Skip to main content

Tech Industry

See All Stories

The Beatles? Finally on iTunes? Ugh.

Site default logo image

We hope so just so we don’t have to hear about it anymore.  It is rolling into Macworld tomorrow.  From their website:

The John Lennon Educational Tour Bus is a non-profit, mobile recording studio outfitted with traditional musical instruments as well as current technological advances. Since 1998, the Bus has provided free hands-on programs to hundreds of high schools, colleges, Boys and Girls Clubs, music festivals, concerts, conventions and community organizations. Working together with some of the biggest names in music, the Lennon Bus encourages students to play music, write songs, engineer recording sessions and produce music video projects using the latest audio, video, and live sound equipment.

The interior is divided into two separate recording environments. The front studio offers the chance to participate in the creation of multi-media projects. Audio and video components are demonstrated, with visitors assisting in the recording and editing of original material. The back studio is a more traditional set-up for bands and the remote recording of concerts and special events. It features a full range of instruments including guitars, basses, keyboards, and drums. Also on-board is a P.A. system enabling performances on the side of the Bus.

MacBook Air

Site default logo image

YEP – Macbook Air.  Check back for more coverage…

  • At the iPod refresh launch, one of our sources told us that there wouldn’t be any significant  MacBook refreshes until Macworld.  We published that info in the post-event post.  That info was recorded by Macrumors as "Of interest, they most recently posted a small blurb indicating that MacBook Pros would see updates in January."
  • We then got a report with a blurry/dark photograph in September of darker (and standard color), much  smaller Macbook Pros.  Same size screen as the MacBook but way slimmer case, etc.
  • Around the new year, someone started alerting the rumors sites that there was going to be a "MacBook Air" product at Macworld.  Also that it was the "worst kept secret at Apple" (which is very suspicious!)  His/her words sound very similar to this Digg commenter.
  • Appleinsider and Arstechnica posted pictures of the Macworld posters with the phrase: 2008 There is something in the air
  • Macrumors, seeing the correlation between the posters and the earlier rumor submissions posted that they thought the name would be "MacBook Air".  The similarities (assuming here – and whatever other info they might have had) was enough to make the statement on the name.
  • We had previously heard that Intel WiMAX teams were all over Apple months and months earlier and thought there might be a connection as well.  This might be the reason why the "Air".  Also Valleywag jumped on this.
  • We found a very well done image (above right) and some interesting hypotheses at Macpredictions.com on a MacBook Air – including Power-by induction – which Apple patented a year ago.  Since then, many more images have shown up across the internet.  Macpredictions was certainly the fastest and one of the most professional looking.   He is in London and unconnected to Apple.
  • One of our readers, Jon Cotton, found a mention of a "MacBook Air" on one of Adium’s usage log reports.  Subsequent verification from Google Cache reveals that this log entry was made on January 9th, BEFORE the Macworld posters were revealed.  Therefore, someone would have had to have known about the posters and made the reference to "Air"
  • UPDATED: MacDailyNews via Macrumors has some very telling domain name information.  IS it possible with the cat out of the bag, Apple is jumping on all of the domains it can?

Therefore we can conclude that there are one of two outcomes:

1. The MacBook Air is real  – our details may be off slightly but the name is real.

2. Either Apple or someone with knowledge of the Macworld 2008 There is something in the air slogan 2 weeks ago sent the rumor sites false info and went to a few websites with public logs with a browser hacked to show "MacBookAir" as machine-type.

Either way, this is very interesting.

So…

Why would they call it "Air"?

Maybe it is the WiMAX?  Or a sub-kilo weight?

Macpredictions thinks that it won’t have any cables.  Induction charging!  Ultra Wideband BluetoothWireless USB!  Cool if true.  Most likely…notsomuch.

Oh, and here is the one year old Apple patent application on inductive charging if you subscribe to that sort of thing.

Apple debuting new Myriad light font

Site default logo image

Appleinsider’s pictures also reveal that Apple is using a new skinnier font.  While to the general population, that will mean very little,  to font people, this is a big deal. (IF you saw the movie Helvetica, you know what we are talking about).

Ten points to whoever can name that font first!

EDIT: It looks like it is Myriad Pro Light or just Myriad Light is the cool font of the year.

"There is Something in the Air" means WiMAX?

Site default logo image

Appleinsider has some pictures of Macworld Expo with the new banners in the new Apple Myriad light font saying "There is something in the Air."  Could this mean WiMAX?  Could it mean anything else?  The only other thing we can think of is that the new AppleTV will let you stream your movies "over the air" that is if you didn’t hardwire the AppleTV – which works much better.  Maybe the new AppleTV USES WiMAX to get its content?

Or, as a commenter points out below, maybe Apple is doing the mobile phone purchasing with the iPhone that we’ve heard so much about.

Other than that, we got nothing…can anyone out there think of anything better?  While you are doing that, here’s a 5 year old video that is an awesome demo of the coolness of WiMAX…

 

By the way we thought that WiMAX would be on the scene in August.

 

Amazon gets SonyBMG content sans DRM

Site default logo image

DRM is now officially on its death bed – for music that is.  SonyBMG became the last of the big four record labels to start distributing its music DRM-free today.  Amazon will now carry music from the big four record labels and many indies all DRM free.  While the files do contain watermarking which will allow the labels to track the usage of the files (for instance on torrent sites), they will be able to be moved from computer to computer without having to activate other computers or having limitations on how many computers they can run on.

SonyBMG has a outstanding contract with iTunes and hasn’t been given the word to remove the DRM from the music it gives to Apple as of yet, but obviously it will in due course.  The only big label that  currently runs on iTunes DRM free is EMI who removed their DRM shortly after Steve Jobs issued his open letter entitled "Thoughts on Music"on February 26, 2007.  Whether or not it was the motiation, less than one year after the open letter was published,  the music industry is DRM free.

Ironically, as DRM is now pretty much dead in music, Apple is set to release DRM in rental movies next week.

Guardian asks insiders what will come at Macworld

Site default logo image

Everyone is getting into the game now it seems.  Now that a lackluster CES is over, all eyes are on Macworld.  The Guardian gets a few insiders to give their take on what will go down at Macworld.

All of the usual suspects are there:

  • Leopard 10.5.2
  • iTunes movie rentals/iTunes 7.6
  • SSD Drive based slim laptop, sans optical drive
  • 16Gb iPhone, $100 price drop on 8Gb – 3G was mentioned but doubtful
  • Tablet/Mac Touch/ iPad

Something we have heard very little of, but gets mentioned a few times is.. the Home Network Server.  Apple could roll out a Terrabyte home server the size of a Mac Mini that could be used for backups as well as storing shared Media across a family or workgroup.  Perhaps running a mini version of OSX Leopard Server.  It makes sense to us.

Read more here

The panel includes: Chuq Von Rospach spent 17 years at Apple, working on enterprise and IT projects, before joining a Silicon Valley startup and "can now watch a Macworld Keynote without stressing out that everything works". David Sobotta worked at Apple for nearly 20 years, leaving in 2004 as director of federal sales. Mike Evangelist worked for Apple until July 2002, responsible for Final Cut Pro, DVD Studio Pro and iDVD. Daniel Jalkut was a senior systems software engineer at Apple until 2002. He now runs Red Sweater Software. Michael Gartenberg is consumer technology analyst for Jupiter Research. Adam Engst is the editor of the TidBits site, and has repeatedly been named one of the five most influential people in the Apple ecosystem. Wil Shipley is founder of Delicious Monster Software. All Delicious Monster’s staff, except himself, have subsequently been hired by Apple. Gus Mueller is founder of Flying Meat, an independent software company that develops exclusively for OS X.

 

Parallels Server goes public, MacOS Server virtualization era begins

Site default logo image

Parallels Server beta is now public according to ServerVirtualization.com and InfoWorld,  Parallels Server runs on both Xserves and Mac Pros as well as Linux and Windows machines.  The virtualization of the MacOS is only allowed on Apple machines however, according to the EULA.  As we mentioned back in November, Parallels was working closely with Apple to make this happen.  We have yet to see the Mac OSX Server running in virtualization but we should see it shortly.

Rogue copies of OSX Leopard and Tiger have been running on VMWare for awhile but because most of the drivers are unsupported and not optimized, it is a dog on performance.  An Apple blessed and supported version of this would allow a huge leap forward in speed and performance.  It would also mark a big change of direction for the company who has always had a zero tollerance policy for Virtualizing OSX.

Apple opened the door for this when they changed the server licensing wording for Leopard from Tiger.  From the Leopard Server License:

This License allows you to install and use one copy of the Mac OS X Server software (the "Mac OS X Server Software") on a single Apple-labeled computer. You may also install and use other copies of Mac OS X Server Software on the same Apple-labeled computer, provided that you acquire an individual and valid license from Apple for each of these other copies of Mac OS X Server Software.

Perhaps we’ll see something next week at Macworld?

The Internet is going to get a whole lot slower next week

Site default logo image

People have been calling for the Internet to get crushed under the weight of its own bandwidth since it was created in the 80s.  Of course it never has.  But the threats have always been overstated. 

However, next week, Apple will almost definitely launch it’s iTunes movie rental store, and millions of people will start downloading like they never have before.  One and a half hour movies can get up to one gigabyte in size.  Contrast that to a four megabyte iTunes music file which is 250 times smaller.  This is a huge amount of data.

Additionally, these movies will only be good for a short time – at that point they will be deleted from the computer.  So if you want to see Casablanca again, you’ll need to download the whole gigabyte of data all over.  In iTunes you hopefully only have to download a file once.

Apple already utilizes Akami for media distribution which house web file servers all over the globe and at ISPs to help alleviate Internet congestion.  This will certainly help – but will it be enough?  Other people have said that Apple could use the AppleTV as a bit torrent client which would help distribute files quickly and more cost effectively.

Or perhaps this threat is overstated.  It isn’t just Apple in this game.  Netflix and Amazon are currently selling movies as downloads without crippling the Internet.  But neither of these vendors has anywhere near the marketshare as Apple.  iTunes currently resides on over 100 million computers.  Again, we are talking about a lot of bandwidth here.

By most accounts,  Apple’s movie rental store will most  be a big success – hopefully not at the expense of the Internet.

VOIP comes to the iPhone – iPod Touch

Site default logo image

2007 was a monumental year for iPod hacking and a major milestone looks to be acomplished just before the year ends.  The first SIP compatible VOIP solution for the iPod Touch (and hopefully soon the iPhone) should be coming our way in the next 10 hours (as we write this).

The SIP application actually requires a bit of extra hardware on the iPod touch because of the lack of an audio-in port on the device.  Thankfully they are selling the microphone as well.  The iPhone should eventually support this application without hardware modifications.

Hopefully this will light a fire under the VOIP industry, which hasn’t been quick to port their applications to the iPhone.  As of now – or in 10 hours – only SIP accounts are supported on the Tochmods VOIP client.  Raketu had earlier announced an iPhone application for their VOIP service but as the application was in Flash form, it wasn’t able to work on the iPhone.  It turns out they hadn’t even tested the device on their system.

It is about time that someone did it right!

video after the jump

iTunes movie rentals coming at Macworld, 20th Century Fox 1st confirmed

Site default logo image

Valleywag points us to the Financial Times who is outing Apple (try shutting them down!!) and 20th Century Fox’s love affair on the home movie front.  They are the first outted studio to offer movie rentals – most likely to be announced at Macworld.  Sony, Paramount, Warner Bros. and, of course, Disney are expected to be announced at the event but others including internationals should follow.

"Apple has signed News Corp’s 20th Century Fox studio to a new online video-on-demand service in a deal that could change the way people pay for online film content," Matthew Garrahan and Kevin Allison report for The Financial Times.
"The agreement will allow consumers to rent the latest Fox DVD releases by downloading a digital copy from Apple’s iTunes platform for a limited time, according to a person familiar with the situation," Garrahan and Allison report.

"The Apple-Fox deal, likely to be announced at the Macworld show on January 14, has the potential to transform film distribution. Apart from letting people rent online, Apple will also for the first time extend its FairPlay digital rights management system beyond its own products," Garrahan and Allison report. "A digital file protected by FairPlay will be included in new Fox DVD releases, enabling film content to be transferred or ‘ripped’ from the disc to a computer and video iPod."

"Apple, whose shares hit $200 for the first time yesterday in intra-day trade, is understood to have been in talks with Sony Pictures Entertainment, Paramount and Warner Bros about making their new releases available on iTunes to buy and rent," Garrahan and Allison report."

These movies will be available for view on iTunes and through the network on the AppleTV.  This will hopefully be the killer App of the AppleTV which has been lackluster in performance as well as sales up until this point.   Most likely it was the studos who have been dragging their feet up until this point.

Also, according to Paidcontent.org:

One interesting twist that will help, though: Besides the online rental deal, a digital file protected by Apple’s DRM scheme FairPlay will be included in new Fox DVD releases, enabling film content to ripped to a PC and video iPod. DVD content can already be moved to an iPod but this requires a bit of an effort.

To review:  Apple WILL announce movie rentals at Macworld.  Prices will start at about two bucks each.  Expect movies to be viewable for 24-72 hours but perhaps up to a week.  The data will still take a considerable time to download – up to a few hours o the slower broadbands.  But it is what it is. 

It is about time.

 

 

Apple expected to announce sales of 5 million iPhones at Macworld

Site default logo image

Insiders tell us that Apple expects to announce sales of roughly five million iPhones at Macworld 2008 in January.  Of these, around one million are expected to come from Europe.  Apple is seeing very strong Christmas sales despite AT&T’s announcement that a 3G iPhone will be hitting in 2008 (May-June is our best guess at this point) that could’ve hampered demand.

Apple sold 1 million iPhones in 74 days around the same time it dropped the price to $399 from $599.  Also, Apple opened in Europe’s three biggest markets in November – just in time for the holidays.

Some sources expect Apple to release a 16Gb iPhone upgrade at Macworld in mid January, however, no hard evidence to this effect has hit our ears.

Apple had originally expected to sell 10 million iPhones by the end of 2008 and reaching the halfway point this early is likely to bolster Apple’s stock price.  Apple’s iPhone is a leader in the smartphone charge in the US and has gained marketshare at an unprecedented pace.

Thinksecret is no more.

Site default logo image

UPDATE – Well, it looks like they are still publishing in the secret notes section..We aren’t sure how this is going to shake out?  Was this a publicity stunt?  Was it just Nick who was leaving and Ryan staying?  or maybe it ends Dec 31st?  We’ll see.  The unfortunate part is that haven’t revealed anything significant since WWDC 2007.

Apple has successfully shut down news and rumors site, Thinksecret.

Think about that for a minute.  A company just shut down a news website.

Best wishes on whatever is next to Nick and Ryan from everyone at 9to5Mac.  You guys were great and an inspiration to us ;)

 You will be missed.

Mac Touch interface coming…

Site default logo image

Engadget points us at an Apple ad listing detailing the need for Touch interface QA personnel.  The interesting part is that the job states that it is for iPod and Mac Touch interfaces.

This jibes with Steve Jobs’ earlier hints that Touch was coming to Macs. 

And soon. 

It really feels like everything is coming together for a Macworld launch though we’ve had no definitive proof that Apple is ready to go.  But with this job opening news, it is no longer an if, but a when.  Obviously, keep an eye on this space.

Windows XP upgrade FROM Vista

Site default logo image

We know this is supposed to be funny but it rings so true.  For the record, we have Vista running on Parallels – which runs good- not great.  I am also personally writing this from a Sharepoint 2007 deployment certification class that Microsoft teaches in XP, not Vista :'(

Review: Windows XP

I have finally decided to take the plunge. Last night I upgraded my Vista desktop machine to Windows XP, and this afternoon I will be doing the same to my laptop.

Look & Feel

Windows XP has quite a cartoony look and feel compared to the slick look of Aero Glass; this is mostly offset by the lack of strange screen artifacts caused by malfunctioning graphics code. You know, almost like static on the screen. This was a once or twice monthly occurrence on my laptop, and happened on my desktop whenever I logged in, and also whenever I played a 3D game after leaving Vista running for a couple of hours. I also miss the "orphaned windows" I got on Vista, dialog boxes that would not go away, in a sense they became part of the desktop, since you could drag a selection from within them, despite the fact that the Glass would render the selection below them. Such crazy graphics bugs appear to be a thing of the past.

Performance

Well, here there appears to be no contest. Windows XP is both faster and far more responsive. I no longer have the obligatory 1-minute system lock that happens whenever I log onto Vista, instead I can run applications as soon as I can click their icons. Not only that, but the applications start snappily too, rather than all waiting in some "I’m still starting up the OS" queue for 30 seconds or so before all starting at once. In addition, I have noticed that when performing complex tasks such as viewing large images, or updating large spreadsheets, instead of the whole operating system locking down for several seconds, it now just locks down the application I am working on, allowing me to <gasp> Alt-Tab to another application and work on that. I am thrilled that Microsoft decided to add preemptive multitasking to their operating system, and for this reason alone I would strongly urge you to upgrade to XP. With the amount of multi-core processors around today using a multitasking operating system like XP makes a world of difference.

A doomed attempt to cancel a file copy, I had to hard reset the computer after this.

In addition, numerous tasks that take a long time on Vista have been greatly speeded up. File copies are snappy and responsive, and pressing the Cancel button halfway through actually cancels the copy almost immediately, as opposed to having it lock up, and sometimes lock up the PC. In addition, a lot of work has gone into making deletes far more efficient, it appears that no more does the operating system scan every file to be deleted prior to wiping it, and instead just wipes out the NTFS trees involved, a far quicker operation. On my Vista machine I would often see a dialog box from some of my video codec’s pop up when deleting, moving or copying videos. No more, now all that is involved is a byte transfer or NTFS operation.

read more

Mossberg comes out (yet again) against the US mobile cartel

Site default logo image

 

http://services.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f8/452319854

You have to admire Walt Mossberg for taking his position as grand exalted leader amongst technology journalists directly to the US telecoms.  He is single handedly trying to break the hold on consumers that the Sprint/Tmobile/AT&T/Verizon Cartel has on the US Mobile industry.  To his credit, he has gotten Verizon to promise that in Q3 2008, that it will accept any device on its platform – as long as it meets a very simple set of requirements (like no VoIP?).  If he were running for Office, we’d vote for him. 

Of course, we’ll believe it when we see it.  Surely there will be a price to pay for being open.  But at least there is some movement.

In the video above, Walt also make it clear that the iPhone is the device that illuminates this anomaly.  It is a computer, not a phone.  It is much more powerful than any of the computers behind him (including – is that- a TI-99? – to the right of the Etch-a-Sketch).  Yet, you can’t change your ISP.

It is more than a bit surprising that there isn’t more flack about how the French can buy an iPhone without ties to a carrier, but Americans can’t.  French consumers clearly have it better than US Consumers.  The French laws are better than American ones.

Don’t get angry, call your congressman/woman. Ask them why the French have it better?

 

15 Billion dollars, Apple? Someone is doing some Christmas shopping

Site default logo image

So it came out last week that Apple had been saving a bit of money.  They are likely going to buy something and the internet blew up with ideas on what that should be.  Ars came up with Adobe, Tivo, Nintendo.  We aren’t feeling any of those – here’s why:

  • Adobe – there is too much overlap in products.  Final Cut/Premiere.  Aperture/Lightroom, etc, etc.  Adobe has a great portfolio of applications but overall the line isn’t close enough to Apple’s core competency.  Plus the two companies aren’t getting along that well anymore.  Adobe is also pricey.
  • Tivo – It is a great technology for the next 3-5 years.  Soon though, networks will be broadcasting their content over the net by themselves.  The technology to leverage advertising will make them more than the currently falling costs of broadcasting over the net – so it won’t matter.  As someone who has to watch college football on a slingbox, I say hurry the fsck up.
  • Nintendo – great idea, but they are too expensive.  Any buyout of Nintendo would have to be more like a merger.  Can you see Steve Jobs agreeing to a merger and taking in top management?  Us neither.

So, we’ve come up with three companies that Apple should buy – and which they actually have a shot at.  Yep, telecoms:

  • Clearwire.  Fresh off their split from Sprint talks, Clearwire is looking for some more dough.  Apple has 15 billion reasons why they should come into the Apple fold.  Oh, btw, WiMAX is great match for Apple’s new mobile platform.
  • Skype – Recently devalued and a bargain.  Ebay is looking for a buyer.   Over 100 million users.  VOIP.  Phone Numbers.  iPod, iPhone, tablets…it all makes much more sense.
  • 700MHz spectrum.  Not a company per se – but a huge amount of power in the telecommunications industry for the next 20+ years.  Apple would likely partner with Google and a few other technology giants (MS?) on snapping this up.  It goes without saying that tech companies are sick of letting the telecoms tell them how they can use and sell their products.  This will be an interesting auction.  NFL draft, eat your heart out.
  • EDIT – didn’t think of it but makes perfect sense.  a Studio!  Maybe they even roll their own.  With the other studios starting to give up on Apple and in some cases giving preferential treatment to other online distributors (see Amazon’s DRM free music from Universal), it might be time for Apple to move down the value chain a little.  Apple has one of the biggest distribution channels on Earth in iTunes and can offer new artists a really big, hip audience in a tenth of the time it takes traditional studios to get content out.  Oh.  And why just music?  El Jobso knows a few things about running a movie studio (Pixar). – thanks D-Jents

Will Apple put its feet into the telecom world?  $15 billion is a whole lot more fun to spend than distribute to shareholders.  Maybe we’ll get some news at Macworld on January 14-18. OH btw- the telecom auction is on Jan 17. ;)

 

 

First piece of 13 inch Macbook becomes apparent

Site default logo image

Digitimes is reporting that Apple just bought 90,000 (more expensive) 13.3 inch LED displays.  We have no idea what Apple is going to use those things for.

Expect some more surprises in the coming weeks as Apple’s partners ramp up production of their new hybrid laptop/tablet device.

Oh, and don’t expect Digitimes to find an OEM that is making a trackpad for this thing btw ;-)

(Fake – and not at all realistic – image provided by Fake Steve).

Skype Updated for Leopard

Site default logo image

We’ve been using Skype on our Leopard MacBook since – oh about mid-October with very few problems – but there have been many cited on the Internets – mostly in relation to Apple’s redesigned firewall.

Well, for those with problems, Skype has answers – in the form of a 2.7Beta release (at your own risk).  Skype betas have treated us relatively well over the years so we’ll be downloading and testing this shortly.

From Skype:

New in this version

Leopard compatible – if you have the latest Mac OS X 10.5 then you can use Skype with confidence.

Better video resolution – your video conversations are now set at a whopping 640 x 480 pixels by default with up to 25 frames per second. If your webcam can handle this resolution you’ll soon be appearing in an improved and bigger format on friends screens.

AT&T CEO States Obvious. Tech media fall all over themselves

Site default logo image

AT&T’s CEO stated the obvious yesterday – that there is going to be a 3G iPhone "sometime next year".  No kidding!?

Everyone has known about this for months.  Steve Jobs has even stated this on numerous occasions – he even stated this during the UK iPhone release party!  It is a known, known – as Donald Rumsfeld would say.  Still though.  It is all over the news:

AT&T chief lets slip plan for faster iPhone

AT&T CEO outs 3G iPhone: "You’ll have it next year" (dugg?!?!)

AT&T chief confirms 3G iPhone on the way

Apple to Unveil Faster IPhone, AT&T’s Stephenson Says

AT&T CEO: Expect A 3G iPhone In 2008

We know it was a slow newsday but its hard to believe the people reporting this didn’t know it wasn’t really news.  It would have perhaps been news if he said the 1st quarter or even 1st half of next year would see the 3G iPhone.  Or if he gave some other specs like improved memory.

Some notes:

AT&T’s CEO is an idiot for announcing anything – it will just keep more people holding off from buying the iPhone – it is basically just a reminder to wait for the 3G version.

Apple will likely release the 3G version surprisingly early as more and more people will hold off because they are waiting for the 3G version as time goes on.  We expect May-ish at this point.

Are we nuts?

 

Bonjour files found on the iPhone. Wireless synching?

Site default logo image
 
mDNSResponder.  On the iPhone.  Why?  It isn’t currently being used for anything is it?   But the files are there.  Wireless printing?  iChat coming?  The Apple Social?  Maybe….maybe not.
 

Most likely, though, it will allow wireless syncing to iTunes and hopefully allow you to play your iTunes library around the house on your iPod touch and iPhone.
 
 

WildCharge Inc. Beats Apple to Market With an Inductive Charger

Site default logo image

hrmpf caused quite a stir in the rumor community back in February when it reported on Apple’s inductive charging patent filing. Well, according to the Mossberg Solution at wsj.com, it looks like a company called WildCharge Inc. beat Apple to the punch on their popular portable devices. 

They haven’t done inductive charging (like Braun-Oral B does with their toothbrushes for instance) but they have made small adapters that have connection points to the flat surface – which should give similar results. (thx commenter)

We think it’d be a great convenience to charge our iPhones like this, but it would be really be off the hook (pun?) if Apple would work in a WiFi sync to go along with it (ahem – Macworld Expo), so we can free up a USB port.

So what do you all think? Ready to shell out an extra hundred bucks for the privelege not to charge your iPhone/iPod touch with the cradle? Or are we all waiting for iPhone2 with 3G and built-in inductive charging?  And maybe you are worried about electrocuting your cat and/or wasting too much precious energy with the inefficiencies of this device?  Do tell…

Apple, where are the rentals?

Site default logo image

 

AppleTV

 

 

UPDATE: Officiality

Well, by now is seems pretty obvious that Apple isn’t releasing anything huge before Christmas.  From what we’ve heard, just about everything in the Macintosh lineup is scheduled to get a hit at Macworld (more on this to come soon).  iPods are staying put for awhile and the iPhone won’t see revision 2 until around May – in time to ship in Asia.

That leaves the AppleTV line – Apple’s "hobby".  What could have been a huge product this Christmas is turning into a dud.  Why?   The technology is there.  We’ve all seen the hidden tidbits inside iTunes that allude to movie rentals.  It is ready to roll.  The infrastructure is also in place.  People downloading Purple Violets (>1GB) reported  it came in at under 15 minutes – much faster than the average trip to Blockbuster and with no winter clothing to put on or car fuel to burn.

The roadblock is that the studios aren’t budging.  Perhaps wary of what is happening in the Music Industry or perhaps burdened with the writer’s strike, they haven’t made the deals to get on iTunes like Apple had hoped.  Additionally, the entertainment industry is this time hoping to roll their own movie rental services – or at least have a few more players out there so as not to give Apple as much power as it has in the Music business.  TV shows from NBC also aren’t running on iTunes anymore.  Will other networks follow?  Not likely but they could.   Should all of this be cause for concern?  Perhaps.

Over the past few weeks, the studio bosses have been reversing course and praising apple again.  Warner Chief, Edgar Bronfman recently got caught praising Apple’s iPhone and iPod lines.  Jon Gruber at Daring Fireball reports on  Doug Morris‘ admission that the Entertainment industry had/has no idea what they are doing technology-wise.  In fact they were so stupid that they couldn’t even know who was smart enough to hire to figure it out.  That is Calculus Integral stupid – and it seems about right. Quote:

"There’s no one in the record industry that’s a technologist," Morris explains. "That’s a misconception writers make all the time, that the record industry missed this. They didn’t. They just didn’t know what to do. It’s like if you were suddenly asked to operate on your dog to remove his kidney. What would you do?"

Personally, I would hire a vet. But to Morris, even that wasn’t an option. "We didn’t know who to hire," he says, becoming more agitated. "I wouldn’t be able to recognize a good technology person — anyone with a good bullshit story would have gotten past me."

The movie industry might be a bit smarter (no one can be this dumb can they? – I mean they could have enrolled in some classes at NYU?) and has had some more time to watch things unfold.  Rather than give up such an important part of the value chain right away, they are willing to hold out longer.  But is this actually smarter?  People aren’t really into waiting for technology when better means exist – even if its legality is, shall we say, questionable.

While the movie studios wait on Internet movie rentals, more and more people are becoming familiar with the BitTorrent clients – some are even going mainstream like Vuze.  They are buying multi-terabyte mediacenter hard drives that can hold thousands of regular definition moves and hundreds of high definition movies.  People are getting higher speed fiber to the home and 100mb cable is being rolled out in limited areas. 

Movies are getting to the Bittorrent sites faster.  Most movies hit Bittorrent before they hit the rental shelves.  sometimes they are even out before they are in theaters.  While a lot of times these are poor quality camcorder or Oscar voter-type copies, if you wait long enough, most movies come out in DVD quality.  Some you may even see in HD. 

Of course people have alternatives.  They can go to Blockbuster or send away to Netflix and get their movies slower, more costly way.  But given the opportunity to do it better, more and more people are turning into pirates.  Just like the music industry did when Napster went mainstream.

So maybe the movie studios ARE dumber than the record labels?  At least the record labels didn’t have a precedent to follow.  Apple, of course isn’t hedging its bets on AppleTV.  It is, after all, just a hobby.  But how long will Apple leave this device out there dangling when it could be making mega huge hard drive media centers that can store thousands of movies?  Maybe we’ll find out at Macworld.

The window of opportunity is closing on AppleTV – but more importantly, it is closing on the movie studios who obviously don’t get technology or its implications on their business. 

 

Amazon's Kindle doesn't hold a candle to the iPhone/iPod

Site default logo image

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=thepartim-20&o=1&p=8&l=as1&asins=B000FI73MA&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifr

Amazon announced their highly- anticipated Ebook reader dubbed "Kindle" today.  Coming in at $399, it has some really good functionality, including:

  • Thumb keyboard
  • EVDO
  • 30 hour battery life
  • 2 hour recharge time
  • 10.3 ounces
  • 4.9 inches x 7.5 inches x 0.7 inches, 800×600 pixel
  • SD Slot for storage (from early specs)
  • USB 2.0 (from early specs)
  • Uses E Ink technology (high contrast display  – needs no backlighting)
  • Adjustable Font size
  • Can hold over 200 books
  • Can search books for phrase or name
  • 3.5 stereo headphone jack

Even with all of that it looks to us like it is going to be a really hard to justify this thing.  Why?  Because most of this functionality already exists in a product already out in the marketplace called the iPod touch.  The iPhone features add even more to this.  The books metaphors aren’t enough to switch us.  The E-ink technology is the only redeeming technology and it looks to be something exciting for people outdoors or with little access to power.  Overall though, we aren’t looking for another device to add to the man-purse.

When you compare the hardware, its not even close.  The iPod is thinner and about 1/3 the area but with more than 2/3rds of the screen – and more importantly it is something you can put in your pocket.  The screen is really easy to read (although the Kindle has a low voltage high contrast screen that will stay legible longer).  The Kindle’s ability to resize fonts won’t impress anyone who has pinched and panned on an iPod.  More importantly, the iPhone allows you to do many other functions – without carrying ten devices around with you.  While the Kindle is going to have an underpowered browser, the iPhone has a full Webkit Safari.

When you start getting into Youtube and Photos and Email it isn’t even fair.  Its like putting together the best high schoolers from around the nation and playing them against the New England Patriots. 

Those who have hacked their iPods and iPhones know there is a REALLY good Ebook reader aptly called "Books".  In hacked form it offers most of the features that Amazon’s Kindle offers.

The iPod comes in at less than the Kindle with much more RAM at $299, the iPhone and 16gb iPod match the Kindle’s $399 pricetag.

What still could be a winner for Amazon is the software and backend system they use to distribute the millions of books they have in their library (88,000) at launch.   While music and video content markets are quickly being cornered, the Ebook sales industry is still in its infancy.   Hopefully, Kindle turns into a service and hits all of the other hundreds of devices out there.  We love Amazon and wish them the best, but its hard to justify this type of device when a better one already exists and does much much more.

 Jeff Bezos sums it up best: "This isn’t a device, it’s a service."

Update: Forbes is thinking the same thing