April 2010

I won’t be buying an iPad after all.

by alec on April 20, 2010

For the last couple of days, I’ve been in the company of masses of the technorati here at eComm.  Many of them are carrying Apple’s latest gadget – the iPad.  I won’t lie.  iPad is very pretty.  It has definitely caught my eye, and because of delays in delivering the iPad to Canada, I came down here intending to check it out and perhaps… buy one.

Not this trip, I’m afraid.  I’ve seen the iPad, I’ve played with it, and I won’t be buying one… yet.  It just doesn’t do enough for me to justify the expense.

The positives:  I was blown away by its utility as a media consumption device. Books (Apples iBook, and Amazon’s Kindle) were fantastic.  Video was equally incredible, although I was surprised to see that YouTube videos weren’t available in high definition.  Music was wonderful as well, and the newspaper experience on USA Today and the Wall Street Journal was fabulous. Gaming was cool as well.

The negative (yes, there’s one overarching negative) was the keyboard.  The on screen keyboard is a duplicate of the iPhone keyboard – four rows of keys, instead of five.  It eliminates the number keys and many of the punctuation marks, moving them to a secondary pop-up activated by pressing a button like the shift key on the lower left side of the keyboard.  That’s a great solution in the display constrained iPhone environment, which is designed around thumb typing, but a crappy solution on a device the size of the iPad which purports to be able to support touch typists.  You can’t touch type on a non-standard keyboard!

Apple’s failure on the keyboard impacts every content creation application on iPad from email to word processing, presentations and spreadsheets.  Unfortunately, I cannot justify spending $600 on a device solely for content consumption.  Too much of my usage on a portable device is content creation, not consumption.

A big disappointment. I am glad I had a chance to play with it before making a decision to buy.

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New Voyces in the communication industry.

by alec on April 19, 2010

I’m in San Francisco this morning for the annual eComm conference.  We’ve already heard from BitTorrent, GoogleVoice, and the FCC on the US National Broadband Plan.  As always, this event delivers enormous value.  The event has become a Mecca for communications industry people, touching on everything from advanced technologies to finance and policy. 

At dinner last night six of us launched a new blog called Voyces.  Co-authored by Andy Abramson, myself, Jamie Siminoff, Tom Howe, Larry Lisser and Luca Filigheddu, (and soon to be joined by Jim Courtney) Voyces is an insiders view of what is happening in the communications industry today.  It’s a collaborative effort that we’ve worked on over the last couple of months.

So check it out, leave a comment, brickbats and bouquets welcome.

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Crater sized loophole in the Truth in Caller ID Act?

April 15, 2010

Yesterday the US Congress passed the Truth in Caller ID Act, designed to curtail deceptive Caller ID spoofing.  The substance of the law is this short paragraph: “It shall be unlawful for any person within the United States, in connection with any real time voice communications service, regardless of the technology or network utilized, to [...]

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iPhone OS 4.0 and the coming identity gulags.

April 14, 2010

The unveiling of iPhone OS 4.0 caused a bit of a stir last week.  Apple will finally allow multi-tasking on iPhone devices, which means that true communications clients can finally be built to run on iPhone.  No longer will users be required to load and run the Skype, Truphone or Google voice clients – they [...]

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I’m sleeping in the bathroom these days.

April 13, 2010

No, I’m not in trouble with my wife and I don’t have to sleep in the tub, but thank you for asking. We’re simply painting our bedroom, which involves moving all of the furniture to the center of the room, taping, painting and then moving the furniture back to where it belongs.  It’s a big [...]

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Apple’s naked self interest

April 12, 2010

Any vendor in the platform business knows that their primary product is programming interfaces – the so-called APIs that developers depend upon in order to deliver applications.  The API exposes features of the platform, and differentiate applications running on that platform from all others.  Lose control of the API, and you will lose control of [...]

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RIM bought QNX because of Apple.

April 9, 2010

News is out this morning that Harman International has agreed to sell its QNX Software Systems division to Research In Motion.  TechCrunch reports that this might mean tighter integration with automobiles, since Harman acquired QNX in order to provide software to its automotive customer base.  RIM Co-CEO Mike Lazaridis himself hypes up the automotive possibilities [...]

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Hackintosh chez Saunders

April 8, 2010

Last night I published a couple of tweets on a project I’ve been working on in the evening this week – building a Hackintosh, or installing Mac OS X, dual boot — on my quad-core desktop at home.  After years of gentle ribbing from my friends, plus a desire to understand more about the Mac [...]

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iPad “soars” on Boingo

April 7, 2010

There’s nothing like a good hack hook to grab media attention.  The latest news from Boingo Wireless does exactly that.  Reading iPad Now Second Most Popular Mobile WiFi Device in Boingo Airports, Apple’s Latest Market Changer Surpasses Android, Blackberry, Windows Mobile, the implication is that the four day old iPad is on such a tear that [...]

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