Tag: iPhone

Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see

Runkeeper and more let this man run solo
Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 0

When Simon Wheatcroft says to his wife that he is going for a run, it’s not the kind of run that you or I would take lightly. Blind by the age of 17, the 29-year-old student who classes himself an ultra-runner, trains solo with only the help of his iPhone to guide him, but how? Pocket-lint went to Doncaster, where he lives, to run with Wheatcroft to find out how he uses his iPhone to see.

Wheatcroft is able to achieve this feat by using Runkeeper, a popular iPhone running app that lets him gauge where he is on his route. The app itself isn’t designed specifically for blind people, but has a feature that allows runners to set it to give you pace details every minute. Wheatcroft uses that feature combined with sensory clues in the camber of the path to instantly determine where on the route he is without anyone’s help.

“And here we are at the first turn,” says Wheatcroft confirming what we already know at the point of our first turn about a mile into the run. Considering he can only just about make out shadows, we are impressed. We turn the corner and carry on at a pace. Wheatcroft explains that he uses a number of clues to plot his course learning through practice where and where not to run.?On our outing with him and it’s clear that he doesn’t need any help, even though he can’t see where he’s going.

Wheatcroft has been running this route for over two years, but not without the odd mishap including running into road signs and falling into bushes.

He first started running on a nearby football pitch but tells us he found it too crowded with dog walkers believing that he would step out of the way – he didn’t.

“It sounded like a really safe idea,” explains the runner. “But unfortunately people didn’t realise I couldn’t see them so it became unsafe for me and them.”

When it was clear that wasn’t going to work, he moved on to a piece of disused road by Robin Hood airport in Doncaster. Three loops equalled a mile, but doing 30 laps a time soon became incredibly boring.

“Around the same time, I started using Runkeeper and its audio distance makers and I thought, ‘Maybe I can pair all the elements of the technology, learning the road and route together?’ So that’s what I did. I stepped out on to the dual carriageway and started running.”

The Runkeeper app might give him pacing details but he still has to navigate the road in front of him including cars when he comes to crossing the road – frightening we know.

That’s where the app serves another function too, allowing his wife and friends to track him via the Runkeeper Live service. A subscription based add-on to the app, it means anyone can track where our athlete is running in real-time. Handy, Wheatcroft admits, if people are worried about him.

But it’s not just about using Runkeeper. Wheatcroft uses the iPhone, iPad, and iMac in his daily life too allowing him to complete tasks that most of us take for granted.

“I love that the accessibility tools are the same across the entire line of the hardware. So, something that I’ve learnt on my iPad translates to the iPhone,” says Wheatcroft and, ultimately, that means less for him to learn.

A self-confessed Apple fan, Siri, Apple’s personal assistant feature on the iPhone and iPad is also a favourite. It helps him when it comes to writing and reading his emails, although Wheatcroft admits to it not really of much use when it has to read out messages from friends that can’t spell.

“Siri is great because there have been a few occasions where something has gone wrong on a run and I wanted to quickly call my wife, I was able to do that. It meant I wasn’t panicking trying to search through the phone book to find the number. I understand why it can be seen as very gimmicky. For most people it might make a tiny difference in everyday use, in my situation it makes a huge difference.”

Other iPhone features utilised include Where’s my iPhone; not to find his phone, mind you, but for people to find him.

On the iPhone there are other apps that he and his friends use to help them turn the iPhone from a phone into a useful seeing tool.

Apps include a lux meter to work out if the lights in the room are on or off, or a colour-identifying app (color identifier) that lets his blind friends know what colour clothes they are wearing – for the record Wheatcroft says he doesn’t care what colour his t-shirt is.?

On the Mac, Wheatcroft uses Apple’s built-in contrast tool to help him see things on screen. The feature turns black to white and means that if a website or an application uses contrasting colours already, he can just about see it. If the site uses muted shades, it’s no good.

“I used to use Facebook a lot, but they’ve broken voice over with it, which is really frustrating,” Wheatcroft remarks before pointing out that the social networks’ constant urge to change the user interfaces mean he can’t learn where features are on their apps are either.

To help him find the mouse he uses Mouse Expose, originally designed as a presentation aid to show where on the screen the mouse pointer is for audiences watching but Wheatcroft has adapted it to suit his needs.

But it’s not Apple devices that gives Wheatcroft a sense of freedom from a life that he admits can be “very boring” at times.

Another gadget that gives Wheatcroft freedom is his Nordic treadmill with iFit.

Connected to his Wi-Fi network and managed by an accompanying website, our runner is able to load pre-programmed running routes from around the world into the treadmill to then be able to run in real-life with the treadmill replicating the incline of the chosen route, so it feels like you are actually running up that tough hill, for example.

When we visited, the ultra-marathon runner – who incidentally runs between 50 – 70 miles a week – was doing hill training in San Francisco. The system can even be plugged into a monitor so you get a Street View of the route as well, not that he needs it, Wheatcroft jokes.

The next race? A marathon sandwich on 27 May in Sheffield.

The race will see Wheatcroft run a 13 mile half-marathon, followed by a full marathon, followed by another half-marathon all back to back all for charity.

For this race, he will have a guide but still plans to use the Runkeeper app to track his performance.

Two and half miles into our run and we come to the airport. Wheatcroft knows exactly where we are.

“I’ve run around 2000 miles on this piece of road,” he tell us. You can see the memories of all those miles filling his mind. The endless loops that eventually became boring enough to push him onto the road. We stop and chat. Chat about his studies – he is doing psychology – about how he wants to complete his degree and then help other people in similar situations, about a life beyond being just another blind man with a guide dog – he is just about to get his first dog but has been told he isn’t allowed to take it running.?

Wheatcroft isn’t one to give up easily it seems. Some photos of where it all began done, we get back on the road. We’ve still another four miles to go.

We carry on talking, running at a fairly brisk pace of around 9-minute miles – a speed even Wheatcroft is pleasantly surprised by.

So how does the blind community take to his efforts?

“It shows that anything is possible,” says Wheatcroft. “And some don’t like that.”

As we near the end of our run, we both go silent, finishing off the long straight final mile towards the end. The run hasn’t been the most picturesque. Yes, there are some green fields to look at and the airport that looms up in the distance getting ever closer gives you a midway focus but, for Wheatcroft, that doesn’t matter. This is his little bit of escapism, his feeling “normal” as he puts it.

Do you ever get the urge to just keep going, we ask? The response from such an impulsive man is perhaps to be expected.

“I did once,” Wheatcroft starts to explain before telling us how he wondered whether he could read the road as he ran it. Half a mile later and he quickly realised that it wasn’t such a good idea. He didn’t have Siri or Where’s my iPhone at that point and, without a way of contacting for support, realised that he was very much alone on a road with no help at all.

Luckily, he was able to make it back to where he started, and now realises the dangers that he takes every time he puts his trainers on and steps out for a run on his own more than ever before.

With many more races planned, Wheatcroft’s ultimate goal is to be the fastest blind man to finish Badwater?-?a 135-mile non-stop race from Death Valley to Mt. Whitney, in California, in temperatures up to 55 degrees Celsius.

For us, our run is over. Runkeeper tells us we’ve done six miles in just under an hour. We’ve stopped and chatted, snapped a few photos, and Wheatcroft is happy with the time.

As we cool down, we ask him what gadget he wants most of all that he doesn’t currently have.

“A driverless car,” is the response; not so he can be lazy and never have to run again but so he can be driven to the next race without having to bother his friends and family.

Tags:
Sports Fitness RunKeeper Apple Phones iPhone Interviews Features

Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 0 
Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 1 
Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 2 
Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 3 
Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 4 
Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 5 
Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see  . Sports Fitness, RunKeeper, Apple, Phones, iPhone, Interviews, Features 6 

Running blind: How Simon Wheatcroft uses his iPhone to see originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Tue, 22 May 2012 10:08:24 +0100

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APP OF THE DAY: Tom Daley Dive 2012 review (iPad / iPhone / iPod touch)

Splooosh!
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch

Yep, after all the shouting, the London 2012 Olympic Games are almost upon us. The thought will have some running for the hills, others frothing with excitement, and it is the latter that app developers are hoping to cater to with a swarm of applications, practical, whimsical and playable.

Today’s Pocket-lint App of the Day is from the playable gaming camp, but features no less than Team GB poster boy and the youngest person to have represented his country at an Olympics since 1960. It is, of course…

Tom Daley Dive 2012

Format
iPad (version tested), iPhone, iPod touch
Price
Free (+69p in-app purchase to unlock more dives)
Where
iTunes

There’s one thing you can absolutely guarantee every two years, summer and winter alternating, and that is that there will be a host of videogames that feature some form of Olympics-themed sporting events. Ever since Track and Field back in 1983, there have been button mashers and joystick wagglers that share the same gameplay DNA.

However, while Tom Daley Dive 2012 shares some of the play mechanics of such titles, it delves far deeper into the teenager’s own sport, diving, than any before it.

The game has been developed by the London-based Chelsea Apps Factory which has previously focused on enterprise applications, so comes at it from a unique angle. Its experience outside of the games industry is certainly apparent in this particular app’s presentation, and there’s plenty of content and features to explore.

Core gameplay is a gesture-controlled diving simulation, where strokes of the finger equate segments of a dive, successful or otherwise, but splashing down into the water isn’t the only goal. To begin with, most of the individual dives in the game are locked, with well-received and executed ones needed to make others available.

There’s a tutorial to help you learn the basics, and each dive can be viewed beforehand with the virtual Tom showing you the perfect positioning and timings needed. A multitude of camera angles are on offer too, so if the timing is hard to get from one viewpoint, you can always switch to another to see if that helps.

The practice/qualification levels allow you to take on individual dives in order to unlock others. And, when you’ve opened up enough of them you get the chance to compete in championship mode too, with new locations to compete in: Beijing, Barcelona and London.

Photos of Tom Daley can also be unlocked through completing different achievements, and the whole app?links up to Game Center for you to log your scores.

Tom Daley Dive 2012 is free to download, and is a universal app, so runs on iPad, iPhone and iPod touch. Not all the dives are available in the free version, however, and to access them all, you’ll have to pay 69p as an in-app purchase (which pops up when you try to perform a paywalled dive). This is extremely cheap though, and at least by that point you’ll know whether you liked the game or not.

We certainly do.

Tags:
Apps iPad apps iPhone apps iPod Touch apps App of the day

Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch
Tom Daley Dive 2012 - iPad, iPhone, iPod touch

APP OF THE DAY: Tom Daley Dive 2012 review (iPad / iPhone / iPod touch) originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Fri, 18 May 2012 18:00:00 +0100

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APP OF THE DAY: ubiCabs review (Android & iPhone)

Minicab?
ubicabs

Travel apps are all the rage, especially when it comes to getting around in the Big Smoke. There are bus checkers and train finders coming out of our app store ears, but the most recent trend has been for getting about in the privacy of a car hired just for you. Yes, we all know about the executive car app for Addison Lee, we very recently met the Hackney Carriage end of the equation with GetTaxi, but today it’s all about minicabs.

ubiCabs

Platform
Android, iOS, browser

Price
Free

Where
iTunes/Play/web

If there’s one thing that ex-Googler Jay Patel and his co-founders at ubiCabs hate, it’s inefficiencies. Minicabs are stationed by a local controller and, when you hire one, it’s either going to pick you up from, or take you to, an area where it’s not going to be able to get another fare. Worse still, in cities like London, the transport agency forbids minicabs getting customers off the streets, so the drivers and the companies that dispatch them end up having to pay for the petrol of one leg of the journey on their own, ie, without a passenger in the car.

That’s where ubiCabs comes in, according to Patel. The service acts as a booking agent for as many minicab firms as it can get. The idea is that customers then request taxis through either an Android or iPhone app, or by using a web interface. The ubiCabs system will then instantly search and access all the minicab controller information to assign the nearest, available and – most importantly – the cheapest car for your needs.

The app itself is fairly familiar to the others we’ve seen. As with most of these systems, ubiCabs tracks your position by GPS or you can add your pick-up point manually. The selection of what kind of car, how much luggage you have and how many passengers is nicely handled, as well as the way you can track your cab’s journey to you on a live map. So, no more waiting around and wondering.

While the main idea behind it all is obviously to get taxis at your convenience without having to pay Black Cab prices. One would also hope that both the added petrol efficiency and the behind-the-scenes price bidding system might result in minicab costs going down. Sadly, this doesn’t yet seem to be the case with all the journeys we’ve been quoted so far being pretty much what we’d expect to pay normally.

Still, with the added convenience on top, it’s well worth a try. Sure, it’s not much different from picking up the phone if you’re looking to get from your home to a night out, but it’s just the answer for those tedious queues when you’re on your way back from the middle of town.

At the moment, ubiCabs covers just London within the M25 but, so long as it can stay ahead of the competition, expect to see the service rolling out to a town near you soon.

Tags:
Apps Cars and GPS iPhone apps Android apps App of the day Ubicabs GetTaxi

ubicabs 
ubicabs 
ubicabs 
ubicabs 

APP OF THE DAY: ubiCabs review (Android & iPhone) originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Thu, 17 May 2012 18:21:00 +0100

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APP OF THE DAY: Strava cycling review (iPhone)

Get fit
APP OF THE DAY: Strava cycling review (iPhone). Apps, App of the day, iPhone, Apple 0

Sometimes free apps can be better than their paid-for equivalents. The world of fitness on the iPhone is undated with all sorts of accelerometer and GPS-integrated applications designed to help you lose the pounds. Problem is, the majority of them cost.?

Strava cycling is different, it offers a comprehensive smartphone based aid for the hardcore cyclist, be they road, off-road or indoors.

Strava Cycling

Format
iPhone
Price
Free
Where
iTunes

First up you are going to want to sign up with Strava. We opted for the direct Facebook linkage approach, which sped up the process no end. Either way it costs nothing. From there you are sent straight to the app’s home screen, which works like most iOS apps in that it has a menu selection laid across the bottom.?

You can opt for a new ride, which will record just your timing, speed and distance. It can be paused at any time and, once finished, will build up a big set of details on your ride. A large map view of the exact route you took is recorded, as well as things such as average speed and elevation. A full-screen map of the exact route is also obtainable and integrates itself with Google Maps on iOS.?

A particularly nice touch is a sort of Xbox-style achievements list. Things like best times for individual segments will show you when you do your quickest section. You can even compare your times with others who have done the same route.?

Adding even more value are the built-in routes. The explore option will show you different cycle routes based on your location, even listing things such as elevation and distance. On top of all this, a global stats page with all your running and cycling efforts overall is kept constantly updated.?

A lot to get stuck into with Strava and especially given it’s free. Serious cyclists in particular will find it hugely useful as it is a very comprehensive training aid.?

Tags:
Apps App of the day iPhone Apple

APP OF THE DAY: Strava cycling review (iPhone) originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Wed, 16 May 2012 18:01:00 +0100

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Apple’s next iPhone to house bigger screen to compete with rival smartphones

At least 4-inches
iPhone 5 to house bigger screen

According to reports, Apple’s next-generation iPhone will have a screen that measures at least 4-inches as it looks to compete with rival flagship phones.

Apple has been rumoured to be considering increasing its display size since the iPhone 4S arrived with a conservative 3.5-inches, the same dimensions as all previous models.

However, the Wall Street Journal is reporting that the manufacturer has already begun ordering larger screens from its Asian suppliers.

The exact size of these displays is unknown but are said to be “at least 4 inches diagonally”.

With the likes of the Samsung Galaxy S III (4.8-inch), HTC One X (4.7-inches) and the LG Optimus 4X HD (4.7-inches) all sporting larger displays than the iPhone 4S, Apple looks set to rethink its approach.

It’s not just the iPhone’s dimensions that Apple’s said to be examining. Speculation that we could be seeing a 7-inch iPad this October gathered momentum as the Cupertino company looks to monopolise the tablet market.

Read

Tags:
Phones Apple iPhone 5 iPhone 4S Screens Displays

iPhone 5 to house bigger screen 

Apple’s next iPhone to house bigger screen to compete with rival smartphones originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Wed, 16 May 2012 15:12:59 +0100

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