Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Blog Changes and Apple Updates

Well, the iPhone 2.0 (and now 2.0.1 and 2.0.2) software revisions have arrived alongside the App Store, iPhone 3G and MobileMe. It was a hectic time around the launch July 10-12, but things have calmed down a lot now, though bugs persist.

In the meantime, thanks in part to an app now available for the iPhone to blog using Wordpress, I have a new blog where you will find most of my newer musings (should you care). That is located at http://srhawk.wordpress.com

If Blogger ever comes out with a similar iPhone App for mobile blogging (listening Google?), perhaps you'll see more updates here. Otherwise, most everything I have to say will be found at the Wordpress-hosted blog going forward. Seeya there.

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

6 Days And Counting

The long awaited day is coming soon. By that I mean the day that the Apple App Store and the iPhone 2.0 firmware/software finally sees release to deliver on the promise of the iPhone SDK announced back at the beginning of March.

WWDC is set to begin this coming Monday kicked off by a "SteveNote." Hmmm, I like that name for an event.... kinda catchy (I know, I didn't invent the term... but my name is Steve).

Anyhow, while I try to find the time to write up my own expectations and/or predictions for what Mr. Jobs will introduce next Monday (uhh, 3G iPhone, duh), I'll just put up this quick post.

Thoughts to ponder:

Very Likely:
- 3G iPhone
- iTunes 8.0
- App Store (and iPhone 2.0 software/firmware)
- me.com (.mac revamped)

Not So Likely:
- 5"-7" mini-tablet using iPhone OS (iPad anyone?)
- eBooks in iTunes Store
- more than one distinct new iPhone model introduced (size of storage does not make a distinct model)
- Mac mini replaced by mythical-mac-mini-tower system
- Mac mini replaced/supplemented by new Mac "nano" (like the MacBook Air only not a notebook)

Now, talk amongst yourselves.

Saturday, March 08, 2008

iPhone SDK Revealed, and so Much More...

This past Thursday Apple unveiled its plans for iPhone (and iPod touch) third party software and enterprise functionlity. My initial reaction to the announcements was and is very similar to the reaction I had to the initial annoncement of the iPhone itself back at the beginning of 2007:

"Wow!", and "Darn!"

"Wow!", this is going to be big! And, "Darn," I have to wait until June to get the goodies!

The difference is that I now already have an iPhone and I can immediately download the SDK and join the revolution!

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Looking for an SDK

With the end of February 2008 fast approaching, Apple's self-imposed deadline to deliver a SDK for the iPhone and iPod Touch is also nearly past. And with the last Tuesday in February behind us, the chances of any sort of special media event to unveil the SDK and/or any significant update to iTunes to support it has also passed. But with three days left in the month, Apple could still sneak something in under the wire.

So, in anticipation of such an enabling event, I am posting here something I wrote up all the way back in October, 2007, prior to Steve Jobs' announcement that an official SDK was coming. Without further adieu, and without any editing to account for the passage of time, here is what I was looking for from the iPhone way back then. Let's see how much of it comes to fruition in the coming weeks and months once the official SDK arrives (and yes, I know, many of these features and apps have come about for those willing to hack/jailbreak their device and install unsupported applications).

Here goes:

From 10/9/2007

Things the iPhone Needs:

(All of these are software-based. Hardware additions, like GPS, 3G wireless data networking, flash for the camera, etc., are excluded since they cannot easily be added or integrated into the existing hardware version of the iPhone.)

1) A “Disk Use” mode like every other iPod, even if limited to a special unencrypted area on the unit’s solid-state “disk;”

2) Local offline file storage for e-mail attachments, etc. Being able to view PDF/Word/Excel attachments is one thing, being able to save them for later viewing is another (much better) thing;

3) An eBook reader, complete with bookmark functionality, combined with eBooks made available through the iTunes Store (likely in a secured Adobe Acrobat format);

4) A separate To Do List application with links to the Calendar app for reminders on to-do items;
5) An updated Notes app with sync capability through iTunes to iCal, Outlook, and/or Entourage;
6) An updated Calculator with Scientific and/or Business functions;
7) Video capture capability for the Camera application or in a separate Camcorder app (perhaps even with video upload capability to YouTube or .Mac);
8) A “Scores” widget, like the Weather and Stocks widgets, but designed to call up your favorite teams’, leagues’, or conferences’ sports scores of the day or week;
9) Voice memo recording capability and/or application, perhaps with “Use as Ringtone” feature as well; and, of course,
10) Flash and/or Java capabilities added to mobile Safari.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Are e-books the next big thing?

C|Net's news.com is reporting that Amazon.com is set to introduce its own e-book reading device, and presumably a matching download service, on Monday, November 19, 2007. This Amazon reading device has been rumored for about a year or more now and has been referred to by the name "Kindle" (what name it will have when announced is unknown). Several other tech and e-book related sites are quoting and commenting on the report as well.

As one who has been reading e-books on a Palm handheld off-and-on for three years now, I believe this may represent one of several major initiatives that may finally start to bring e-books into the mainstream. As the leading online retailer, and one known particularly for its success in selling books, Amazon is uniquely positioned to promote and distribute e-books better than perhaps any other company save one (and I'll leave you to figure out which other company and product I am alluding to).

Over the last several years, there have been several obstacles that have kept e-books from taking off like digital music and video downloading have. One has been the lack of a proper, convenient, comfortably viewable, properly sized, affordable reading device. Another has been the lack of a standardized or otherwise universally recognized format for e-book files (as .mp3 has been for music). And a third, and perhaps most important, obstacle has been a major distribution platform for e-books (as iTunes has become for music and video and Amazon is for physical books).

While Sony's entry into e-book reading devices and online distribution last year was hailed as a major stepping stone for e-books, it has not panned out to be as successful as many had hoped. We'll see if Amazon has any better success. And we should know more about their reader and their plans come Monday.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

“Welcome to Macintosh,” sort of…



Well, it is now official: I have bitten the bullet and purchased my first Apple Mac computer. Or, more precisely, I now own my first computing device running Apple’s OS X. Namely, an iPhone. Yes, that’s right, an iPhone, Apple’s wildly-hyped “revolutionary phone,” “breakthrough internet communicator,” and “best iPod ever,” which just happens to run on a slimmed down and tweaked version of Apple’s ever growing operating system, OS X. And I, a long-time IBM DOS/Windows PC user and guru bought one, completing my transition to the dark- (or light-, depending on your perspective) side.

This came down about a month ago. Now, let me explain. A few months ago I came to the realization that my pre-paid Virgin Mobile cell phone service, as affordable and decent as it has been for the last few years, had become limiting and less cost effective for me than it had been. While one is only required to “Top Up” a Virgin Mobile account once every 90 days at a minimum of $20 in that timeframe, yielding a per-month cost of just $6.67, that only buys one a very limited level of usage. And I had been finding myself needing to top up at least once a month in recent months as my cell use had grown over the past year or so. Add to that the limited functionality available in the basic youth-oriented phones offered by Virgin Mobile – not a “smartphone” in the bunch – and I was ready for a new more fully-featured phone and full service.

Having been a Palm PDA user since 2000 – with first a Palm III, then a Tungsten E, and finally a LifeDrive – the logical first choice for me to look towards as a new and more advanced cell phone would have been a Palm Treo. And it was, for awhile. But that was not my purchasing choice, though it came very close.

I strongly considered getting a Palm Treo 755p (or even the then rumored, now available Palm Centro) on Sprint’s network as my new “smartphone.” I wanted a phone that had better contact management that could sync to my computer, had better calendar and planning capability, and had good e-mail and web access. Having used a Palm LifeDrive with WiFi for the past two years, a Treo seemed like a natural choice. So why didn’t that make the cut, especially given the comparative price of the iPhone and a Treo?

Well, in the end I decided that the iPhone, running OS X, is the mobile platform of the future, whereas the Treo, as much as I like Palm overall, is a platform of the past. Palm’s failure to significantly upgrade and advance its mobile OS over the past few years, coupled with Apple’s string of successes with the iMac, iPod, OS X, and now the iPhone, pointed to Apple as the new smart-play innovator in the mobile space. But while I had been wowed and interested in the iPhone from the very day it was first announced, the $599 price tag was a dealbreaker at the time. When Apple unexpectedly dropped the price by a whopping $200 at the beginning of September, the Treo dropped out of the picture quickly.

Don’t get me wrong, there are blemishes in the iPhone’s aura and there have been some bumps on the road in my early experience with the device. The EDGE data network from AT&T is slow, to be sure. And the not-inexpensive service contract commitment with AT&T is definitely a tough pill to swallow as well. And my faith in Apple’s commitment to the iPhone as a mobile “computing” platform was shaken by all the reports surrounding the changes wrought in the late-September release of their firmware 1.1.1 release. That release locked down so much of the iPhone’s system that it appeared 3rd party development was almost dead and Apple was out to thwart “hackers” after all.

Then last week my faith in the iPhone as the mobile platform of the future was reassured when Steve Jobs himself, the love-him or hate-him leader-prophet CEO of Apple, wrote on the Apple Hot News page that Apple would release a true Software Development Kit for native iPhone applications in February. Third Party applications will now truly be coming to the iPhone. And when they do, many of the abilities that Apple overlooked with the included applications will likely find themselves available from enterprising and creative developers. The iPhone development situation now looks, hopefully, to develop similarly to the way third party developers flourished and created innumerable useful applications for the Palm platform in that platform’s early days and even to this day. And that is what will make the iPhone, and its future iterations, the “it” mobile platform of the future.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Time for a quick new post to reassure anyone checking this that I haven't fallen completely off the face of the Earth. Maybe partly off, but not completely.