Gmail + Gtalk failures

gmail-failToday started like any other day. I woke up, got dressed and checked my email, except I couldn’t get to my email, Gmail was down.

Over the years I have shifted more and more of my computing power and storage onto the cloud through services like Gmail and Amazon S3. With this shift comes a loss of control. All control was lost today when I couldn’t get to my Gmail account. Gtalk, Googles instant messaging service, was also not working. I work with many remote employees that aren’t physically in our office. My main form of communication with them in Gtalk. With Gmail and Gtalk down, I was really at a loss. It started to make me think “What I would do if I couldn’t use Gmail anymore?”. It was a scary thought. Gmail has a death grip on my digital communication.

After about 2 hours of me mildly freaking out, Gmail and Gtalk came back online and the day was saved. It really made me consider moving back to solutions that I manage, then again that’s very counter to what I am trying to achieve these days…. becoming the ghost in the machine. I’ll save the details of that for another post.

UIPickerView – spinning multiple components

xcode

I found an interesting issues with the iPhone SDK and the UIPickerView

The didSelectRow method gets called after a users selects a new value on a picker wheel. The method knows what wheel (component) was spun and the index of the newly selected value. This works great for a picker with a single wheel. My picker had 5 wheels in it.

If I spun two components of the picker at the same time. I would only get one call to the didSelectRow method. More specifically, if I spin one component and move another component no call was received until the first component stops spinning, and so the second component move is never registered.

Long story short, I didn’t catch this problem when I submitted my app, “Ka-Ching”, to the iTunes store. As a result of not catching this, Apple rejected my app. I could argue that the iPhone SDK should have so programmatic hooks that would only allow one component to be spun at a time, or even a method to return the state of all of components in the picker.

uipickerview

Trying to figure out a solution to the problem I expanded on my idea of recording the state of all the components in the picker when the didSelectRow method was called. Realistically, by the time that didSelectRow gets processed it is possible that all 5 of the components had changed.

Looking through the SDK documentation for the UIPickerView I came across this:

- (NSInteger)selectedRowInComponent:(NSInteger)component

With this method you can determine the selected row index for any of the components in your picker. you don’t have to rely on the values passed into the didSelectRow method.

The wrong way to do it

- (void)pickerView:(UIPickerView *)thePickerView
 didSelectRow:(NSInteger)row
 inComponent:(NSInteger)component
{
	//get the value of the component that was changed
	if(component == 0)
	{
        	currency_value = [currency objectAtIndex:row];
	}
	else if(component == 1)
	{
        	hundereds_value = [hundereds objectAtIndex:row];

	}
	else if(component == 2)
	{
        	tens_value = [tens objectAtIndex:row];
	}

	else if(component == 3)
	{
        	ones_value = [ones objectAtIndex:row];
	}

	else if(component == 4)
	{
        	change_value = [cents objectAtIndex:row];
	}

	//some code here to save the values

}

The right way to do it

- (void)pickerView:(UIPickerView *)thePickerView
 didSelectRow:(NSInteger)row
 inComponent:(NSInteger)component
{

	//get the values
	NSInteger currency_NewRow = [thePickerView selectedRowInComponent:0];
	NSInteger hundereds_NewRow = [thePickerView selectedRowInComponent:1];
	NSInteger tens_NewRow = [thePickerView selectedRowInComponent:2];
	NSInteger ones_NewRow = [thePickerView selectedRowInComponent:3];
	NSInteger cents_NewRow = [thePickerView selectedRowInComponent:4];

	//some code to save the values 

}

RotoPhoto, my first iPhone app

WOW, here I am about to release my second iPhone app, and I realized that I haven’t blogged about my first iPhone app!

“RotoPhoto” is my first iPhone app. It’s a simple tool that allows you to rotate the orientation of a photo taken with the iPhone. The internal sensors of the iPhone are designed to know what direction is up at all times and auto rotate the iPhone camera for you, so no matter the angle you take the picture they are facing up. If you have owned an iPhone for an extended period of time, then you know that the iPhone can get confused when you take a picture when the camera is pointed down or up, and your picture comes out sideways. The iPhone doesnt have any built in facilities for adjusting your photos. RotoPhoto is a tool that fills that gap.

With RotoPhoto you can fix your photos orientation before sharing them with friends.

RotoPhoto is avaliable for $0.99 USD on the iTunes store.

app_store_badge_0708

You can check out http://RotoPhotoApp.com for more information

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIPvURe_AcE[/youtube]