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Posts Tagged ‘smartphone’

Is the iPad iMazing?

Monday, May 24th, 2010

I’m going to say this upfront: I’m not an Apple fanatic. There’s been no queuing up at all hours to get the iPhone, nor shaking of my tiny fists at UK pricing of the iPad. Yes, they’re pretty. Yes, they’re uber cool. Yes, Steve Jobs is both a genius and an incredibly scary man. But honestly, I just haven’t cared that much – I like my Lenovo laptop and my Blackberry. I like having different tools to do different things. So, when my boss announced she’d purchased a company iPad, whilst stranded on an ash induced vacation, I wasn’t too excited. Then however, she bought it in to the office, handed it to me and told me I could take it home to try out …

The iPad does what it does very well. It’s a good design (if a little ‘honey, I blew up the kids’), the screen is incredibly impressive and using it is a breeze, though I couldn’t figure out how to turn if off! I looked for a holiday, flicked through the app store (and err…hello Glee app), wrote a couple of notes, enjoyed the delete action, read the paper and watched some videos. Easy, useful, very portable; but just not worth at least £429 of my hard earned cash.

The real problem is, it is what they said it would be, a third category device. I could do the same thing on my phone – not as well granted, but mostly I can. I can do the same thing on my laptop – sure it’s a bit heavier, but it’s still portable. Though I knew what to expect, I just imagined there would be more, and I was slightly disappointed there wasn’t.

One of the reasons is I’m a massive fan of writing; actual using a pen on a bit of paper writing. In fact, the first draft of this was written on the tube home, in my pad, with a pen. For me, the move away from this has been hard to bare, I’m constantly looked at weird for writing so much in my notepad – but I like it. So, for me, the iPad would be better with a stylus – which allowed me to write on it as though it were a pad. I know, I know, how retro of me, touchscreen is ‘the in thing,’ just, well it annoys me. And anyway, think about it, this is the next step up from using a pen and paper, just like that was an advancement on a quill and parchment. Sending handwritten notes – electronically, it’s both personal and amazing! I’m not talking for everything obviously, that letter to the CEO is probably better typed; but for a product, which, lets face it, is all about being ‘off duty’ – I think it would fit and rock!

However, aside from my little handwriting rant, I think this type of product is the future. I’m just not sure how far in to the future we’re looking. Sure, the iPad will undoubtedly be snapped up by early adaptors, but mainstream? I don’t think we’re ready for it yet. Though, saying that, the assault of these products on the market is just starting. When there’s a wealth of competitive products on the shelves and prices drop, I think they’ll be a different story. But, until that point, and perhaps until we get some awesome augmented reality apps and a stylus, I’m happy with my smartphone, my laptop, my biro and pad.

Nexus One: The Rebirth of Cool

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Just around the time that Google Nexus One rumors began to swirl, my old Blackberry died. Coincidence? I think not, especially after having seen the Nexus One when it was unveiled at a Google press conference in Mountain View, CA.

Nexus One was meant to be mine.

You may wonder exactly what it is about this little device, Google’s self-proclaimed superphone, that generates buzz even amongst uber geeks. Well, dear heart, I can sum it up in two words – cool factor. It’s a concept that until now has remained firmly gripped in Apple’s grubby little hands. It’s a concept that Microsoft keeps standing on its tippy toes trying to reach, barely grazing with its fingertips. It’s a concept that Google has captured and embodied in the Nexus One.

The size of a Swiss Army keychain knife, Nexus One measures 119mm tall, 59.8mm wide and 11.5mm deep. It weighs 130 grams with the battery, 100 grams without. There is a 5-megapixel camera and video recorder with 2x zoom and an LCD flash. Talk time is about 7 hours on 3G networks. It has WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS, a touch screen display and the ability to use other apps while talking.

I know what you’re thinking, adequate, but hardly an iPhone killer.

Insert cool factor:

  • Light and Proximity Sensor – The Nexus One presumes that as the phone nears your face, you will be talking on it. It saves power by automatically dimming the display light.
  • 3D user interface and Dynamic wallpaper – Your display background is a lovely fall scene, an oak tree covered with rain droplets. Suddenly the rain begins to fall more briskly. You see the splash as they enter a puddle. Leaves float gently in the breeze before falling to the ground.
  • Voice control – Every field in any application that you can type in, can now be spoken. That’s right; Nexus One dictates your tweets or Facebook updates.
  • Cooliris media gallery – Sure, the Nexus One has the graphic slider you’ve become accustomed to using. Thanks to Cooliris, it also has the ability to sort photos by time and geolocation. Flip intuitively through your photo albums and enjoy a visually stunning panoramic slideshow.
  • Layered GPS – Type in your destination and receive turn-by-turn directions. Borrrrrrrrrrring! Add in a layer of gas stations and automatically nearby gas stations will be added to your map view. Add a satellite layer and trace your route via satellite as you drive. Add in a street view layer as you approach your direction and see what the building you’re looking for looks like.

Just before Google officially unveiled the Nexus One, Apple strategically announced that downloads from its app store had officially reached the 3 billion mark. Is the Nexus One an iPhone killer? Probably not. But at its press conference, Google announced that it was just the first in a long line of planned smart phone devices. The good buzz is already translating into sales. Barclays Capital Analyst Doug Anmuth estimates that Google might sell 5 or 6 million units in 2010. Factor in consumer’s dismal opinion of AT&T, the official U.S. iPhone service provider, and we may be looking at the Smartphone War of the Roses.

The King is dead. Long live the King.

Note: I didn’t attend the press conference in Mountain View, well…mostly because I wasn’t invited. So, special thanks to Robert Scoble (@Scobleizer) who streamed the event live via Ustream.



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