Feature

How to get Kindle books for your iPhone, iPod Touch or PC

March 1, 2010  |  Apps, Eco, Feature, Tech  |  Comments

Want to get Kindle books on your iPhone/iPod Touch or PC? Here’s a hack, ok, call it a tip. This is not illegal, you still have to pay for the book. It’s just a way around the restrictions Amazon has in place to stop non-residents of the US from buying Kindle books. Let’s get to it.

What you need:
1. A PC (not on Mac yet) or an Apple iPhone/iPod Touch.
2. A credit card
3. An Amazon account. If you don’t have one, register for one. Some Amazon shopping experience will help too. Now who hasn’t shopped at Amazon.com these days?
4. A US address

1. INSTALL THE KINDLE READER SOFTWARE/APP

Installing for the PC:
Download and install the Kindle for PC software.

Installing for the iPhone/iPod Touch:
This is a little trickier. You can only download the Kindle for iPhone app from the US app store. Don’t mess with the account you have right now. Set up another app store account with a different email, a US address and don’t enter your credit card info.

If your app store is in the Malaysian app store, you can easily change that by clicking on the Malaysian flag icon at the bottom right and change it to “United States”.

Now, download Kindle for iPhone app and sync. You shouldn’t lose your information. Once you see the app on your phone, you can log out of the US app store and login to your usual one.

2. Set up your Amazon account to go shopping.

First, use your credit card to buy a gift card that you will send to yourself. The books I buy usually cost around $10-15 so I bought a $50 gift card which should get me 3-4 Kindle books. Don’t log out yet, wait for email. Once the email with the gift card claim code arrives, click on “Start shopping”. This will credit the amount into your Amazon account.

Remain logged in. Go into your account and remove all credit card information. This is what’s making Amazon stop you from getting into the Kindle store. Also change the region or country of origin to the US. If you’re asked to enter a US address, you can use the one above.

Now you’re all set. Click on “Kindle Store” and go shopping.

3. When you’re ready to buy.

Click on “Buy now with 1-click” and tell Amazon where you want the book sent – to your iPhone/iPod Touch or to your PC.

It will come with instructions on how to retrieve the book from the app on your PC / iPhone / iPod Touch.

Enjoy!

BTW, you can leave your second App Store account alone, it may come in handy in the future. I use mine to download other apps that are not available to Malaysians just so I can drool at what I can’t have.

Foursquare vs. Gowalla *ding-ding-ding-ding*

January 9, 2010  |  Feature, Tech  |  Comments

I like Gowalla but Foursquare seems to be doing more to engage me. First, Flickr integration with machine tagging, then superuser status and now Layar – the Augmented Reality app. I’m tired of updating both Gowalla and Foursquare every time. Can one win me over soon? Let’s see what both has got to offer.

I’ll admit, I haven’t been a big fan of Foursquare.

I used to like Foursquare until I found out how easy it was to game the system and check-in to places without having to be there physically. In less than an hour I could get 300+ points to put me on top of the leaderboard. The game turned me off instantly.

Another thing that turned me off Foursquare was how long it took to check-in or create a new place as compared to Gowalla which picks up your location automatically so you don’t need to enter the venue’s address. People don’t always give a friend the address to a restaurant, we say it’s behind KLCC or between this place and that place. Who remembers the address anyways. So you take more time creating places in Foursquare than in Gowalla. Foursquare is also quite new in KL so a LOT of places are not on the map.

Talking about map – here’s another problem I have with Foursquare. Even with the address entered, the map can go wrong – placing  the pin in an area you haven’t even heard of or a place you’ll never go to like in the middle of a lake. Unlike Gowalla, you cannot edit the map at all in Foursquare which is really frustrating. I thought the Superuser status would let me fix the map but I still couldn’t do it. Gee, how hard is it to implement this feature? What I can do as a Level 1 Superuser is limited to merging duplicates and closing rubbish venues like “I hate my boss”.

Duplicate venues was the other reason why I found Foursquare messed up. This is also another way to game the system, you can create 5 different Mid Valleys, spelling it slightly different, check-in to all 5 and get extra points to get you closer to the lead in the game. Some guys love that and would often proudly announce on twitter when they become a mayor and what new badges they got. Maybe some of them deserve it.

It’s actually not all bad, there are cool things about Foursquare like its community of people who take the time to leave tips that pop-up when you’re near a venue. The number of people who are doing this to help others however, are still very small. When I see a really useful tip pop up from someone in Foursquare, I always say a silent thank you to the person who left it. This is what makes Foursquare useful. I hope this community of tip contributors will grow.

flickr machine tag

The integration of Foursquare into other services is something I find very exciting. It is integrated into Flickr so you can add machine tags to pictures taken at venues listed in Foursquare. Folks looking at your flickr picture can click on it and be taken to the venue page to read your review/tip or get the address to visit the place themselves. The map can’t be trusted yet and I would also sometimes add “Don’t trust the map” into my Foursquare tips. Foursquare venues and tips are also integrated into Layar as an AR layer. When you pan your phone around you’ll see venues and tips popping into your screen which is pretty cool. I can see my own tips and other people’s tips on what’s interesting nearby. Again, please note that the location map in Foursquare cannot be trusted which means that the locations in Layar are also dodgy. The integration (idea) into other services that I use regularly is what’s making Foursquare engaging to me. So I am taking a second look and going to use it a bit more, together with Gowalla.

I’m not about to forget Gowalla yet but Foursquare is close to making me give it up. Foursquare just needs to improve the venue creation process and make the map editable, not just for superusers but for everyone.  The game is fun for awhile (pretend you’re not hacking it) so it’s nice but not important. Game-wise, I like Gowalla’s better because it’s harder to exploit. The idea of picking up items and leaving something behind for others to pick up is a nice touch. In Gowalla, when you create a spot, you can become a founder by dropping an item. But it also gets very frustrating when you have run out of items to drop, it is a total killjoy. I want to like Gowalla and I’ve given a lot of feedback but it seems to have fallen on deaf ears. I’m now hoping Foursquare can improve further and make it the one and only location based check-in game on my iPhone.

Add me:

On Foursquare: http://foursquare.com/user/thechannelc
On Gowalla: http://gowalla.com/users/thechannelc

9 out of 10 location maps of places I create in Foursquare are off. Here's one example.

Jan 10 Update: There was apparently a January 8 update at the Foursquare blog that I missed. The location finder has improved and I tested it with a location I created this evening and I left the address field empty just to see if the app can track down my GPS location. It did, yay. But it still won’t let me edit the map and fix all the previous venues that have their pins someplace other than where it should be. Give us editable maps, Foursquare.

Stop restricting ebook sales.

December 31, 2009  |  Apps, Business, Feature, Tech  |  Comments

Even though I don’t have a kindle, I have been reading ebooks since 2003. I get the pdf versions from ereader.com and back then I was reading them on a Palm V.  One of the first apps I installed on my new iPhone 3Gs recently was Barnes and Nobles ebook reader – for the fun of it. B&N’s weird, they won’t sell me the ebooks like Amazon but they won’t stop me from downloading the reader unlike Amazon.

I do know a way to download the Amazon reader and buy kindle books but it’s a tedious process. This regional restriction put in place by publishers is stupid. If physical books can be shipped anywhere by Amazon why can’t ebooks be sold as well? For the first time in Amazon’s history, they sold more ebooks than physical books this Christmas. Ebooks are the future. No, ebooks are here today.

Ebooks are great, they don’t take up anymore space on shelves in homes or at the bookstores. They don’t kill more trees. They don’t contribute to carbon footprint moving around from printer to distributor to retailers and finally to a reader. They cost less and save consumers more. They can meet consumer demands faster. They weigh nothing so you can carry a small library in your pocket. More copies of a book in digital form can be sold because it’s a personal copy once it’s purchased, I can’t really share an ebook as easily as I can a physical book. More sales, more money, everyone happy. No? The one bad thing I see with ebooks though is that I can’t get an author to autograph it. I’m sure someone somewhere is working on a solution where I can have a video of me kissing the author and a digital scribble with the words “Last night was amazing. Sign” attached to the ebook.

There are so many reasons why an ebook is better than a physical book and why regional restrictions need to be tossed out the window. Who’s with me?

Check out:  The Business Case for E-Readers.

The Legend of Cristang

December 17, 2009  |  Business, Feature  |  Comments

I had heard about Cristang from friends on Facebook and Twitter. “Cristang’s pork burgers are to die for” someone said. “For sure, one of the top three places for burgers in KL” said another. I decided to go taste for myself.

I went there after a meeting at 5pm and they were opening up for dinner time. Being first on the scene gave me the opportunity to chat with Yin – part-time restaurant manager and long-time assistant to Gerald, who owns the place. I told her I came to investigate claims of Cristang having the best pork burgers in town and we started talking. Not long after, Gerald came and we sat down, talking for two whole hours.

I told him I was surprized his name was Gerald and not Cris Tang. “I get that a lot and I’ve had people come in here telling me they are friends of Cris Tang and wants a discount on their bill.” He explained that “Cristang” is a slang that means ‘people of Christian faith’ and is commonly used by the Eurasian community of Portuguese descent to refer to each other.  Portuguese itself is not the correct term to refer to folks like Gerald because he’s not Portuguese and the food he serves isn’t anything you’ll find in Portugal. We’ll call it Portuguese anyways, to keep it short. So, it could be that our Malaysian Portuguese food is the country’s first fusion food if they win the Pie Tie and Pongteh ownership debate with the Nyonya’s (Malaysia assimilated Straits Chinese?).

IMG_0017

Gerald is full of wonderful stories. There’s a story behind the restaurant’s famous pork burger called P7 The Urban Legend. I asked how that name came about but first, all the burger names have a P and a number. What that means is the number of pork items in the burger. P1 means one pork item and that’s the pork patty and P2 has two pork items – patty + bacon etc. The P could also mean grilled cajun prawns, petai, chilli pork con carne and pineapple. P7 however, doesn’t have seven pork items but because P1-P6 were taken. The P7 only appeared on the menu a month and a half ago but they have been serving it for over five months like a beta test. It was so good that word got around and people were often heard asking for the P7 like an urban legend.

I figured most of the items on the menu are from recipes passed down through generations of portuguese in his family but the burgers were far from the usual Portuguese fare. “Most of my dishes are accidents in the kitchen” he said, “I love to cook and I’ve never been to chef school so I don’t know my limits and there are no rules to tell me what I can and cannot do with food.” He does have one personal rule though, after one of his dishes become famous, he won’t eat it anymore in case he jinx it. I think this trait is in a lot of artists or perfectionists or both. They always think their best work is yet to come so if he tasted his dish, he might fix something that’s not broken and end up breaking it instead. It’s not like programming, flavor is highly subjective.

Well I had a great time today tasting the legendary P7 and having a wonderful chat with Gerald. The P7 is indeed very delicious. The petai (a strong tasting bean) did not over-power the taste of the pork which was so juicy and tender, it melts in your mouth. I’m a fan of burgers again.

Cristang is at 8 Avenue, Jalan 8/1. Tel: +603.7956.7877. They are opened for lunch and dinner, 6 days a week and closed on Mondays. Highly recommended are of course the P7 Urban Legend Pork Burger, Bacon and Eggs Soup, Bacon Rib Ambila, Tenggiri with Soy Limang and Debal Chicken.

Follow Cristang on Twitter: @cristangrstrnt

Disclosure: I have not received any freebies for writing this article. The only privilege I got was Gerald’s time and the wonderful chat we had.

Who is getting rich off the iPhone?

December 11, 2009  |  Business, Feature, Humor  |  Comments

so-just-where-does-all-that-iphone-money-go

Now let’s look closer to home. Malaysians pay Maxis (the only telco offering the iPhone) US$714 for a 32GB iPhone 3Gs with a 1 year contract. Let’s assume Maxis pays Apple the same $550 per unit, Maxis still makes $164 just from selling you the phone and you pay the entire sum upfront, Maxis doesn’t have to subsidize a thing and they’ll make even more money from your voice and data plan. There is nothing to lose and all to gain for Maxis. Brilliant.

Did you say “This is so unfair. To think I’ve stayed with them all these years, through good reception and no reception and I get jack”? Well, if you’re the only player in the market, the rules are yours to dictate.

Want to pay nothing or close to it for a Maxis iPhone? Their corporate customers get the iPhone for free. So if you know anyone who’s a corporate customer, you can buy it off her for cheap or convince her to give it to you. Keep telling her it’s a bitch to type with a touch screen keypad – this is the bain of many new iphone owners in the first week of playing around with the device. With a hint of urgency in your voice, tell her to get rid of it (and give it to you) before technology becomes obsolete and she has to pay people to take it off her. Check ebay and she’ll see how many unsold first generation iphones there are. If she has no patience for touch screen, she won’t search ebay and will just take your word for it. Score! Congratulations and welcome to the iPhone owners club.

Deja-hoo: Yahoo! is finally in Malaysia.

November 26, 2009  |  Events, Feature, Tech  |  Comments

The Yahoo! Youreka campaign has ended and ’somewhat officially’ launch the Yahoo! Malaysia portal. Never mind that they are a decade later than MSN and Google. In the past few months, we’ve been seeing the folks from Yahoo! come down from their offices in Singapore to engage the community of developers and users in Malaysia. It’s great and they have no competition from the other two in winning hearts and minds by meeting Malaysians face-to-face.

But I can’t help feeling like it’s 1999.
The landscape may have changed quite a bit. This time, eyeballs are locked on sticky social media/networking sites, IM chats happen in twitter, email comes through Blackberries and news through RSS readers. If you use Netvibes, you could even get all the above into one dashboard. Why is Yahoo! using aging tech to reach new users. The segment Yahoo! is targeting is not an aging group at all – late teens to 25. Is Yahoo! being arm-twisted to do this by our aging Deputy Education Minister? Or does Malaysia have a third world classification online as well so here’s the best of Yahoo’s third world tech?

I am a paying customer of two of Yahoo!’s services. They also throw great parties, engage the community and give away awesome schwags. I love Yahoo! but they need to do more than just localize a news portal. I don’t remember the last time Yahoo! has announced a new feature or a major product improvement.  Is Yahoo! going forward by going backward? Odd strategy.

Yahoo! Youreka found its winner at a party held at KL Live last night. Semi-finalists who found the elusive tag online, gathered for their final torture, I mean test, to prove their worthiness. They wiggled and pushed their way (as well as pushed JJ to the ground)  in a game of musical chairs to get to the “Sumo” round. Dressed like sumo wrestlers, the pair battled each other to see who’ll be first to form the word Youreka from the jumbled letters. The worthy one went home with a Macbook Air and an iPhone. Congratulations to the winner.

Thanks for the party Yahoo! and welcome to Malaysia.

DiGi’s Coat-of-Arms

November 22, 2009  |  Feature, Marketing  |  Comments

If you were watching twitter this week, you would have been inundated with tweets on the Youth Engagement Summit 2009 (#YES2009), Barcamp Melaka and Singapore, a statement from the Deputy Education Minister saying English at work is weird and Cadraver’s story on “Malaysian Telcos to bear Code-of-Arms”.

I caught Mahyuni’s tweet on  Cadraver’s story which was particularly interesting. He wrote a parody on the Malaysian government who’s now requiring telcos to develop their coat-of-arms and they must be prominently displayed everywhere their brands have a presence. Brand logo? What’s that? Coat-of-arms or else. Read Cadraver’s piece here.

When the news started spreading on twitter this week, DiGi was quick to pick up on it, launching a “request-for-proposal” or a contest for DiGi’s code-of-arms. They will be giving away 5 musical mugs to the top 5 designs. I thought they were joking and I went to ask @digi_telco for the contest rules and was told there were none – not even a deadline. It’s anything goes. LOL. So here are my submissions.

digi coat of arms 1 prepare for glory

Fantastic move on DiGi’s part. Here’s one brand that is not only paying attention to what’s going on in social media but participating and having some fun with the community as well.

Note: I’m not paid or have been paid by DiGi in any way or form to say this.

In ReHaB: RHB’s new website stumbles out of the gate.

November 20, 2009  |  Business, Feature  |  Comments

Friday, November 20 2009.

The day I choose to do some internet banking, internet banking chooses to fail.

First surprise was seeing a redesigned website from RHB. Even the URL has changed. It’s a little scary to suddenly find I’m at a new site. A virus can also hijack a website and redirect you to another site. I don’t like to be scared by a bank. Never mind, let’s move on. The new design looks refreshing.

Here’s what I liked:

1. Shorter URL. Instead of www.rhbbank.com.my I can now type rhb.com.my.
2. First question the site asked was “Consumer” or “Business”. Great, just show me what I want to see and kill the rest.
3. It finally works on Firefox.

consumer or business
Consumer or Business.

Unfortunately, the joy lasted for one screen. Now the nightmare:

1. Menu bar has tiny white text against a light blue background. OMG, I’m not as young anymore, don’t strain my eyes please.
2. Every time you get into the site, it repeats the same question – Consumer or Business. Can’t you recognize me? (this was on Friday and the problem seems to be fixed on Sunday).
3. Best of all – LOGIN does not work.
I am being asked repeatedly to change my password. If my password isn’t working, it doesn’t give me a clue as to what is wrong. (It’s Sunday and this is still happening)

consumer homepage

See the menu bar? Look harder.

I checked on twitter and @kzamri replied to say he was experiencing the same thing. I tried to re-register thinking maybe there’s a new login system. Didn’t work. I searched every where to see if this site is still a prototype. No luck.

One hour later, @kzamri and I (after a few deep breaths) called the bank. He didn’t get a clear answer and proceeded to write the bank a passionate email – all the way to the top. You don’t want to mess with @kzamri. He knows people, very important people.

I, on the hand was told the site was under maintenance, please try again AFTER office hours. Say what? Actually it’s the best line I’ve heard in a while. If something goes wrong, the bank will be closed all weekend and there’s nothing you can do but wait for it to reopen on Monday. It’s an awesome excuse to buy time.

RHB FAIL

  • Dear RHB, if your site is down for maintenance, please take it down. Go back to the old system or put up a message to tell customers the site is under maintenance and have an idea when it will be up again. Your customers can be reasonable if they’re not kept in the dark.
  • It’s also a good idea to keep Friday trouble-free. If you launch something new during the week, when you run into trouble and still can’t fix it by Thursday, have a plan b, like switch back to the old and familiar.
  • Let your customers know what to expect before you change something as important as your internet banking site. A sudden change like this can reduce trust and confidence in your bank.
  • I also hope you got rid of that tedious security feature customers have to go through to edit information in their account. You have no idea how painful it is to wait for an sms PIN and then trying to enter a ridiculous, finger-twisting, series of numbers from a card that has to be physically picked up from the bank first.  The sms PIN request doesn’t even work half the time. Securing transactions online should be the bank’s job, not the customers’.

Online Banking with RHB wasn’t as simple or convenient as you say it is. Hope to see some real improvements from the new site, I guess by Monday.

Can brands use twitter list?

November 2, 2009  |  Apps, Feature, Marketing, Reviews  |  Comments

twitter Personally, I see twitter lists as another ego stroker. You know it is when people start thanking each other for adding them to a list or getting upset when they have been left out of a list and proceed to block, unfollow or both, the list curator.

I curated a list of Malaysians in Social Media for Listorious.com yesterday which I deleted today because it’s just not worth the emotional hassle. Some names are obviously left out because I don’t have every social media person on my follow list. Even if I did, I don’t count having 18K followers or someone who does not engage with others as being in or having a huge influence in social media.

Ego “twisting” aside for personal lists, there are great reasons for brands to curate their own lists.

Here’s my short list:
1. A brand can show what’s important to them with a list of tweeps they follow. It’s like Tony Hsieh’s alltop page where you’ll find blogs on customer service, lifestyle, fashion, shoes and tech. Knowing what Tony has accomplished in zappos, I want to read what he reads too.

2. I agree with point #5 on this list. Gives brands an opportunity to aggregate multiple accounts. Some brands have different names for different departments. Sometimes I wonder why. Customers want one website, one phone number and one email to reach a company.

Sometimes it works. If different twitter accounts are already established, a twitter list with all the brand’s accounts will help a lot. A great example is how AMC promotes the tv series Mad Men on twitter. Twitter accounts are set up for some of the main characters. One to check out is Betty Draper’s (a character in that show) twitter account. On her profile is a list of the other Mad Men characters which she has listed in her rolodex. It’s incredibly fun to read if you’re a fan of Mad Men like me. Betty also has a list of other people she finds interesting and she has them listed in Mad Men of the future (today’s mad men and women).

3. A brand’s staff/member list can also tell others who work or belong to that organization. Especially useful when someone in your organization deals with other people representing your company. When @xyz representing a publication asks me for an interview for example, I’d like to know if they are legit. Seeing their name listed on the staff list of the publication’s (account verified) twitter account gives me some confidence that he or she isn’t a competitor who just wants to get information on a new product I’ve released to the press that’s under embargo. Good example is the New York Times staff list.

Only three from me. There’s more from the many articles written by twitter pundits which you can do a search on. Final note, if you manage a brand or an organization on twitter, do get your list up soon.