January 2005 - Page 3 of 3 - Chris Ullrich dot net
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January 2005

Angry Apple

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Apparently, Apple has had enough of Nick DePlume and Think Secret. So, they are suing him because he allegedly solicited Apple people to violate their NDA’s and talk about the new $500 Mac and the new iWork suite that supposedly can replace MS Office.

I don’t necessarily agree with leaking info and I think trying to get people to break agreements is wrong but I also don’t necessarily think that Apple should go around suing people. Secrecy is one thing but I think Steve and company take it a little too far sometimes. I remember the time, not so long ago, when the specs for the new iMac were leaked and appeared on the Apple Store site a day early.

I know for a fact that those responsible were sacked. Steve likes his secrets and isn’t very tolerant of screwup like that. The problem is that art of the fun of being an Apple fan and Apple user is speculating what will be released at Macworld. Talking about all the rumors and doing a pool as to what will be released is fun (at least its fun for me. Perhaps I need a life).

Don’t be so quick to pull out the lawyers Apple. Remember, you were a bunch of upstart rebels once too. And besides, doesn’t suing someone for leaking info pretty much show that the info is genuine? Not so good if you still want to keep it a secret.

Now, when can I get one of those shiny new $500 Macs?

More with the Sony Ericsson P910i

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It’s been another week or two with the Sony Ericcson P910i and I have a few more observations and will try to answer some questions people have been asking about it.

First, to clarify, I purchased the phone from a retail store here in Los Angeles. It was unlocked and unbranded and I think just off the boat from the UK. My current cell provider is T-Mobile. All that was necessary to get the P910i working was for me to take the SIM card out of my old phone, a Sony Ericsson T610, and put it in the new phone.

The P910i was able to read the SIM card and get my contacts and cell provider info immediately so I was able to make an receive calls. The next step was configuring the phone for SMS text messages, MMS multi-media messages and for T-Mobile Internet. That was and can be accomplished relatively easily by using either the Sony Ericsson support site for the phone or using T-Mobile’s own configuration site.

Both sites work in essentially the same way in that you click on what you would like to configure, say SMS text messages, and then follow the directions to have the settings sent to your phone wirelessly. The phone gets the settings and uses them to auto-configure itself and that’s pretty much all it takes.

I used this method for setting up text messages, multi-media messages and T-Mobile internet. The two sites differ in that on the Sony site you need to select the phone, select what you want to configure, select your wireless carrier and then have the configuration setting sent to your phone. The T-Mobile site only needs you to select what you want to configure, select your phone and then send the configuration through.

Of the two, I prefer the T-Mobile site as it is from the carrier I use so I feel that the settings will work better. I don’t really have anything to back that up, its just my preference. You can probably use either and be fine.

As for usability, I am getting pretty good with the phone. I now have it set up to check my POP email every hour via T-Mobile internet and that works every time. You can also set it to do IMAP if you want but my accounts are all POP. I can also use it to instant message with AOL, MSN, Yahoo and even ICQ using a third-party tool called IM+ from Shape Services.

Also, I am using a couple other third-party apps, AvantGo and Resco Photo Viewer. Resco Photo Viewer I like better than the native photo viewer that comes with the phone. AvantGo is still in beta so it has a few bugs and is pretty slow but still, its kinda cool.

I have solved my bluetooth issues, at least for the moment, by doing a clean install on my 12″ Powerbook and then paring the phone and the Powerbook to use iSync. That has worked four or five times in a row so, fingers crossed, it will keep working. I’m not saying that wiping your computer and reinstalling OSX is a good work-around, I just happened to have to do it anyway due to another issue to it worked out.

Other than that, I still love the phone. It gets great signal, sends email, text messages, pictures, instant messages, reads word and pdf files, browses the web (albeit at GPRS speeds. yawn) and is not that big and looks cool. Plus, it takes pretty good pictures and video and finally syncs with my Mac using iSync. What more can you want?

Oh, I almost forgot, it does give me some sort of error, as indicated by a yellow icon with an exclamation point, during certain calls that I have made or received. I think it might have something to do with encryption of calls but I haven’t gotten to the bottom of it yet. I’ll let you know.

Also, I have tried to update the phone’s firmware using the Sony Ericcson Update Service but as of yet have been unsuccessful. You need to use a Windows machine and the two I have don’t seem to be able to manage it. I am going to be building a new Windows gaming rig in the next week or so (so I can play Half Life 2 as God intended, of course) so I will try to update using that pristine install of Windows XP. I’ll let you know on that one as well.

Cheers.

Leaks, geeks and some boobs

Samsung needs to be more careful of where they put their files. Someone might leak photos of new phones to the public. Like these.

And please appreciate the irony of this one, ClearChannel radio-stations in four US cities held a contest last month called “Breast Christmas Ever,” in which the “winners” were awarded breast-enlargement surgery. Mmmm. (Sorry you have to click through at Salon for the whole story but that’s just the way they do things).

Also, TiVo announced its new TiVo to Go service. It’s a service that allows you to download your files off of your TiVo to your computer and burn them to a DVD. Cool you say? Well, it might be more cool if you could do this with any content.

But sadly, in a bow to pressure from the “Man” no doubt, the folks at Tivo have included some nice DRM with the service. And the worst part of all, no Mac version. It’s only available for Windows XP/2000 at the moment but they promise a Mac version is “in the works”.

Lastly, the big Consumer Electronics Show is coming up this Thursday. If you’ve never been, its sort of fun to see all the new stuff that the big electronics companies have in store for you. Some things to look for if you go: Sony will probably show the PSP, and announce details on price and availability.

SBC will show its new web enabled set-top box to compete with TiVo. The first Blu-Ray players and recorders will debut, including a CD/DVD/Blu-Ray burner from Philips. Sony will show an LCOS based projection TV. Samsung will unveil a 21-inch OLED prototype.

And if you get bored at CES, you can always check out another event happening at the same time. The Adult Entertainment Expo. But remember, what happens in Vegas, stays in vegas.

Have fun.

The new year and some Apple stuff

Apparently, blogs are going to take over the world. At least according to Forbes Magazine, which devotes a big story and the cover of its recent issue to blogging.

And, the rumor mongers are all buzzing with talk of what might be revealed at Macworld Expo next week. Some of the rumors include Apple’s answer to Microsoft Office, called Pages, and even bigger, a Mac for 500 bucks. It is supposed to be basically a headless iMac with G4 processor, limited RAM, smallish hard drive and no DVD burner.

I don’t know if a cheap Mac is a good idea or not. To some, it may seem like this is a great idea that is a long time coming. It could be seen as a move that could potentially increase Apple’s market share and lead Windows users to a Mac.

The logic follows. Once they experience how great the iPod is, after using it with their Windows boxes and iTunes, they can get their feet wet with a Mac at the same price as a new Windows box. Then, once they use the Mac, run OSX, and not have to deal with viruses and spyware, it will lead them to all sorts of other Apple stuff, probably including newer and more powerful Macs. The first taste may not be free, but it’s a great deal.

On the other hand, Apple is one of the very few tech companies that makes any money, market share notwithstanding. They don’t do it by selling more computers at cheaper prices, like Dell, they do it by offering a quality product that works well. So, they must be doing something right. Do they need to pander to the lowest common denominator and try to attract users that probably won’t appreciate a Mac anyway?

The person that is looking for the cheapest thing is not usually looking for the best thing. There isn’t necessarily a Mac user inside of every Windows user. You don’t sell someone a BMW if they want to buy a Chevy. Name your analogy.

I think that Apple will sell a crap load of $500 macs if they end up offering one. However, I think that most of the people buying those computers will be people who already use the Mac. I’ll be getting a few myself.

Will it have much of an effect on Apple’s market share? I would be surprised if it had much at all. It would be nice if it did. It would be nice if there was a Mac in every house and that everyone could experience how great they are. I just don’t think we live in that world. Most people don’t want, don’t expect, great. They are happy with pretty good or just ok.

Besides, what if the $500 Mac sucks?

Happy New Year

2005? Already? What the hell happened to 2004? Or, 2003 for that matter? Has time sped up? Is that possible?

We can get to the bottom of all that later. All the best to all for the new year.

May you all live in interesting times.