Jan
28
SAN FRANCISCO - JANUARY 27:  Apple Inc. CEO St...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

As you know I am an Apple fanboy. I own a Macbook Pro since July, I love it for it does everything I wanted it to – just better – and a massive amount of stuff that makes life convenient and using computers fun. I do run a hackintosh as well. I do have my second iPod, of which I think it’s the definitive portable music player. And I do have the iPhone 3G (although it came to me more by accident) which is a nice gadget to have with great usability and it introduced this huge trend of multitouch screens along with an accessible UI and a platform for apps that today suits every imaginable need. There is – imho – still no serious competitor on the market, with the Android phones probably being rather close but not there yet.

Now, yesterday Apple presented a product called the iPad, a portable computer with a multitouch display and – at least by what you see from the outside – pretty much nothing else. Since this product has been rumored for years, many people during the last 24 hours already laid hand on it, reviewed it and there is as much information on the internet now that after much reading and watching videos I feel as informed as if I had touched one myself. :-D
Still I feel a bit disapointed by it and here’s why:

lcars_star_terk_padd

Image by AWWS via Flickr

In my understanding a Pad-like computer is every geeks dream since Star Trek TNG (I think there were similar devices in TOS but they rather looked like Etch-a-Sketches), where every crew member ran around the Enterprise with devices commonly known as PADDs (Personal Access Display Device).They came in several shapes and could obviously used for anything from accessing ship data to writing your personal journal.
They were easily exchanged, it seemed like nobody actually owned his PADD or was technically bound to it. Obviously they could easily be replicated as they were lying around anywhere. Note that they were not only used by humans but also by the other races although their design differed.

There has been work on real PADDs for some time now actually, notice the Apple Newton or Palm PDAs. Of course there also has been much improvement over the years. So, in this regard the iPad is a logical next step and the expected answer to the Amazon Kindle, which was made to be the ultimate digital reading device.

If you look at the features and specifications of the iPad you see it’s a quite impressive list for a device of its size. But then again – as many blogs noticed – the iPad looks like an oversized iPhone. And the worrying thing it isn’t even that. Although it comes in a WiFi and 3G version, you won’t have the native ability to phone with it, although you easily could connect a headset via cable or bluetooth. It has no camera (not on the back, not on the front, no photo, no video). And it runs iPhone apps of which there are plenty of but it will probably take some time until there are worthy apps tailored to the specific device.

It’s advertised with about 10 hours of battery life which seems good enough if it lives up to that. What I wonder about is why they promote stand-by time. While it makes sense with phones where you can still be reached because of long stand-by battery life I don’t really see the benefit of not using a device for a month so it still has power.

Then there is the storage: 16, 32 and 64 GB flash memory are the options to choose from which is the same as you can get in iPod touches at the moment. As you can software-wise use the iPad to have full iPod functionality (which means storing music, video, gaming and podcasts), you can put your photos on it, use the internet (download?) and even have newly designed iWork apps on the device along with the new Bookstore (+ebooks) and of course other apps I doubt that 64 GB is anywhere near the amount of space necessary. It took me mere weeks to fill the 160 GB of my Macbook. I can’t really take my whole media library with me on the iPhone right now.
Also I wonder what writing really common – which means intensely text-based – documents on the on-screen keyboard feels like. Note that during the demos nobody really did that during the presentation. It might be really nice for emails but how good does it perform when writing, let’s say, on a master thesis? You probably need to buy that keyboard accessory.
And then this the question occurred to me: If all I can do on the iPad is basically iPhone or iPod touch functionality (book reading on the big screen being the only exception i see), well, why not buy an iPhone or an iPod touch, which you can actually take with you? I doubt realy cineast will watch movies on it, jsut like real audiophils probably won’t hear their music with it (you need to connect it to good speakers, so it’s no longer wireless).

I simply feel that – apart from this being a cool, thoughtfully designed product – either the iPad is – yes, I dare saying it – redundant to a notable degree or it is aimed at a rather small group of customers for which it fills a gap between iPod and book reader that I don’t really see yet. At 499$ in the smallest incarnation and about 800$ for the all-in-variant it seems just not as useful as the other products in the line up. I may be wrong here.

Now, what’s great is that the iPad uses and elaborates on the great keyboard-&-mouse-less user interface ideas used on the other Apple touch devices. I do believe many people will love to use it because of that especially if they have shied away from using any laptops or computers up to now. It might be perfect for my mum! But me, myself and I will probably stick with a real computer (which of course could be married with the multi-touch display at some point) for now. Note also that Apple not really markets the iPad as an ebook reader but as a missing link between smartphone and laptop. However to me it can not really replace either of them easily. Therefore it would need custom browsers like Firefox, Wireless syncing, more storage, more connectivity. It is a small step forward but no huge leap in my opinion. Of course that might be a by-product of the hype that has wildly gone crazy during recent weeks. Still I’m excited to see this product evolve.

Update: I finally saw the Keynote and to a large degree, I believe it proved my point. They tried to set first foot into a niche that does not necessarily exist naturally but probably grows now that the iPad is there.

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Aug
13
Filed Under (apple, article, computer, thoughts) by yodahome on 13-08-2009
MacBook Pro 13
Image by vLutzifer via Flickr

Mein allererster Computer war ein Robotron, die DDR-Variante eines C64, wenn man so will. Er konnte im Grunde nur ein rudimentäres BASIC, der Bildschirm war ein alter russischer Schwarz-Weiss-Fernseher und die Daten waren auf normalen Kassetten gespeichert. Wollte man z.B. ein Spiel spielen, legte man eine Kassette ein, tippte ein paar Befehle ein, ließ das Band laufen (das klang so ähnlich wie Modemgeräusche) und dann war das Programm im Speicher. Dann konnte man das Programm nutzen, schaltete man den Rechner ab, war alles wieder weg. Puff.

Später dann kam ein PC, MS DOS 5.0, dann das erste Windows (3.1), das nächste Windows (95), das nächste bessere Windows (98) und etwa zu dieser Zeit mein erster OS-Wechsel zu Linux. Debian auf meinem eigenen kleinen Server, das war eine vollständig neue Welt, denn jedes Betriebssystem benutzt andere Bedienmetaphern, die man erlernen muss. Unter Dos und Linux waren das noch eine  teils recht unterschiedliche Sammlung von Textkommandos, die man auswendig lernen mußte. Seit Ende der 90er Jahre und dank der Evolution im Bereich der grafischen Benutzeroberflächen sieht das jetzt anders aus, zumindest teilweise, denn um Nutzerfreundlichkeit auszustrahlen, ist man als Hersteller dazu angehalten, sich an etablierten Standards zu orientieren. Die Fenstermetapher ist zum Beispiel mittlerweile universell auf allen Systemen umgesetzt. Ebenso wie Maussteuerung oder die Schreibtischmetapher (aka Desktop). Erfunden hat das eigentlich in weiten Teilen Apple. Microsoft hat das Konzept aber überzeugender an den Mann gebracht. Und in bunten Schachteln.

Seit kurzem bin ich stolzer Besitzer eines 13” MacBook Pro, meinem ersten, neuen Laptop seit 2002. Damals hab’ ich mir bei einem Kaffeeanbieter, der nicht genannt werden will, für 1300 € (meinem ersten selbstverdienten Geld) einen Laptop von Medion gekauft, mit dem ich leidlich zufrieden war. Das kann man dem Gerät nicht unbedingt ankreiden, die Technik war wohl einfach noch nicht soweit. Die Laufzeit betrug im Maximum 2-2,5 Stunden, für jede sinnvolle Nutzung beispielsweise an der Uni deutlich zu wenig. (Heute schaffen das selbst billige Geräte mit links)

Die Gewöhnung an die neuen GUI von einem Mac OS X war, trotz einiger gravierender Unterschiede, erschreckend einfach. Beispiel: Programme schließt man mit CMD + Q, denn ein Klick auf das rote X schließt zwar das Fenster, behält aber die Applikation im Speicher. Menüleiste immer am oberen Bildschirmrand, das @-Zeichen auf dem L statt auf dem Q, keine rechte Maustaste bzw. keine Tasten unter dem Trackpad – es sind viele Kleinigkeiten, an die man sich auf den Mac erst gewöhnen muß. Spätestens aber, wenn man weiß, das man das Kontextmenü erreichen kann, wenn man mit zwei Fingern statt mit einem auf das Trackpad tippt, beginnt man sich zu fragen: Warum machen das nicht alle so?

Thema Software. Nahezu alle nötigen Programme, die ich schon auf PC nutze, gibt es auch für den Mac und dazu noch einige tolle Programme, die man unter Windows vergeblich sucht. Hier eine kleine Übersicht:

NeoOffice_Writer
Image by yyq123 via Flickr

OpenOffice.org gibt es seit einiger Zeit auch für den Mac, NeoOffice ist ein Derivat von OpenOffice, welches auch spezielle Features des Mac ausnutzt und ansonsten voll kompatibel ist.

Evernote benutze ich unter Windows und auf meinem iPhone, es ist für Notizen und Mitschriften jeglicher Art sehr praktisch und darf deshalb natürlich auch auf dem Mac nicht fehlen. Obwohl Apple den wirklich auffallend schnellen Browser Safari mitliefert, ist auch die Nutzung von Firefox kein Problem. Mittels des noch in der Entwicklung befindlichen Weave-Plugins kann ich meine Browser sogar synchronisieren.

Auch andere Open Source Programme wie Gimp, Handbrake, Miro oder ScummVM sind auf dem Mac zuhause, andere wie den IM Klienten Adium, das Softwareaktualisierungstool Appfresh oder auch dem Texteditor Smultron gibt’s nur für Mac. Dazu kommen noch ein paar kommerzielle Programme, über die ich vielleicht später noch berichten werde.

Da Mac OS X auf einer Unixbasis steht, ist auch die Benutzung des Terminal, die man so auch aus Linux kennt, vollkommen unproblematisch. Diverse Softwarepakete gibt’s z.B. beim MacPorts Projekt, wer Pakete unter Debian oder Ubuntu installieren kann, der kriegt das hier auch hin.

Und auch für das kleine Spielchen zwischendurch bieten sich diverse Möglichkeiten an, einige Spiele von EA (Spore und Sims 3 beispielsweise) kommen schon Intel-Mac-kompatibel aus der Presse. Mit Darwine (dem Wine-Port für den Mac) kann man dann auch ohne Emulator Windowssoftware – und damit eine größere Auswahl an Spielen – auf dem Mac laufen lassen, das geht sogar auf dem Macbook recht gut.

Ich werde diesem Thema sicherlich noch einige Artikel widmen, zumal ich gerade erst beginne mir einen Überblick zu verschaffen. Klar scheint mir aber, dass es absolut keinen Grund gibt, dem Apple grundsätzlich den Rücken zuzudrehen, viele Kritikpunkte sind heute nur noch Vorurteile und wenn man das Geld investieren möchte, bietet der Apple gerade dem Computereinsteiger ein befriedigenderes Erlebnis als das Windows je konnte.

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Official Zooomr Blog : Zooomr 2008 Release Schedule

Ok, I have been very close to giving up on Zooomr a few times since the launch of Mark III because on several occasions upload or other features did not work and many things I would consider basic stuff weren’t available. And then there was kind of an dead pause after the intense communication time around MKIII which made me think Zooomr could be slowly dying.

But it’s not.

Head of Zooomr (HoZ) Kristopher Tate has been over to Japan to actually save Zooomr from dying by establishing a business model that would provide enough income to keep everything running. Zooomr is hosted by Zoho which only was a short term solution and so now Zooomr moves it’s data to a new japanese data center along with an 2008 release of the service (MK4). Also there will be more of a mobile service of Zooomr starting out in Japan but probably coming to other countries as well.

Not much is known about what features mk4 will introduce but let us hope the update is much more smoother this time.

In other news:

There’s probably no better way to find out if somebody is a geek than to ask them whether they saw Steve Jobs’ keynote at MacWorld. I watched the presentation being blogged live at macrumorslive.com (no link here, as it’s not available any longer) but found myself only mildly impressed at the beginning when I read the announcements (and saw live photos from the show). The service was actually one of the few who managed to stay up while many other services like Twitter, Crunchgear etc. went down facing the amount of massive interest.

However, I then saw the video stream and thereby proved that the art of presentation is actually a big point in the cult around Apple products. Still, they brought up some great stuff. I think the Apple TV really becomes an interesting product now it’s stand-alone, although in Germany the main providers for on-demand TV and movie content through internet are Maxdome and T-Com and they market their products very agressively while there are no movies or tv show yet in iTunes. But Apple TV clearly has the more accessible interface, probably a bigger library (Maxdome part of the ProSiebenSat1 Media AG and, as I understand, therefore is limited to their content) and it looks cooler, which has repeatably been stated as a focus point about hardware that should get into the living room.

The MacBook Air is great but (expecially for me) much too expensive. It might yet replace the MacBook at one point. I especially love the fact that all of Apples Laptops have 5 to 6 hours battery lives which most other Laptops do not have (mine usually last about 90 minutes). I still plan on buying my next new laptop from Apple but can’t afford it yet.

More on what I recently read you can see on my Google Reader linkblog (also in the box on the right).

Sep
05
Filed Under (apple, computer, geeky, iTunes, life, nerdy, news) by yodahome on 05-09-2007

Apple – iPod – Which iPod are you?

I simply can’t let that go without a note. Today Apple announced the new iPod product line. As you may know I started this blog very much with the purchase of my first iPod (Photo or 4G with 20 GB) which I actually still use. Very much indeed. Now they have redesigned the iPod and they added the iPod touch which is kinda like an iPhone without a phone. It has the big touchy display, the Safari browser and Wifi and most of the other features the phone has. It’s available at 8 and 16 GB for $299 and $399. The ’small’ iPod classic (which would be a neat replacement for my iPod) now carries 80 GB (eigthy!!!) which is twice the size of my music library and it only costs $249 (probably about the same in Euros). I mean, it’s 4 times as much space for 50 bugs less!
Just two years… :-(

However, I don’t see why to replace a fully functional product. My iPod does great. No video, but hey, I want to hear music.
They also updated the shuffle and the nano but that’s a no-brainer.

Looking forward to see the presentation (will probably be available via streaming by tomorrow).

Official Zooomr Blog : Live at the iPhone Launch on ZooomrTV

Well, half of America is anxiously exspecting the iPhone launch later today (in short: the iPhone is a mobile phone and an iPod plus incredible usability due to the touch display). People are camping at the various Apple Stores to be among the first to pay their 600 $. Among those early adopters are Kris Tate and Thomas Hawk aka Zooomr Crew and they broadcast live via UStream (see on their blog).

Apart from just sitting there Kris is working on some more Zooomr features (the service is still a little crippled after the big MKIII launch) to put (or re-put) them up which should be released together with the iPhone later today.

Now how weird2.0 ist that…