Romeo & Juliet
Archive for June, 2009
Romeo & Juliet
Sunday, June 21st, 2009@doomdoomdoom where were you?
Saturday, June 20th, 2009@doomdoomdoom where were you?
Raygun Gothic Rocketship inter…
Saturday, June 20th, 2009Raygun Gothic Rocketship interior interactivity meeting.
I just ousted @doomdoomdoom as…
Saturday, June 20th, 2009I just ousted @doomdoomdoom as the mayor of Brown Sugar Kitchen on @foursquare!
pork hash! (at Brown Sugar Kit…
Saturday, June 20th, 2009pork hash! (at Brown Sugar Kitchen)
@MCFaulkes Howdy, Dill!
Thursday, June 18th, 2009@MCFaulkes Howdy, Dill!
mussels, mmm… (at Mua)
Wednesday, June 17th, 2009mussels, mmm… (at Mua)
Find My iPhone
Wednesday, June 17th, 2009Neat feature!
If you have a MobileMe account (http://www.me.com/) and turn on the feature in your iPhone’s MobileMe account preference, you can locate your phone in two ways:
1. Geophysically. The onboard GPS reports back where on the planet the phone is and displays a Google map of its proximity.
2. Sound. You can send a message to the phone from the MobileMe website that causes the phone to vibrate and play the Sonar pinging sound (a little too quiet if you ask me).
Here’s what the MobileMe interface looks like:

You can also send a signal to remotely wipe all the info on your iPhone.
@jeremycrandell To continue th…
Wednesday, June 17th, 2009@jeremycrandell To continue the update I quite iTunes and that seemed to kick it back in gear. I’m 3.0′d!
Update complete
Wednesday, June 17th, 2009The iPhone OS 3.0 update took
Before I began the update my 16GB iPhone had 3.82GB available space.
iTunes backed up my current iPhone (which I had already done manually so it was pretty quick).
iTunes contacted the iPhone activation server to be sure I had the real deal.
The activation server seemed stalled for almost 45 minutes. I gave up and told iTunes to quit via the Dock and that seemed to goose the thing into action. The ”Contacting activation server…” modal window went away immediately, the phone rebooted and a new modal window “Waiting for iPhone” took its place.
Soon that was replaced with an “Updating iPhone software…” modal window with progress bar. The actual software update and verification took about six minutes from beginning until the phone rebooted.








