Entries Comments

Alex Mace’s Blog

Life & Web Development

Archive for March, 2010

Royal Mail Online Postage

shipment_of_failRoyal Mail’s Online Postage used be a great service. In a nutshell, it allowed you to pay for posting something online. Once you had paid, you could then print out an envelope or label and pop it in the post without having to get a book of stamps or visit the Post Office. No mess, no fuss.
For Mac users, that was the happy situation up until fairly recently, when Royal Mail “upgraded” their offering and completely broke it.

You see, when you download your label, it comes as a PDF with “SAMPLE” in large, unfriendly letters across the front of it and a small box explaining that this wouldn’t print out on the final label. Which was true, whether you were using Adobe’s official PDF viewer, Adobe Reader or Apple’s Preview, which ships with Mac OS X and doesn’t come with a load of crapware attached (Adobe Air? Acrobat.com? Fuck off Adobe). However since Royal Mail “upgraded” the service, if you print the label in Preview it also prints the unfriendly “SAMPLE” and the notice that it won’t print the word “SAMPLE”.

So you have to use Adobe Reader instead. However this doesn’t work either, as I found out. Not only does it force you to install other services that I didn’t want (Still here Adobe? FUCK OFF), but when I first launched it, it halted to install updates. That’s right, updates on software I just downloaded and installed. Then, say for example you told Royal Mail you wanted to print out a DL envelope. Well Adobe Reader can’t manage to print that out for you. Instead, it assumes that the envelope itself is A4 and scales it down to fit on the envelope. Which it then fails to print on, only managing to fit the top 25% of the label on the bottom of the envelope, rendering it useless.

So congratulations Royal Mail. You’ve taken a useful, if little known, service and rendered it useless for me. I guess I should be thankful you haven’t closed the Post Office at the end of my street.

The iPad Buying Decision

While the iPad is now available for pre-order over in the US, the date when you can do the same in the UK has not yet been announced. There are some questions to be answered: What will the UK pricing be, should you buy one and if yes, what model should you get?

Up until fairly recently, Apple were displaying the US prices on their UK site, with a note that international prices had not yet been announced. This, to me, seemed a strange move for Apple considering their UK prices have usually been substantially more than the (US price * exchange rate) + VAT. Perhaps for once they were going to actually do that, but since the initial announcement of the iPad sterling has slipped considerably against the dollar, which I think was what prompted the removal of the US pricing. They are, however, still trailing it as being available at a “unbelievable price”. Unfortunately for those of us in the UK, this is more likely to be unbelievably high than unbelievably low.

These are the current US prices:

16Gb 32Gb 64Gb
Wi-fi $499 $599 $699
Wi-fi + 3G $629 $729 $829

Current US prices in sterling at current exchange rate (£1=$1.517):

16Gb 32Gb 64Gb
Wi-fi £329 £395 £461
Wi-fi + 3G £415 £480 £546

What I expect sterling prices to be for the iPad:

16Gb 32Gb 64Gb
Wi-fi £399 £499 £599
Wi-fi + 3G £499 £599 £699

It is very much possible that they may be higher, they may be lower. I have no insider information, but on past evidence I would expect prices to be at least those I have listed. There is precedent for worse; Apple TV is available in the US at $229 (£151 at the above exchange rate) but its UK price is £223.

Anyway, regardless of that, which iPad should you buy? Let’s start by thinking about which model to go for – Wi-fi or Wi-fi + 3G (which I’ll refer to just as the 3G model after this point to prevent confusion). I personally think it is unlikely that the iPad’s main use is going to be going on the Internet while on the move, that’s what the iPhone is for. So you could make the case that you don’t need to buy the 3G model. However, the 3G version also has GPS, which to me is justification to spend the extra money on that model. The 3G chippery itself is a mere bonus. The possible applications of GPS in location-aware apps is very exciting and I wouldn’t want to be excluded from that. So get the 3G model.

Next question is how much storage should you go for? When buying a hard drive, my advice is usually to think about how much you need and double it. My 16Gb iPhone is full and only has one movie on it. The iPad is going to be a million times better for looking at photos and watching movies, which will require much more storage. Better to be able to take as much as possible with you rather than wishing you’d put movie x on rather than the selection you brought with you. So I’d go for at least 32Gb, preferably 64Gb.

Does that mean if you can’t afford the £699 top of the range 64Gb 3G model, you shouldn’t get one? No, it doesn’t. If you want one, get the one you can afford, but I’d go for the 16Gb 3G model before looking at the 32Gb Wi-fi model because it gives you more possibilities with it’s GPS. You can always swap around your content if necessary, even if it is a bit of a faff. You can’t swap the features around.

So, am I going to buy an iPad? No. Not yet anyway. At the moment the iPad doesn’t offer me enough to justify getting a device between my iPhone and MacBook Pro. It’s close, though. I suspect the mark 2 iPad will have a forward facing camera, which will make it a great device for video conferencing and all the stuff the mark 1 can do. Roll on the 2011 model.