Apple iBooks a Kindle killer with iPad launch?
Well Steve Jobs loves it, and another Apple launch today that has created media frenzy and instant iWant consumer demand, the launch of the iPad. Apple's tablet which allows book lovers to read e-books in a digital form (er, obviously), is going to give Amazon's wireless reader, the Kindle, something to compete with.
Now I'm very brand conscious and loyal. A colleague recently said, "Jim, you're all about the brand aren't you?" or words to that affect. Looking down at my desk, I shuffled the Apple iPhone to one side, stretched out my D&G denim legs, nudged the Prada glasses up my nose, and calmly replied, "of course". I don't deny enjoying the finer things in life, and whilst I am an early adopter for some digital gadgets, I do like to suss out the options, do my mansearch and read reviews, before paying the full premium in day or week one.
Now I have owned an Apple 20GB iPod early generation and 16GB iPod Touch. One was a present and was thrown into a bath by my son, the second a prize a won at a clients Xmas party in 2007 and sold for a £100 profit this month. With these out the way, I've gone out this month and bought a 16GB iPod Nano and got an Apple iPhone 3GS 16GB. The Nano to run with and the iPhone to play with.
But will I be rushing out to pre-order the Apple iPad touch-screen handheld computer? No. Did I end up buying the MacBook or iMac last week, as per my blog post in search of a laptop and desktop replacement? No. I actually bought a silver Sony Vaio FW51MF/H instead with a whopping 16.4 inch full HD screen. Oops, another brand purchase.
Looking at the iPad and asking myself, do I actually need it or do iWant it? The answer is neither. When you access the web, email, and Apple's apps on the iPhone or a laptop, is there really any need for a 9.7 inch screen that weighs 1.5lb and fork out another £499 for a non mobile SIM enabled iPad. I'd like to see Belkin and Exspect come up with some giant leather and clear crystal cases and accessories for a tablet that size!
Apple are pretty smart people. I mean, they've called their online music store iTunes. Some bright Californian spark must have stood up at a company meeting and said "let's call this eBook reader an iPad which users turn the pages of their purchased iBooks from the iBookstore". What a genius.
With Google launching the Nexus and trying to get books online, you can see that if you cannot beat them with one thing, join them instead. It will be interesting to see how this technology warfare pans out over the next few years between the likes of Apple, Microsoft and Google. It won't be long before Google launch a netbook or laptop to compete, offer free broadband or mobile broadband, and do your ironing.
Consumer brands like Sony, who have already an ebook reader in the market, must be shitting themselves. All that money spent on R&D, brand marketing and PR, only to see a fluffed audience be sold on a book tablet idea and then buy from the competition. Retailers like Waterstones must be rubbing their hands.
I was tempted by the Sony eBook Digital Book Reader. Slim, lightweight and sexy to look at. Everything I aspire to be. But I just don't read enough books to warrant coughing up a few hundred notes for me and worry about another bloody thing to charge up. The electric companies must be loving this cyclical power surge.
I don't know anyone who has a Kindle from Amazon nor a Sony eBook. People I know who love reading, actually love a good book. I take it that means a physical paperback. Millions of books are bought each year, but is there any point to bring out another gadget which the existing ones could potentially do?
You should be able to get the iBooks app on the Apple iPhone. Let me download digital books to my mobile and let me read them at my convenience without lugging around piece of technology in the pocket. I do that with movies and TV programmes. Then I can buy my books, movies and music in one place... not iTunes, but the Apple iStore. I'm sure it's only a matter of time.
Apple have enough money to buy iStore.com from The Information Store, Inc, and let them get on and improve asset performance, reduce cycle time and maximize return on investment for petroleum companies with their digital oilfield solutions.
Apple Store is offline retail, Apple iStore is online retail. Mr Jobs, this is a no brainer, so sort it out and let me have share of the buy out for aligning your brand identities. Invoice will be put in the post in due course or alternatively I will happily accept a lifetime of your products.
Sony VAIO laptop F Series with Intel Core i7 processor
Doing my fair share of mansearch for a laptop at the moment and I'm toying with a Dell Studio XPS 16 with a decent spec buying direct with some beefed up components. But the thing that gets me is the cost. For about the same price £1,100 to £1,100, I've seen I could get the Sony Vaio Laptop, VGN-FW51MF/H, 2.53GHz with 16.4 Inch Display from Sony Style, or just the opposite way and get an Apple iMac .
But with a little deeper searching, I noticed that trusty John Lewis don't have it in stock. On Sony Style they have some ready made FW Series models, but trying to customise one with some really decent gubbins I get a pop-up saying I can't do it.
This made me start wondering and back to Google trying to hunt for the answer.
Looking for reviews of a laptop is really hard work. There's far too many sites quaffing a load of copy/paste shite, sorry I mean just a paragraph and the standard spec. Not enough people who are experienced laptop and computer people giving their professional and subjective opinions. Also there is a load of old reviews and all I want is something recent.
I found one! Hooray, and it's with PC Pro (somewhat the name of the website implies they fit the bill). Their Sony VAIO VGN-FW51MF/H review. The first user comment struck me down, "Another review of an obsolete Laptop". Thank god I didn't buy at love at first sight. The user andyrs1 seems to know what's going down, and says that Sony are dropping this laptop. Other people chip in saying that Sony haven't pulled their socks up and launched laptops with the new Intel Core i7 processor.
News Flash
Well they have, albeit in the US. Website LAPTOPiNG say that "Sony has unveiled at the ongoing 2010 CES Show three new laptops: the VAIO F multimedia notebook, and VAIO Y and Z series ultraportables." The laptops will have the new Intel Core i7 and i5 processors.
I found on the Sony Style website in the US, you can now buy the Sony VAIO F Series with Intel® Core™ i7-720QM (1.60GHz) for $1529.99 which works out at a stupidly low price of £938.50 with a US plug.
Question is, how long will it take until they launch the new Sony VAIO F Series in the UK? This US version has Blu-Ray player and burner, something that the current FW Series doesn't have, just a player.
I could get say "what the hell, let's have a blow out and get the new Apple iMac from the Apple Store UK". But before clicking the link, you must watch the video below, an entertaining review of the Apple iMac.
Or, if that's not your cuppa tea and more of a techie geek, then you'll enjoy this video below of Tom's Hardware managing editor Chris Angelini talking about the Intel Core i5 and i7 quad processors. Riveting.
A broken mobile phone is as painful as one lost
I've been having a mobile-free couple of days due to my Nokia E71 deciding to stop working. It's surprising just how nice it is. I guess the mobile bill will be a bit cheaper, but I could be faced with a couple of day's worth of missed calls, texts and voicemails. How on earth did we cope without mobiles 10 years ago, or even 100 years ago? Maybe they ready did say back in the day...
Faced with a broken Vodafone phone, I had to decide whether to go and buy a cheap pay as you go mobile. The cheapest on the high street was a £9.99 generic phone with the requirement of a £20 top up on a network. However as it's a generic mobile it is unlocked so I could whip in my SIM and it will work. As for the £20 credit, I'm assuming you'd want to run this down phoning landlines in order to avoid telling the story to friends that you have a new number. £30 though for the luxury of being able to make a call once again? There must be a cheaper option.
The staff at the Vodafone store I went into today were great. The phone would be covered by the Nokia warranty, and 10 minutes later I was told it will be back on Monday next week. Awesome. However I had to sign the waiver to confirm that I know that it will come back with no data on it. Not awesome.
Fear struck in. Arse, what's on the phone? Am I going to lose the photos, videos, music, downloaded apps, special texts, etc? Thankfully I save multimedia files to the 2GB Micro SD card. I recommend you change the automatic setting from phone memory to card memory. I did end up paying £10 on a card reader specifically for mobile memory cards. But I'm not too convinced that my contacts will be saved.
Tomorrow I will have to bite my lip as I go into the very dodgy looking "unlock your mobile phone here" shop with an old PAYG Vodafone Sagem 527 . With the flashing neon lights in the window, and an array of phone covers hanging in the shelve, you just feel a bit ashamed you have to be asking them to unlock your mobile, let alone paying for that privilege. But for 7 quid, I'm hoping that the seconds this will take, will be worth it. I see this as a convenience fee. Coupled with the purchase of the memory card reader, it will be at last a tenna cheaper than buying another phone.
Hopefully the main people I call are stored in the SIM card. If not, it could be a very painful exercise to text, email, and be one of "those" people asking the "what's your number, again". Fingers are crossed that the last data syncronisation also copied over the contacts to the PC. If not, then at least I know one mobile number off by heart, the all important one
.
A broken phone seems to be just like losing your phone; when it's gone you realise just how much you miss it. Although I'm quite enjoying the silence. Once I get the spare phone unlocked or the E71 back, if there are no messages, voicemails or texts, and Billy comes to mind, I might just keep the damn thing switched off instead!
Augmented Reality download apps for Apple iPhone AR the future
Finally a gadget has been announced that is so intelligent that you can point your mobile phone or Apple iPhone, and get a wealth of superimposed information about the object or location on the screen.
You can now download apps which use Augmented Reality (AR), basically a mashup of the phones satnav, internal compass and the really cool accelerometer, which determines if the phone is facing up or down, found in the Wii controller.
By using an AR app on your iPhone, means that you could be pointing your phone at a London tourist attraction and on the screen it tells you information about it's history, admission price, opening hours or even point you in the direction of the nearest tube station when you come out.
Download the augmented reality apps such as Wikitude or Nearest Tube, and let me know how your on.
But the really exciting stuff is yet to come. We won't be saying "beam me up Scottie" just yet, but a new AR software called Layer is going to allow users to perform searches in Google, and the data is filtered and presented on the screen. A good example is looking for a decent bar late at night, and being shown where there are, how to get there, recent reviews or the cocktail menu.
At last an app that is practical and saves you time, rather than walking round in circles trying to find another pub. Better still, show me a list of pubs showing the Champions League games and serves a decent pint of Guinness.
Find my location on Google Latitude with mobile maps
How many times have you phoned a friend for an impromptu beer, to only find out they are out of town or you get that international dialling tone, that you quickly hang up on.
Well the good news is that Google have just launched a new service called Google Latitude that uses their Google Maps for mobile application and bridges the GPS positioning of your mobile phone to show your location on a map.
Pretty impressive, and what's even better is that you can invite your friends and family, allowing you to share your location in real-time and see where they are too.
The privacy folk are likely to question how much more is Google becoming Big Brother will all this data we are sharing them. From web search history, personal emails in Gmail, instant chat with Talk, shopping and transaction history with Wallet, video preferences with YouTube, our inner thoughts with Blogger and the sites we visit with DoubleClick. It makes you think what they don't already know, but it becomes powerful when you can start to link services together.
Google Latitude is just another step forward in their ability to innovate and lead the field with services that make our life easier. Whether this service remains free forever, is turned into a paying subscription model, or funded through targeted advertising, millions of people will sign up for it.
Just look at Twitter, and they've managed to grow to a base of millions with a free service, with an apparent 2,000 new accounts a day. They will start to monetise this once they feel they have the capacity to do so, and I feel Google will do the same. It's not like there are many competitors out there to take market share.
If people start to use Google Latitude with their iPhones, then expect to find a lot more friend requests in your email inbox. Should they develop this into an iGoogle widget, imagine the fun you could have with it from your desktop, or how useful it would be on your Smartphone, or Nokia for example, whilst out and about.
For example,
- See where I am on the London Marathon 2008 course on April 26th, and get to the next mile marker to cheer me on, or
- See if I'm in town or in the area to grab a beer after work at the local pub.
This reminds me of 24, and Jack Bauer asking CTU to triangulate the co-ordinates to see where someone was from their mobile phone signal. With GPS tracking from mobile phones, we can do a lot more with geolocation services.
Imagine if Google used Latitude alongside Google Maps for Mobile and microblogging such as Twitter, to help you find your friends, like a sat nav. It could go something like this;
... in 100 yards turn right. Continue for 50 yards and Dave is in the Duke of York pub on the left, enjoying a pint of Guinness. Text him now so your drink will be waiting on the bar on your arrival.
At least it would make life easier knowing which pub your work colleagues or friends were in on a Friday or Saturday evening. Although the last thing you need is the better half knowing you are still there at last orders, hours after you had promised you were on your last drink and about to leave.
WordPress application for iPhone and iPod Touch
I've been using the WordPress application for the iPhone and iPod Touch recently and am really impressed. If you have not seen it yet, pop over to the iTunes Store and find the download.
This is an app that is for primarily for people using WordPress to write new posts and save a local draft, or even upload it with a draft or published status.
There isn't the editing and formatting tools you find in your WordPress admin, but if you save it to Draft status and upload, it is simple to then add images, links, videos, etc. You can add photos from the app, either those you have on your iPod or if you have the iPhone you can use the camera to take a picture.
From an efficiency point of view, if you are planning on blogging regularly, it's great to pen anything that's on your mind whilst on the move and then expand on the topic later, or just upload the post whenever you have an internet connection.
I have an iPod Touch, so I am reliant on being at home to upload. However, spending a few hours on the train each day commuting, means that I can draft a few stories or thoughts and publish when it suits me.
You can also select categories and tags, so that posts don't get uploaded uncategorised. One feature that is pretty cool is the Preview function on the iPod, which makes it much easier to read what you have typed and check for any errors. If you find yourself exiting without saving, it does recover the last post you were writing, but don't rely on this, save whenever you can.
Downloading this application was easy and configeration simple, but there was an option in the settings in WordPress admin online which needed to be updated. This was to allow remote access to push the data to WordPress.
If you have more than one blog, then you can add more to you iPod or iPhone. So give it a go, you just might realise that it will enhance your blogging frequency!
Using Sony PS3 Playstation 3 Eye as a webcam
Clearing out some cupboards after Christmas, I found the web cam from my PS3, the Playstation Eye. This was launched with some great expectation of lots of compatible games. However, after buying EyeCreate and downloaded another game online, I've not used the damn thing!
So having surfed the web this weekend, I found a site which has a downloadable programme and drivers to enable the USB Playstation Eye as a web cam on Windows XP and other operating systems, such as Vista.
Is was really quick and easy to do. After installation and a restart of the PC, I was able to see just how amazing the quality of the camera was, with a resolution of 640 x 480 and 75 fps. One of the other advantages of this gadget is the combined duo of a camera and microphone.
Adding this to my Skype account under the video settings was simple, and now I can finally look foward to some VoIP action!
If you want to download the drivers and get more information, click here.
