeared first on Leon Kilat : The Tech Experiments.

Smart makes country’s first LTE voice call, SMS

Smart Communications, Inc. conducted the country’s first long-term evolution (LTE) voice calls and SMS in Cebu last Tuesday.

PLDT-Smart Technology head Rolando Peña described the development as historic and said it was a “major step forward for Smart and the Philippine mobile industry.”

LTE is a telecommunication standard for high-speed data transfer. Being a standard for data transfer, operators need to engineer it to be able to do voice calls, which are currently handled differently.

1ST LTE OVERSEAS CALL FROM THE PHILIPPINES. Huawei Wireless Technology Head Li Zhi Chao calls a colleague at the Huawei head office in China to make the first overseas LTE call from the Philippines at the Smart office in Mabolo, Cebu City. (Photo provided by Smart Public Affairs)

1ST LTE OVERSEAS CALL FROM THE PHILIPPINES. Huawei Wireless Technology Head Li Zhi Chao calls a colleague at the Huawei head office in China to make the first overseas LTE call from the Philippines at the Smart office in Mabolo, Cebu City. (Photo provided by Smart Public Affairs)

The calls and sending of SMS were made a month after Smart launched commercial availability of its LTE services.

Last Tuesday, Smart conducted several firsts in LTE voice calling: within the Smart network, with a Sun phone and with a Globe mobile. Smart also conducted the first overseas LTE voice call when Huawei Wireless Technology Head Li Zhi Chao called from the Smart office in Cebu a colleague at the Huawei head office in China. A Smart representative also called the NTT DoCoMo office in Japan.

Data connection

Smart Technology Services Division head Mar Tamayo also placed a call from the Smart office in Cebu City to Smart Wireless Consumer Division head Noel Lorenzana in Makati City to inform him about the development.

Smart Technology Services Division manager Hans Alvarez said the network uses circuit-switched fallback to enable voice calling. With the system, data connections are not interrupted when the network handles the call by switching it over to the circuit-switched HSPA network or whatever is available to handle it.

Alvarez said LTE, being a standard for data transfer, handles data by packet-switching.

In their demonstration, Smart showed an LTE-capable phone playing a YouTube video getting a call from a regular mobile phone. When the call was taken, the YouTube video was paused. After the call, the phone was able to continue playing the video at the point where it was when the call was received. Officials said that it showed data connectivity was not cut off when the system handled the call.

Peña said this handling of voice calls over Smart LTE uses the same techniques and technologies used by telcos in the United States and Europe.

Alvarez said that in the future, they wanted the call to no longer be handed over to circuit-switching but to be treated as another data connection within the LTE network. The system, called voice over LTE or VoLTE, is being deployed in South Korea and operators worldwide are watching closely how it fares there, said Peña.

Capability

“As simple as it may sound, not all LTE operators are capable of supporting voice and text. It takes much more than just having both an LTE and a 3G network,” Peña said in a press statement issued yesterday.

“We are now in a position to offer not only high-speed data services on our LTE network, but also seamless voice and SMS services,” he said.

Tamayo said, “The objective of Smart is to provide broadband for all, whether wired or wireless and this is another step to that.”

“On top of our high-speed connectivity, the basic of voice and SMS is there. It’s completing our services on the high speed network,” Tamayo said.

Smart said the LTE data service will be made available using pocket Wi-Fi devices that will enable non-LTE phones, tablets, laptops and even “smart” appliances to access the high-speed broadband service.

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Inbox zero

IT took two long weekends but I finally got to inbox zero and that state of bliss you find yourself in after having processed all pending e-mails and seeing an empty inbox.

Like many people, I felt that I’ve lost control of my e-mail. My inbox was full of messages that needed to be replied to or dealt with. Instead of immediately acting on an e-mail by sending a short reply, I’d put off sending a response until I had the time to send a fuller e-mail. My e-mail even served as a digital filing cabinet for documents, contact details and event invitations. And that was how the messages piled up.

It was Sisyphean. I’d clear a few messages only to get so much more and by the end of each day, my inbox kept growing.

Heading to the two long weekends last month, I decided to revisit the Inbox Zero philosophy of dealing with e-mails. It was started by writer Merlin Mann of 43Folders, a blog “about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.” Mann, in turn, said he got inspiration from the getting things done philosophy espoused by David Allen.

The best resource on the topic is a video of Mann during a Google Tech Talk last July 23, 2007. That video can be accessed at the Inbox Zero website.

Mann stressed that e-mail “is just a medium” and “not where the action is.” “You don’t want to be focusing exclusively on e-mail,” he said.

Mann said the technique is to “process” e-mail and not just check. He describes processing as “more than checking and less than responding.” He said the act of processing answers the question, “so what?”

5 steps to process e-mail

He suggests five steps to take in processing e-mail: to delete or archive, delegate to somebody else, respond to very quickly (in 1 or 2 minutes), defer or do right away.

Mann also suggests finding “one place for everything” and getting things off e-mail.

In my case, however, I couldn’t find a single place for everything because of the way I work. For tasks and other notes I either transferred it to Podio, which I use with other people, or Trello, which I’m trying out by using for myself. There is no shortage of project management services that you can use and many of them free. You can try Any.DO, Asana or Astrid.

For documents, I chose to centralize on Google Drive and use an excellent browser plug-in called Attachments.me, which integrates your e-mail with cloud storage like Box, Dropbox and Google Drive and simplifies the transfer of e-mail attachments to your cloud storage.

For appointments agreed on in e-mail exchanges, I transferred everything to Google Calendar, which syncs everything to all my devices. Contact details were also transferred to Google Contacts which did the same.

E-mail followup

For e-mails that I needed to attend to on a future date, I used Followupthen, a useful free e-mail reminder service. The service is easy to use: if you need to be reminded of an email in three days, just send the email to 3days@followupthen.com and the service will send you back the email that you sent after three days. The service allows you to delete or archive messages knowing you will get a reminder later.

By using the services I listed above, I was finally able to clear my inbox, archiving most mails so that these can still be searchable if I needed to do so in the future. For that, I have to thank Gmail, which I use to manage my own domain’s e-mail.

While it is still a constant battle to keep my inbox free of messages that needed action, it is much easier. I now make it a point now to act on an e-mail as soon as I receive it. The clearing of my inbox helps me focus on messages that need to be acted on.

The tip, Mann said, is to do e-mail sprints and not constantly check your e-mail. Doing so allows you to be more productive.

“Process to zero every time you check your email. You never check your email without processing,” Mann said.

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Smart LTE now dual-frequency

SMART Communications, Inc. has made its LTE service dual-frequency by deploying its 1800 megahertz (MHz) band during the Asian Carriers’ Conference (ACC).

Smart LTE now runs on the 2100 MHz and 1800 MHz bands, said PLDT and Smart Network and IP Systems head Rolando Peña. He said Smart is the first telecommunications company in the country to deploy the service in multiple frequencies. The deployment is also consistent with the company’s operation–it offered 3G in multi-frequencies, he said.

Peña said the deployment improves the quality of the service and user experience as well as offers people choice.

“Why do we need to do that? LTE today has no standard frequency to operate in…we are giving the customers the choice. Anyway, we have the equipment, we have the capability, we have the system and we have the frequency asset. Why don’t we use it?” Peña said during an interview at the sidelines of the ACC.

Maximizing use of assets

“We are maximizing the use of our asset. Because the system has been modernized, we are now reaping the fruits, getting the value of our investments,” he said.

Smart LTE was launched nationwide last Aug. 25. LTE offers speeds of up to 100Mbps. The service now covers major areas in Metro Cebu with the deployment based on usage data. Peña said LTE can be accessed in places where there is heavy usage and demand for data connectivity like hotels and malls.

He said, however, that Smart can quickly roll out the service because of the PLDT group’s recently completed modernization program.

Starting with their LTE deployment, the company used a system called “software-defined radio” wherein a single system can be used to run different modes of communications such as 2G, 3G or LTE. Previously, specific equipment was needed for a specific mode of communication.

Peña said new deployments, in a way, is a matter of turning on a switch.

He stressed, however, that the backbone of the system is equally important.

“In the PLDT group we have the most extensive fiber optic network in the country. We are close to 60,000 kilometers of fiber optic in the ground today. And we are even bringing the fiber to the home,” Peña said. He said they are adding “thousands” to the network every week.

He said LTE adoption is fast because improvements in fiber connectivity and even home DSL connections spur people to seek the same experience in mobile.

Faster adoption

“If it took six to 10 years for 3G to become what it is now, we think with LTE it will take two to three years. It will take half the time,” he said.

Smart LTE is offered under Plan 3500 with a 10GB allocation. The system can be used through USB dongles but Peña said they will soon launch an LTE-capable phone. He said the pricing is comparable to what is being offered in the region on a per-gigabyte basis.

He said the availability of a high-speed network has a “big impact on business,” which is keenly looking into LTE.

He said that complementing the improvement in the network connectivity is the setting up of a distributed content delivery network (CDN) that will store commonly-accessed content in facilities in the country to speed up downloads and access.

Peña said that with the distributed CDN, users will be able to view content faster and the company will be able to save on connectivity costs. Peña said the facility is located in Manila but a similar system will be set up in Cebu and other places before the year ends.

He said he is also pushing for storing local content within the country to speed up downloads and improve the user experience.

“Locally-generated content should be locally stored,” he said.

Peña also said that before the year ends, consumers will be able to use their data plans within the solutions provided by both Smart and PLDT.

PLDT and Smart both have Wi-Fi zones with corresponding subscription plans.

“Within the year all of those hotspots can be used by our Smart customers with data plans and PLDT users with DSL plans,” he said.

Peña said the bundles will be simplified into Home, Mobility and Hotspot under one account.

“Broadband connectivity can be within any of the three means. The theme is providing broadband connectivity to anyone, anywhere in phones, at home, in the office, at leisure, in the mall, anywhere,” he said.

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Going mobile

In the recent Olympics, smartphones and tablets took a more central role in providing people more information about the games, Google said in a report.

Google said there were times when more searches were “performed on tablets and smartphones than on computers.”

The search giant said they’ve been seeing “large spikes in global mobile search volume” in major sporting events and the trend continued with Olympics.

And one key usage of smartphones and tablets spotted by Google is to serve as second screen to get information on what they were seeing on another screen – the television.

“We’ve crunched some data from the past week, and the opening ceremony is a great illustration of how mobile devices have taken center stage. Fans turned to their smartphones and tablets to find more information about the incredible feats and celebrities that they saw on screen,” Google said.

The company cited how searches, many on smartphones and tablets, for Paul McCartney surged when he performed “Hey Jude” during the opening ceremonies.

And the surge was a global phenomenon with the US recording 47 percent as combined mobile search share; Japan, 55 percent; Australia, 45 percent; United Kingdom, 46 percent; and South Korea, 36 percent.

A more industry-specific study by Google provides a peek into smartphone and tablet use in travel. The Google study “2012 Traveler” projected a 15 percent to 25 percent growth in searches related to travel. Of the growth projection, desktops are expected to contribute 0 percent; smartphones, 68 percent; and tablets, 180 percent.

The study also found increasing use of mobile for travel information at 38 percent for leisure travelers, which is up from 31 percent in 2011, and 57 percent for business travelers, up from 56 percent in 2011.

The shift to mobile is truly underway. And that shift will have ramifications across industries.

In the Philippines, that shift is speeding up. We are, after all, known as a country enamored with mobile phones that once took pride in being the text messaging capital of the world. Another Google report, the “Global Business Map,” shows a 1,211 percent growth in mobile search queries in the Philippines. That number is more than double the growth in desktop queries, which stood at 546 percent.

The shift to mobile will bring with it new ways to consume information. Already, there have been major changes in consumption of news because of tablets, smartphones and reading apps such as Pulse, Flipboard, Google Currents and Zite and services like Readability and Pocket (formerly Read It Later).

I think the shift to mobile, along with availability of next generation high-speed networks like LTE or long term evolution, will make possible the availability of a layer of information on real life through such technologies as QR or quick response codes, augmented reality and near-field communication or NFC.

That is for the future. But even now, the phone is becoming our main personal computer that will increasingly allow us to access data whenever and wherever we need it.

A personal example: When story broke last Saturday on the crash of the plane carrying Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo, I kept up with the story just on my phone, mostly through Twitter and at times through mobile browsing of news sites. Previously, I’d have opened the TV set or booted up my laptop. Not last Saturday. I found that the mobile phone had sufficed for my breaking news needs.

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