May 9, 2013
Apple and the iWatch

With all the speculation that has gone on around the rumors of the iWatch, the most surprising revelation, to me at least, has been the number of tech pundits who don’t wear watches. The same people who love the Jawbone Up and the Nike Fuelband don’t wear watches? Makes it seem like they might not be horribly qualified to discuss the watch market, doesn’t it.

It seems that there is a divide between people who are into the “quantified self” and those who are watch wearers. The watch wearers, the very people who make up the market that it’s claimed Apple would be selling to with the iWatch, are very different people than the people who are putting up with the looks and design of the smart tracking devices. Watches are a form of jewelry, and in the case of men’s watches, one of the more socially acceptable forms. The tracking devices often have watch features, but they are focused almost solely on the data gathering and the design is a secondary goal.

The way I see it, for Apple to succeed in with this type of device, it would need to build in the tracking features of some of these devices, but with the looks/design of the more traditional watches. This would probably mean a smaller screen than most people are expecting, and less of a iPhone on your wrist and more of a remote sensor for your iPhone. Maybe the iWatch would function more like the Pebble, but either way, the build quality and design would have to be ratcheted way, way up.

The long and short of it is that I can’t see this being anything but a hobby, similar to early Apple TV, but even smaller. Unless… I get my wish and this is all an elaborate prank to get Samsung to make a shitty pedometer watch.

5:10pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDykdCwkU
Filed under: Apple Tech watches iWatch 
March 3, 2013
Serious Outside the Box Engineering

A very interesting find by Panic and interesting discussion (especially this comment) about how Apple designed the Lightning video adapter with an ARM SoC that decodes a compressed video stream from the iOS device and outputs the video on the AV outputs.

The design of this means that the iOS device can output video to any device type as long as there is an adapter that can talk to it. This of course is not limited to video, but designing this way means the only limitation for video is the bandwidth of the lighting port rather than being tied to a specific hardware implementation.

Very interesting to say the least.

12:20pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDyfQxA2S
Filed under: Apple iOS tech 
January 30, 2013
New Blackberry…

Brian Lam has the best take I’ve seen so far on the BB10 announcement today.

It was just blah. Nothing to see here, move along.

9:50pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDyd2xSDr
Filed under: BlackBerry tech phone 
October 16, 2012
MS Surface RT Pricing

The pricing seems reasonable, but I’m surprised that they don’t have any
cellular data connectivity. Seems like it will limit the usage of the
device.

1:10pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDyVQ4-VO
Filed under: MS tech surface 
September 9, 2012
parislemon:

What do the colorful Apple decorations for this coming week’s event at Yerba Buena represent?

They’re stretched iOS icons…

The stretched icons almost look as if they are moving by very fast. Maybe rather than pointing at a taller iPhone, they’re pointing out the 4G speeds.

parislemon:

What do the colorful Apple decorations for this coming week’s event at Yerba Buena represent?

They’re stretched iOS icons

The stretched icons almost look as if they are moving by very fast. Maybe rather than pointing at a taller iPhone, they’re pointing out the 4G speeds.

4:21pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDyT5hGJX
  
Filed under: apple tech iphone 
September 4, 2012
Well, Fuck…

As Gruber says, this looks to be a total cluster fuck.

Question 1 is why the FBI has this info and question 2 is what this group plans to do with it now and how much damage can it do.

Also, something really has to be done about these Java holes.

12:36am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDySlLs8L
Filed under: apple fbi tech 
August 29, 2012
What Killed the Linux Desktop

Miguel de Icaza gives the best explanation I’ve heard so far on why Linux on the desktop failed.

10:17pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDySQH7R8
Filed under: linux tech apple osx 
July 31, 2012
Steam Comes to Linux, Stallman Not Enthusiastic; News at 11

At least he isn’t outright hostile:

“This development can do both harm and good. It might encourage GNU/Linux users to install these games, and it might encourage users of the games to replace Windows with GNU/Linux,” he wrote. “My guess is that the direct good effect will be bigger than the direct harm. But there is also an indirect effect: what does the use of these games teach people in our community?”

He does call steam games on Linux “unethical because they deny freedom to their users.” Which is a bit much.

8:36am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDyQTbwPA
  
Filed under: games linux stallman tech 
July 26, 2012
Google Fiber Is The Very Best Of Google

parislemon:

Milo Medin of Google:

It’s easy to forget how revolutionary high-speed Internet access was in the 1990s. Not only did broadband kill the screeching sound of dial-up, it also spurred innovation, helping to create amazing new services as well as new job opportunities for many thousands of Americans. But today the Internet is not as fast as it should be. While high speed technology exists, the average Internet speed in the U.S. is still only 5.8 megabits per second (Mbps)—slightly faster than the maximum speed available 16 years ago when residential broadband was first introduced.

Google has just started offering Kansas City residents their Fiber service with 1,000 Mbps download and upload speeds. Yes, you read that correctly. 

And: no bandwidth caps. Boom.

It’s $70-per-month, which is about what I pay Comcast for my shitty 10 Mbps service (which it never actually hits — and has a cap). Google also includes 1 TB of storage with this fee (via Google Drive).

Or you can pay $120-per-month and get TV service as well. With a 2 TB DVR. And a Nexus 7 to control the set top box.

If you’re not ready for Gigabit Internet, you can settle for 5 Mbps service. Why the hell would you do that? Well, it’s free (with a one-time set up fee). Yep, Google is giving away the service I pay Comcast an obscene amount of money for.

Amazing. Bravo, Google. Now please bring this everywhere in the U.S. and force the cable companies to get busy innovating or get busy dying. 

Holy shit!

I look forward to sometime around 2040 when my area will have speeds like these.

5:09pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDyQAFh7K
  
Filed under: tech google 
July 26, 2012
Nintendo Reports Operating Loss Of $132M

parislemon:

When I read news like this, I get sad because I love Nintendo.

But not too sad, because I hold out hope that this somehow leads to Nintendo games coming to Apple devices.

Losses like these make me sad for the big N, but I don’t think releasing on Apple hardware would help them.

Take a look at how Sega and Atari are doing. Both still exist but are very pale shadows of their former selves.

So far none of the console makers have ever figured out how to reverse the slide once it starts, so it may be their only route, but if they take it Nintendo as we know it is done.

4:56pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZNUaDyQABvNd
  
Filed under: games tech 
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