Pogo Sketch and Autograph From Ten One Design


One of the coolest booths at Macworld was Ten One Design. Two of their products are Pogo Sketch and Autograph. Pogo Sketch is a stylus that works on capacitive touch screens. It can control the cursor and do what your finger would typically do. It can be used to documents with the Autograph application also sold by Ten One Design
The Pogo Sketch
It's probably no more than a stick with a piece of foam attached to it, but a pencil is just a piece of wood with a piece of lead in it. It's a super simple concept, but works brilliantly. It works on: Zune HD; Motorola Droid; iPod Touch; iPhone 3G(S); Macbook (Air and Pro included); and Blackberry Storm. It's available now for $14.95 for silver and $11.96 for hot pink.
Autograph
Autograph is a program that makes your touch pad a signing surface. It works great. You can change the writing thickness, output format - .png or .pdf and you can change the color. It doesn't do much but for the price of $6.95, it doesn't really need to.
All in all I ended up buying both of them and using them together. I paid $16.95 for both because of a show special, but I would buy them for $25. That being said, I have heard some critiques about the stylus namely the fact that it can wear out easily. I have not had that happen yet so I don't know, but if it does, I'll be sure to update this review. I think they are both great products and serve their purpose quite well. I got to use the pen on Daniel Brusilovsky's Square and it worked great. Using autograph has solved the problem of me signing electronic documents and is a cheap solution compared to the cost of a Bamboo writing pad. It doesn't have all the functionality, but who cares for less than a sixth of the price.
Disclaimer: I have not been influenced in any way shape or form by Ten One Design or any related companies. The opinions stated here are purely my own. Facts cited are found from the Ten One Design website and are true as far as I know at the publishing of this post.

iPad Event – Macworld 2010
12:50pm:
1:00pm:Lights are going down. Word is that there will be no iPad here. We'll see soon enough.
1:03pm: Apparently whoever got a greeen beach ball gets a free iPad.
1:05pm: Jason Snell is on stage with Dan Morenstien, Ted Landow, Ryan Block, and Andy Ihnatko
1:08pm: Everyone has spent at least 20 minutes with the iPad. They are talking about the upside and downside of a 4:3 display.
1:09pm: Andy's first impression is the supurb build quality.
1:10pm: They are making fun of the cardboard cutouts. "they are not event eInk, just Ink."
1:11pm: Bezel should not be a problem according to Jason, Ryan says doesn't think that a bezel is important. Andy says that we should all get some 3M gripper tape to hold on to the pad.
1:13pm: Bezel is not noticeable after the first few uses.
1:15pm: They are discussing the closed nature of the iPad store. Ted is using the example of him using a hypothetical toaster oven and being required to use only buy things from Cuisinart store that work with the toaster, and everything that it's supposed to do works really well, but it doesn't allow the use of toasting anything else, but toast. That toast is the best toast ever and the toaster looks great, but it doesn't do poptarts or anything else. He keeps the toaster.
1:21pm: Andy just compared Steve Jobs to Dr. Doom. "Welcome to this week in Fantastic Four" - Jason
1:24pm: Dan is making the point of having a switch for unapproved apps to work on the i-devices. Allowing all apps, but not supporting anything that isn't from the App Store. Allowing people the option of using the open store, but when the go into the store and say it doesn't work, they flip the switch and all the non-app store apps break. Andy agrees.
1:27pm: Ted - "Even Steve [Jobs] couldn't think of everything the iPhone does today."
1;29pm: Dan - The iPad should be something that everyone uses different.
1:30pm: Andy brings up the fact that at Apple events the furniture is set to a specific hight, chairs are made at an angle so that you get a certain view of the device and Steve. Jason adds that at the iPad event the platforms that the iPad was on high enough that you couldn't look down and type. Also that an Apple employee was watching each of the iPads and if that iPad disappeared so would the employee, permanently.
1:33pm: Dan brings up the fact that the books aspect still isn't ideal because you still can't lend or give books away. We still go to libraries a lot to get books.
1:35pm: Andy brings up EPub, the technology that is in the iPad for books, is being used now by publishers for libraries and that you can lend a book out and set them to expire in seven days when that license reverts back to the library.
1:38pm: The iPad having a centralized store for books is great because right off the bat you can get a book. Today, we need to download all different apps Kindle, other e reader programs. Of course there will still be companies like the New York Times that spend $100,000 to build an app, but most companies can just sell their books on the store. What will periodicals do - Apple can really change the way we read magazines on electronic devices.
1:42pm: The iBook isn't going to be the biggest delivery device for periodicals or comics, it will be built on WebKit - Andy.
1:44pm: Jason makes the point that people are not going to want to do a separate app for each periodical and publishers won't have the resources to do. Right now the Kindle takes an XML feed and displays it without a custom app.
1:47pm: Ryan "I really don't want to read a book on a iPad. All the things that make the iPad great, the vibrant, bright screen make it hard to read for a long time."
1:49pm: Ted "$500 is not a magical price point, there will be cheaper models"
1:50pm: Dan "There will still be people who buy the Kindle and everything else." - The iPad isn't going to destroy the other markets.
1:51pm: Jason "I say no when Amazon wants to open up the Kindle API. It really good as an eReader and it doesn't need to do anymore."
1;53pm: Last ten minutes - Talking about the future.
1:54pm: Dan - In ten years, kids will laugh at us who grew up with the keyboard and mouse. They will naturally just pick up a device and use the touch gestures.
1:55pm: Jason "Is there a class of laptop that people just buy because they can't do email on a touch device?"
1:57pm: Consensus - Yes, the iPad can serve as a focal remote control that you just pick up around the house to do simple tasks, control the thermostat, lights, media, email, just lying around the house. The iPad is launching with the App Store and is based around it. The iPhone didn't get the App Store until a year after being released.
1:58pm: Andy brings up the Microsoft tablet, that they are basically desktop computers with the finger replacing the mouse and that's why it's never been successful. Starwars wasn't the first science fiction movie, but it was the first to really put everything together and hit it out of the ball park. The iPad will bing the kind of credibility of tablets and everyone will buy one in 2011.
2:02pm: Jason - What is your biggest unanswered question?
Ted: 4.0 OS for iPad, Printing.
Dan: Can I used it as a phone. (laugh) about about a camera? iPhone OS 4.0 what will make it really look different from the iPhone OS wise.
Ryan: It feels empty UI wise, how will it look more complete. Multitasking. It's gotta happen eventually how will they do it?
Andy: How easy will it be to get stuff on the iBook Store? Will it be like the App Store or the iTunes Store? If they make it open and easy that unless you specifically break a rule, it will be great if not, well then it's going to be just a few well funded guys.
2:07pm: Thanks everyone for reading, No Q and A.
Macworld 2010
Just got here at Macworld. Thought I'd throw up a quick post.
Update (11:04pm February 11, 2010): The vibe this year is very different from years past. All fallout from Apple dropping out and Microsoft having one of the biggest booths; what has happened to the world? This year there was just one expo hall versus two during the last few years. Many big manufacturers and companies were missing and even many vendors and booksellers were absent. My first impression was the conference was dead, but after walking around I realized that although it isn't 20% of what it used to be, there is still a place that it can carve out for itself as a place for consumers to interact with iphone and apple developers. That being said, I did find some interesting stuff that I'll write up later.
Update (3:46pm February 12, 2010): I've decided to write individual posts for each of the products that I really liked so check them out.
Lessons Learned From Youthful Transgressions
This is in response to the TechCrunch article: An Apology To Our Readers. If you haven't read it, I suggest that you read it. I've only quoted a bit of it below, and it'll make much more sense if you read the article in its entirety.
On Monday evening I received a phone call from someone I trust who told me that one of our interns had asked for compensation in exchange for a blog post. Specifically, this intern had allegedly asked for a Macbook Air in exchange for a post about a startup.
After an investigation we determined that the allegation was true. In fact, on at least one other occasion this intern was almost certainly given a computer in exchange for a post.
The intern in question has admitted to some of the allegations, and has denied others. We suspended this person while we were sorting through exactly what happened. When it became clear yesterday that there was no question that this person had requested, and in one case taken, compensation for a post, the intern was terminated.
First off, I am not posting the name of the person here because I do not think it's relevant to what I'm going to say. If you would like to find out, it should be pretty clear by the comments of the quoted article which can be found here. I do not know this person personally, but do know many people who are close to him/her. I'm going to break this post up into three parts: what I think about TechCrunch's actions, the behavior of the said person, and my personal opinion of the effect on teens involved in technology as a whole. I am not an ombudsman or claim to have any authority on this issue, but feel that what I have to say is relevant and would love to hear your input as well. Here I go; sorry for the long preface.
TechCrunch's actions - I believe that TechCrunch (TC) in this case has done what any credible news outlet would have done and was legally required of them. I do believe that TC has increasingly become an outlet of news that I question on it's journalistic objectivity. I have seen posts reviewing products that may or may not have been influenced by an outside source. This irks me: I have even gone as far as to poll my friends' thoughts. All in all, I do not believe in good conscience could they have kept this quiet nor could they have kept the employee. It is important that they keep their journalistic integrity and I applaud them for that. They also omitted the person's name--which I believe was a legal issue, but was what I would have done regardless.
The actions in question - It was stupid. Really, really, stupid. And If I ever do that, please shoot me first. Yet, how many of you have honestly never done a really stupid thing in your youth? None, if you haven't you haven't lived, or more likely, are lying. I think the visual picture most of you are getting are of the said person demanding a bribe--that's what was--in return for a positive review. Magazines do it all the time with their advertisers, but journalists should be unencumbered and objective. Journalists should disclose all connections with companies they review and avoid reviewing them if they can not be completely unbiased. I know that is a pretty high standard and I expect bloggers to adhere to it too. Now is a good time to say that I own shares in Apple, Fannie Mae, and Cisco--I'll post that disclosure prominently on my blog later, and on every post regarding those three companies.
The truth of the matter is that he/she is 17 years old. As a friend said, "[said person] has so much power, yet so little power:" a writer at a respected blog with a wide audience yet being the lowest on the totem pole there. I'm not sure if he came up with the idea him/herself, but it was likely a situation of him/her testing their power. I might have even been half-jokingly and he/she will regret it for a long time. I don't think it was a huge financial incentive--I can say that on several good sources. This person does not need a Macbook Air and could afford to buy many of them if they wanted.
The effect on teens and credibility of teens as a whole - I believe that this is probably the most relevant part. As a teen, I can say that many adults don't take you seriously already and after incidents like this, why should they? I truly believe that people learn more from their mistakes and failures than their successes. The person in question has had much success in the past yet might not have reached any limits and kept going. I admire that, just not in this case. I am very much a believer in what many people have told me and which is quoted on one of my favorite t-shirts:
There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there, you must go beyond them. — Bruce Lee (1940-1973)
The realist in me says that it's important to be prepared with the tools of success and those tools are gained through struggles and failures. I can only hope that this person has gained some "tools" from this experience. I hope that we can all learn from this experience and never repeat it. As my ex-theater teacher says:
"If you're going to make a mistake, be the first one to do it." - Phillip Rayher, Actor, Director, Teacher.
To all the adults out there, please don't let this one transgression affect your entire outlook on today's youth, and we won't let your continuing transgressions define you.
Thank you for reading this, and I will post an update as soon as there is a response to the article by the subject.
Justin
Update (1:40am February 5, 2010): I just read Daniel's response. I am glad that he came out with it. It shows his professionalism. It is still yet to be seen if we have learned as a whole from this experience, but I respect him for his achievements and hope that good things continue to come his way - in college and in life. As I am going through that process as well. It is very much a learning stage for him. As for the whole story, I'm not sure if we'll ever know - just like the CrunchPadJoojoo. I would love to hear everyone's opinion about this and how you think I covered the story.









