Archive for

February 2010

No SD card slot because iPhone will plug straight into iPad?

Just a thought, but with a new iPhone looming in July of this year along with possibly v4 of the OS could this be one of the reasons the SD card slot is present in the iPad.

The new iPhone will almost certainly have a better camera, microphone, etc as Apple make it the primary content generation device for the masses in their product line-up.

The iPad is being positioned as the content consumption appliance, so having one dock plug into the other dock may well be a possibility. Or, will we get WiFi, using Bonjour, or even Bluetooth transfer of content from the point of generation to the point of consumption.

The iWork products built for the iPad hint at if not content generation, simple content manipulation is also being seen as a target function of the device.

iMovie for iPad anyone?

Posted

I have a new home page iPhone app

This is a really well executed app from the Met Office. An absolutely must for commuting cyclists.

Photo

Posted

Google Nexus One, it's great...

I've been using the Nexus One for a couple of weeks now and I really like it.
The first thing you notice is how reassuringly solid it feels in your hand. It reeks of a build quality not seen in previous Android devices.

Next is the speed, it is very quick and responsive.Lag is the enemy of a a great touch screen experience, without physical feedback frustration soon overtakes not knowing whether the button has actually been pressed.

Gmail integration is excellent, my work Exchange email sync'ed without a problem. Bit of an issue with syncing my OSX address book to Google ending up with multiple versions of some contacts. Not sure where the fault lies for this one though.

Multi-tasking is ace. I love the fact Seesmic can pop a notification on the bar when someone @'s me. Being able to flick between apps and return back to where you were is a refreshing change.

As a phone it seems to be far more reliable with better call quality than the iPhone, though I am comparing an iPhone on O2 and the Nexus on Vodafone.
This is definitely an excellent device.

However, the browsing experience is where it starts to the fall down. The browser just isn't as polished Safari. Tapping on areas to zoom is clunky and not as accurate. The font rendering seems amateur.
There is little pleasure in browsing which is a criminal shame with such a beautiful screen and Google's browser aspirations.

Browsing is also where the lack of multi-touch is suddenly a real problem. Who on earth thought that the little zoom-in and zoom-out buttons were acceptable in the modern age.

The iPhone has shown us the power of multi-touch for consuming and interacting with web content. Like sitting forward in a plane, there 'aint no going back.

The real abomination though is the maps app. Pinch-zoom was made for mapping. In 2010 any mapping application that doesn't support it is frankly useless to me.

These gripes are all solvable through software updates, Google having just announce multi-touch support in the first software update for the device.

What isn't resolvable are two other key reasons I'm holding out for the next iPhone.

The accuracy of the multi-touch screen is good but not as good as the iPhone. It makes typing just that bit more awkward. True, the word prompting when typing is far better than the single guess of the iPhone OS so you generally have to type less but I make mistakes which makes me less inclined to type.
I'm not a power text user, if so I'd probably still be using a BlackBerry, but when I use it I want it to work.

The real killer, and for me what Apple have got so right, are the apps. I just can't get the apps on Android that I can get on the iPhone. Apps that my life now depends on (not literally, though sometimes it feels like it).
In the Nexus One and the iPhone are comparing not phones but mobile computing appliances. Appliances need applications and Apple has got this so right compared to Google.

These appliances no longer exist on their own. Their power comes from the ecosystem that surrounds and supports them.

Google need to up their game if they're serious about mobile computing.

Filed under  //  toys  
Posted

Google Nexus One, it's great but...

I've been using the Nexus One for a couple of weeks now and I really like it.
The first thing you notice is how reassuringly solid it feels in your hand. It reeks of a build quality not seen in previous Android devices.

Next is the speed, it is very quick and responsive.Lag is the enemy of a a great touch screen experience, without physical feedback frustration soon overtakes not knowing whether the button has actually been pressed.

Gmail integration is excellent, my work Exchange email sync'ed without a problem. Bit of an issue with syncing my OSX address book to Google ending up with multiple versions of some contacts. Not sure where the fault lies for this one though.

Multi-tasking is ace. I love the fact Seesmic can pop a notification on the bar when someone @'s me. Being able to flick between apps and return back to where you were is a refreshing change.

As a phone it seems to be far more reliable with better call quality than the iPhone, though I am comparing an iPhone on O2 and the Nexus on Vodafone.
This is definitely an excellent device.

However, the browsing experience is where it starts to the fall down. The browser just isn't as polished Safari. Tapping on areas to zoom is clunky and not as accurate. The font rendering seems amateur.
There is little pleasure in browsing which is a criminal shame with such a beautiful screen and Google's browser aspirations.

Browsing is also where the lack of multi-touch is suddenly a real problem. Who on earth thought that the little zoom-in and zoom-out buttons were acceptable in the modern age.

The iPhone has shown us the power of multi-touch for consuming and interacting with web content. Like sitting forward in a plane, there 'aint no going back.

The real abomination though is the maps app. Pinch-zoom was made for mapping. In 2010 any mapping application that doesn't support it is frankly useless to me.

These gripes are all solvable through software updates, Google having just announce multi-touch support in the first software update for the device.

What isn't resolvable are two other key reasons I'm holding out for the next iPhone.

The accuracy of the multi-touch screen is good but not as good as the iPhone. It makes typing just that bit more awkward. True, the word prompting when typing is far better than the single guess of the iPhone OS so you generally have to type less but I make mistakes which makes me less inclined to type.
I'm not a power text user, if so I'd probably still be using a BlackBerry, but when I use it I want it to work.

The real killer, and for me what Apple have got so right, are the apps. I just can't get the apps on Android that I can get on the iPhone. Apps that my life now depends on (not literally, though sometimes it feels like it).
In the Nexus One and the iPhone are comparing not phones but mobile computing appliances. Appliances need applications and Apple has got this so right compared to Google.

These appliances no longer exist on their own. Their power comes from the ecosystem that surrounds and supports them.

Google need to up their game if they're serious about mobile computing.

Posted