Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Steve Jobs Taking Medical Leave
Friday, January 09, 2009
Download Disaster for Microsoft
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
MacWorld 2009 Thoughts and Observations
Apple product announcements were in ample supply during this year's MacWorld despite an ill Steve Jobs. A recent public announcement from Jobs clarified that despite his heath he is still control of Apple. That’s good news after watching Phil Schiller provide the MacWorld keynote. Phil is Apple's senior Vice President of Worldwide Product Marketing and has moved up from Steve's perennial sidekick to take the lead presenter position. Here are a few of my thoughts related to today’s keynote.
Phil Schiller’s Keynote: Phil is not ready for the primetime keynote spot. His performance was rookie like. He was lucky he could finish sentences with the proper words. He was awkwardly nervous for a senior executive. During his hour plus presentation he never really connected with the audience. His timing was off and his performance was disjointed. Phil’s excitement level about his own products seemed rehearsed and ingenuous. In contrast, when Jobs said some technology was “really cool” you believed him. I don’t know Phil well and he may be a great marketer, but he clearly isn’t in to the products at the same level as Jobs. Phil should consider himself lucky for making it through the entire presentation without any major missteps.
Apple Innovation: Apple’s level of innovation is astounding. The software and hardware products they develop are second to none. Can you imagine what types of products sit behind Apple’s Research and Development walls? It must be a treasure trove. While today’s announcements were not earth shattering they demonstrate Apple’s proficiency in innovation.
iLife 09: The already excellent iLife product line continues to improve with the newly announced iLife 09. iPhoto’s new face recognition software will consolidate all pictures of the same person in one collection. We’ll need to see how effective this is, but it is certainly ground breaking. Listening carefully to Phil it sounds like Apple purchased the technology. This isn’t something you hear often from Apple and I wonder if this was a slip. iMovie looks fantastic and a significant upgrade from previous versions. Garageband now has innovative music lesson capability allowing the user to learn how to play guitar or piano from onscreen instructors. Seems like a bit of a novelty. What became obviously clear during the presentation was that iLife announcements require their own day in the spotlight. There are too many features and applications to properly squeeze in to a twenty minute time slot.
Randy Ubillos - Chief Architect for Video: The real stand out from this year’s keynote was the iMovie demo by Randy Ubillos. He delivered a spot on and passionate demo. He should have delivered the entire keynote. He embodies the Jobs spirit. Get those marketing guys out of the way!
iWork 09: Who uses this? I don’t know any Mac user with iWork, but I suspect they’re out there. iWork continues to mature in all areas. The future of Microsoft’s Office on Mac is limited and it’s important iWork is available to take its place. These enhancements are welcomed and necessary Highlights of new features include Keynote’s iPhone remote feature and Number’s table categories and the ability to take complex Excel features such as functions and simply them.
Iwork.com Beta: iWork 09 has a document sharing feature that allows documents to be published to Apple’s web site. Those allowed to view the document have access to content reviewer features and download capabilities. It’s interesting to see Apple move in this direction, but even more interesting to see it done in the form of a public beta. It would be nice to have version history. The service will eventually be fee based, but is free during the beta. Another thing I thought was interesting was Phil’s direct request to Apple users for their feedback. I’ve never heard Microsoft ask users for their feedback from a “world stage”.
Mac Book Pro 17”: Eight hour battery life. Enough said!
No news on upgraded Mac Minis.
Monday, September 22, 2008
iPhone 2.1 Thoughts
It was with great anticipation that I awaited the 2.1 release of the iPhone operating system. After running the new OS for a week I feel that many of my most frustrating issues have been resolved. Battery life - improved. Keyboard - more responsive at time of unlock and within applications. Application crashes - dramatically down. When Steve Jobs met with CNBC for a short interview after his recent keynote he smiled about the dramatic number of fixed in 2.1. That canny way of expressing the extent of bugs highlights how deep the bug list really was. The release offered very few enhancements. Those provided were very minor. This release was about bugs. Jobs and his team had to get those issues under control before the iPhone's image was tarnished. The phone risked becoming a showpiece with no brain. Now on to the enhancements!
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
iPhone 2.0.2 software does not solve 3G issue
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Best Buy To Sell iPhones
Monday, August 04, 2008
iPhone Firmware 2.0.1 Released
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Jobs to Operations - Stat!
Friday, July 25, 2008
Tablet Temptations
Fixation on Fixes
Monday, July 21, 2008
Review: iPhone 3G
Keyboard:
The keyboard takes time to learn, but once acquainted with it, it is usable. Even with my early proficiency my keystrokes per minute will never reach what is capable on a tactile keyboard. The biggest limitation to the keyboard is its inability to enter landscape mode with the Mail application. This is possible in Safari so it’s not clear why, on a phone that is over one year old, this is still an outstanding issue. On some occasions I found the keyboard to be unresponsive or delayed.
Exchange Activesync:
Configuring mail accounts is very easy. Overall Activesync works great with Exchange. I have noticed that the Push technology is a real battery killer. Many have suggested turning off Push to Fetch manually to save battery power (but then losing out on the Push feature). There are issues with using Activesync when you can’t connect to Exchange. There’s no “offline” mode so messages you try to move to a different folder result in an error. For some reason I had intermittent issues with Activesync when using Wifi.
Phone Functionality and Voice Mail:
The phone functionality is very good. The numeric keyboard is easy to use. On screen call options are well designed. Visual Voicemail is great! Switching between speaker phone, handset and Bluetooth is a cinch. Call quality is decent. Max volume on headset still seems low to me. External speakers worked well for calls as well as music.
App Store / 3rd Party Applications
The iPhone SDK will produce a vast array of applications. The 500+ applications currently available through the App Store barely scratch the service on what we will see vendors produce over the next year. There’s a tremendous opportunity for developers to produce rich mobile applications.
Enterprise Readiness
The iPhone is not ready for the Enterprise. The device is missing basics that both Blackberry and Windows Mobile have. Consumers will, for the most part, not care about these. Here are a few examples of features found in other mobile business products, but missing from the iPhone:
• Inability to create meeting request from phone
• Inability to view calendar in week view
• Inability to directly view contact info from meeting invitee
• Inability to customize and “profile” alert notifications for email and phone calls
• Inability to view ToDos and Notes,
• Inability to mark all messages as read
• Inability to perform global search on calendar, contacts and mail
• Inability to copy and paste
• Lack of new message indicator on screen when unlocked
• Lack of new message indicator along status bar
• Lack of external message indicator/light
• Lacks the ability to modify “out of office” from the device
• Exchange lookup via Address Book requires extra steps
Battery Life:
Phone users will need to adjust to the reduced battery life of a 3G type phone. The following settings are a must to mange battery life properly:
• Turn off locator service
• Turn off 3G unless needed
• Reduce screen brightness to 20%
• Consider Fetching mail when needed vs Push
• Turn off wireless when not in use
• Turn off Bluetooth when not in use
• Reduce auto lock time
Ultimately, you will need to figure out what services you can live without to prolong the battery life per charge cycle.
Stability:
Like others who are reporting issues via Apple’s Support forums, I am experiencing a wide arrange of stability issues. Safari has quit on me a number of times while browsing. I’ve also had a number of third party applications quit upon start up. I’ve also experienced the now called “black screen of death” where the device completely freezes and requires a hard reset. Apple needs to address these quickly. Mac news sites have reported a 2.0.1 in testing to hopefully address some of those issues.
3G Performance:
The 3G network in Chicago is spotty. AT&T’s coverage web site reflects 3G strength in binary terms – it’s there or not there. This is misleading due to the patchy 3G coverage areas and is different than how they report EDGE coverage. Browsing on 3G is a great experience and really demonstrates the new phone’s value.
GPS:
I’ve used the GPS feature in various Blackberry’s for about two years now. It has been reliable and accurate. I can’t say the same for the GPS in the iPhone. I’m not sure if the issue is with Google Maps or the GPS chip on the device. Google Maps is extremely slow to update the GPS signal on screen. On some occasions, Google Maps floated my GPS position a ¼ of a mile off from my actual location. A manual reset of my position got it back on track. Use with caution.
Multimedia Functionality:
This is the best iPod anyone could ever have. Video, music and pictures are excellent.
Camera:
With proper lighting, the camera takes great shots. Very easy to sync pictures back to your computer or email to someone else.
Overall experience:
iPhone users will enjoy having so many features packed in to one device. As a business user I’m a bit frustrated with missing features found in Windows Mobile or Blackberry. The overall experience, however, is very satisfying. Apple needs to aggressively address bugs and missing features. As 3rd party application development continues the value of the device will rise even further.
Friday, July 11, 2008
Breaking Down the iPhone 3G Hype
Blackberry to iPhone Potential Regrets
-integrated voice dialing
-visual message indicator
-vibrate and ring profiles (level 1 messages, vibrate and ring combinations, etc...)
-speed of navigation
-week view
-speed of text entry from manual keyboard
-camera flash and zoom
Can you think of more? Email me with your thoughts.
A Little Communication Please
Thursday, June 12, 2008
WWDC Post Conference Thoughts
Additional observations:
The stand out feature with long term potential is Apple’s Core Location. Core Location allows applications to take advantage of an iPhone users whereabouts. With the new iPhone, location content will be determined by wifi, cell or GPS. The potential of leveraging a user’s location is unlimited. Examples include applications that can deliver new content based on where you’re located and social networking applications.
Sega’s gaming demonstration was fascinating. The iPhone IS a game console. It won’t replace the Gameboy anytime soon, but mobile gaming on a phone has been reinvented.
I appreciate Apple’s attempt to minimize power and processor consumption by disabling applications running in the background. The big unanswered question, until the keynote was, how does an application in the background alert the user if it is disabled. Apple’s answer is a background service that provides a push notification service that sends all application messages through Apple and then to the device. This feature won’t be available until September and there are lots of unanswered questions related to how it will work, but we now have more clarity on how developers should plan on alerting users of application events when they are in the background. Got that all you Instant Messenger developers?
I was disappointed by the uninspiring end user features. End user features were barely covered and not demoed. The end user features are hardly the focus of the development team at this point as Apple has bigger fish to fry in terms of adoption. The features announced are welcome, but hardly inspiring. Perhaps seeing the enhancements will help create more enthusiasm. Not much to speak of with the limited coverage at the event. I want my copy and paste functionality!
The keynote covered more details on the App Store. Of note, businesses will have the ability to push applications to business owned iPhones. This was yet another example of Apple bending over backwards for the enterprise environment.
Apple’s new MobileMe is a very attractive service It replaces the aging Dot Mac service with a new set of features and experiences (more remains the same than changes). The last time Dot Mac was upgraded, the results were hardly impressive and failed to keep up with other mail vendors such as Google. If Apple’s implementation is as good as the demo, Apple will finally position itself with a strong web platform for email, calendar and contacts. It will also provide non enterprise Blackberry users with a justification for leaving Blackberry.
Friday, June 06, 2008
"As Is" Apple TV Destined to Fail
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Pre WWDC Thoughts
Focus areas will clearly be: Leopard install base, kudos to developers for creating Leopard apps, iPhone.
While I'm eager to see if the new iPhone has a front side camera, GPS and improved battery life, I'm much more excited about the new line of applications from both Apple and 3rd parties. Apple will certainly add more software functionality. There are many opportunities to improve the experience and from early SDK hints we know these are coming. Search and other features are logical features over time for Apple to provide. The 3rd party market will show the real gems. Apple will do everything in its power to highlight the amazing work 3rd parties have already done to leverage the platform. Breaking out of the web application space to local and more power applications will take the device in all new directions. I would really like to see the iPhone, and touch for that matter, extend the desktop even more. Examples include streaming music and video to the device from my central iTunes library and accessing documents remotely from my Mac desktop.
Working Parental Controls Must Be Priority
Sunday, April 06, 2008
O Flash, Where Art Thou
Friday, March 21, 2008
iPod touch - Not Your Last Generation iPod
MacBook Air Reaches High Altitudes
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
WWDC: Leopard Thoughts
So with this year's Leopard preview I was anxious as always, but cautiously optimistic. At first glance, the Leopard standouts are Finder, Quick Look and Spaces. With the 300 or so enhancements to the OS, with many features yet to be announced, it's hard to say what other features will be of value. You may have noticed I didn't mention Time Machine. While I think Time Machine is revolutionary for a desktop OS product (and free), I don't know quite yet how it will fit in my backup strategy. I'm glad to see that Spotlight will see a performance boost (badly needed). The features in Leopard are more practical in nature. I'm looking forward to seeing the final product list.