IT Technology Services New Orleans

Category

news

Hurricane Trackers: Survival tools for iPad, iPhone and Desktops

By | Apple, Apps, Droid, Google, iPhone, Microsoft, New Orleans, news | No Comments

Here’s a list of essential Apps and websites that we recommend the next time a big storm starts heading your way, so you too can make more informed decisions about whether you stay in place or evacuate.

With Hurricane Irene veering towards the east coast of Florida and potentially making landfall this weekend in the Carolinas, you’ll want to be prepared.

NOAA National Hurricane Center

If you’re going to have ONE application or website that you use for relying on projected storm tracks, then the NOAA National Hurricane Center Website is the one you should have bookmarked on your PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone or other smartphone device. It costs you absolutely nothing and if you really want to learn about hurricanes, this is definitely the place to go.

The National Hurricane Center is the central source of data that just about every other application listed in this article uses as a data source.

The NHC website contains a massive wealth of up-to-date information. You can track and monitor the progress of every single storm in the Eastern Pacific and the Atlantic, read various types of graphical computer models and watch animated satellite and radar maps.

Unfortunately the NHC site looks like it was designed in the early 1990s — there’s no cool Web 2.0 point-and-click GUI, but all the data is there if you want it. They’ve got a PDA rendered version of the site which you could use on an iPhone or an Android device, but unless you’re the type that likes to page through raw data, it probably won’t be of much use to you.

However, the basic charts and storm projections should be enough to give you a very good idea of where the hurricane is heading and to give you up-to-date and reliable information on how its behavior might change.

StormPulse

StormPulse is a great site if you’re planning a trip on a desktop or laptop computer, as the website is Flash-based, so it won’t run on an iOS device.

Like the National Hurricane Center, the website is free and you can sign up with a free account, which will allow you to look at projected storm tracks using different computer models but it has more advanced Premium features for those that are more storm and hurricane enthusiasts or even meteorological professionals, such as moving satellite imagery loops, “Super Radar” and customizable alerts.

iHurricaneHD by HurricaneSoftware.com

iHurricaneHD is a free App for iOS devices and is distributed as a universal binary for the iPad, iPod Touch and the iPhone.

iHurricaneHD allows you to track the progress of current and past storms and uses projection data from the National Hurricane Center. Using the interface, you click on each projected location where it displays the hurricane’s estimated speed, heading and approximate distance from your location.

It also allows you to view various static satellite maps from the US Navy, GOES and METEOSAT, and provides a better interface to warning and alert information from the NHC than the NHC does with its own website.

The Application also allows you to register your email address for hurricane alerts. An in-app purchase of $1.99 removes all advertising from the program.

Hurricane/HD by KittyCode LLC

Hurricane and Hurricane HD, distributed by KittyCode for $3.99 for the iPhone/iPod Touch and iPad respectively is probably the most sophisticated of the “Apps” for iOS listed in this article. It has by far the most exploitative user interface on the iPhone and iPad and makes very good use of the multi-touch capabilities of iOS.

Like HurricaneSoftware.com’s iHurricaneHD, Hurricane/Hurricane HD makes use of data from the National Hurricane Center, but presents it in a very easy to navigate and visually pleasing way and allows you to seamlessly switch between satellite and map modes for storm tracking as well as moving radar and satellite imaging loops.

As with iHurricaneHD, this app allows you to track current as well as past storms, going back as far as even 1851 using available data. The software also provides video updates for storms that are currently in progress.

Hurricane Tracker for iPhone/iPad (iPhoneEZApps)

Our last iOS “App”, Hurricane Tracker for iOS is something of an odd-man-out, as it isn’t really a native “App” per se, even though it is sold on the App Store for $1.99. It’s actually a very clever “mashup” of various web data from the NHC and other sources that allows it to be presented in sort of a browser-wrapper on an iOS device.

That being said, any clever individual could easily make this run on their PC, Mac or their Android-based smartphone, once they know the basic URLS:

Current Storms (Smartphone Version)

Current Storms (HD/Tablet)

Moving Satellite Maps (Smartphone Version)

Moving Satellite Maps (HD/Tablet)

Tropical Outlook Page

2011 Storm Names

Saffir-Simpson Scale

I was able to make all of these pages work on my Windows and Linux-based PC provided I was running Chrome (which is WebKit-based, like the iPad’s browser) and they they will work on the Mac’s Safari as well.

I was also able to make the smartphone versions of the pages work flawlessly on my Android 2.3-based phone, my Android tablet and I suspect they might even function on the Palm Pre/TouchPad or even the latest BlackBerry 6/7 and Windows Phone devices if they are WebKit/HTML5 compatible.

The main “Current Storms” page includes a daily updated hurricane YouTube video and audio forecast that appears to be narrated by the application’s author, who is a talented storm expert. The daily YouTube video update in the page uses HTML5 video embedding, and it works fine on both Chrome and Froyo’s web browser.

I haven’t seen a native Android version of this particular web mashup yet on the Android Market, but I’d gladly pay the app developer the $1.99 for his work if I could use it on my Droid without having to switch manually between bookmarks.

Why You Should Never Buy an iPad from Sears

By | Apple, news | No Comments

This weekend Sears.com was selling an iPad 2 16GB WiFi model for $69, discounted from $744.99. If something doesn’t sound right about any of those prices it’s because the $69 price is a mistake and the $744.99 “standard price” is ridiculously high. Both prices are the reason you should never buy an iPad from Sears.

At this point, you should be damn careful before you buy anything from Sears.com, lest you accidentally purchase from a third-party seller with inflated prices and pretend discounts.

Sears.com $69 iPad Price Mistake

Shoppers who ordered the 16GB iPad 2 for $69, or the 32GB iPad 2 model for $179, have had their orders cancelled by Sears. Sears posted that, “unfortunately, yesterday one of the Marketplace third-party sellers told us that they mistakenly  posted incorrect pricing information on two Apple iPad models on the Marketplace portion of the website.” Sears has the right to cancel pricing mistakes, just like any retailer, thanks to the fine print on their websites. That incident may have upset shoppers, but the current market practices at Sears should frustrate them even more.

Sears Marketplace Makes it Easy To Trick Shoppers

The bigger issue is that Sears blends the third-party market right into the Sears results and even allows the third-party sellers to input the retail price and discount price of products. Additionally, the average shopper would be hard pressed to figure out that they are purchasing from “DamLowPrices” instead of Sears due to the way the Sears Marketplace is designed.

Right now a search for iPad 2 on Sears.com results in three overpriced search results, in the top four results. The following iPad 2 deals at Sears are listed below, along with the actual retail price.

These prices aren’t reflecting a great iPad 2 shortage: they’re just horrible prices aimed at taking more of your money. The current iPad 2 ship-time is 1 to 3 business days, which reflects the demand, and will get you an iPad pretty fast.

These practices are unfriendly to consumers and allow third-party sellers to use Sears.com to take advantage of customers. Best practices would suggest that Sears not allow vendors to create fictitious regular prices to make their sale prices look better. How else can you make a $925 iPad 16GB WiFi model sound like a good deal? The only way I know of is to make up a regular price of $1,100 so you can advertise $175 in savings.

Sears Marketplace Makes it Easy to Take Advantage of Shoppers

Unlike Amazon, where shoppers have come to expect third-party sellers, Sears is a traditional brick and mortar store, which shoppers assume translates into the online space. I know that my in-laws, who love Sears, would have had no clue they were ordering from a third-party and overpaying.

The price error shows a small issue with the third-party marketplace at Sears.com, but highlights a larger problem that exists in the form of unchecked and unclear third-party sellers and prices. Sears would be well served to create official product pricing for items like the iPad 2 so that it is clear to shoppers that they are overpaying and not purchasing directly from Sears.