MelbDjango Hackfest – 24th July 2014

24th July 2014 MelbDjango Hackfest held at Common Code and hosted by Curtis Maloney for the MelbDjango Meetup group.

Mostly being newbies and with some people interested in testing, Curtis started off showcasing his new Django Classy Settings before covering some topics on testing and other miscellany

TAkeaways / Links from the night

Buying Guide: USB Battery Packs / Powerbank

Powerbank

USB battery packs / powerbanks (or whatever you call them) are great when you’re out and about and need to charge your devices but there are some features which you should look out for when buying one

  1. Buy from a reputable source
  2. Sufficient capacity
    • You need a powerbank that is capable of charging all your devices and has enough juice to get you through the day
    • Phones: ~2000mAH, 7″ tablets: ~4000mAh, 10″ tablets: ~8000mAh
      (iPhone 5S: 1560mAh / HTC One M8: 2600mAh / Lumia 1520: 3400mAh / S5: 2800mAh / iPad Air 2013: 8820mAh / Nexus 7 2013: 3950mAh)
  3. Output Charge speed
    • Ensure it can charge your device at the best and fastest speed
      • Tablets usually 2A
      • Phones usually 1A
  4. Passthrough ability
    • When the powerbank is being charged when connected to a power outlet, passthrough allows it to charge any device connected to powerbank, straight from the power source and not from the powerbank itself: perfect if you want to leave all your other charges behind and charges all your devices with just a single power outlet! (Note: may want to ensure that it charges at full USB charge speed)
  5. Battery gauge
    • Nice quick way to know how much capacity is left in your powerbank
    • Allows rationing of your charge
  6. Charges via a standard USB cable
    • Being able to charge your powerbank using a standard cable is ideal as proprietary charges can be hard to replace if lost
    • Ideally the same cable as your other devices (my powerbank can charge via miniUSB but all my devices use microUSB so it is one extra cable to bring along)
  7. Multiple USB ports
    • for those with multiple devices (or for sharing with others)
  8. Port positions
    • Some USB cables may be bulkier than others and thus powers that are spaced out are useful so that you can utilise all ports at the same time
    • Ideally all ports on a single side so it can be pocketable or just easily placed on a surface standing up if needed
  9. Charges quickly via USB
    • If allows charging via several methods (e.g. proprietary cable as well as via USB), ensure that it can charge quickly over USB (my Sanyo powerbank charges very slowly over USB)
  10. If it supports passthrough, added bonus ability to maintain proper charge, amperage and voltage when plugged/unplugged from power source
    • This use case comes from using your powerbank as the power source for devices like the Raspberry Pi: you want it to provide the power to the Raspberry Pi and if the power source gets disrupted and you do not wish for the device to get restarted, the powerbank must maintain a proper current/voltage so not to trigger a restart.

Note: a 4000mAh powerbank will not charge a 2000mAh phone battery twice due to inefficiencies, battery health and other factors.

DDD Melbourne 2014 – 19th July 2014

DDD Melbourne 2014

Thanks to all organisers, speakers, volunteers and sponsors for the event!

Developer Developer Developer (DDD) Melbourne 2014 held at Swinburne University of Technology.

Key Speakers

Sponsors & Goodies Providers!

Videos

Speakers

Other Links

Notes/Improvements for next year

  • Power extensions & power strips for the workshops
  • Ideally free Internet (unless Troy comes)

ITLT: Power/Home Button Placement

Power button

Turning on a device should be easy and simple and shouldn’t take a lot of effort. Physical buttons are the best: giving you tactile and instant feedback.

Power Button - one finger vs the claw
Which would you rather?

Devices with physical home buttons (e.g. iPhone / Samsung S series) are the ideal IMO while Nexus devices (e.g. Nexus 4 pictured above) force you to use ‘the claw’.

ITLT: Headphone and USB port placement

Port Positions
How does one pocket this?

IMHO

  • both USB/charging port and headphone ports should be on the bottom
  • ensures pocketability when charging on the go with a USB battery pack while listening to music

Good

  • iPhone 5S
  • HTC One M8

Bad

  • Nexus 5
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
  • Lumia 930

Other Notes

If you’re stuck on with a device with non optimal port placement, I suggest getting right angle connectors for your headphones as it at least allows the device to rest on the connector without straining anything too much (you could also get a right angled USB connector, but it is yet another thing to worry about if you care about USB charging speeds)

Right Angled Headphone Connector