AMITIAE - Monday 28 May 2012
Cassandra - Monday Review: It Will Soon be Friday |
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By Graham K. Rogers
Opening Gambit:A light weekend. I had it wrong: this week it is Memorial Day in the US. News on apps and the iPad. We want a new MacBook Pro: Facebook likes around 11,000 and rising. More ways to move mobile computing onto iOS. Buffy, the Facebook iPhone killer. The Cisco Cius tablet is dead: the what? RIM loses exec to Sonos. RIM to lose 2,000 staff. After Facebook, Formula One is delaying its IPO. China's Internet: a double-edged sword. And a light bulb made of wood.
Apple StuffThere were a couple of new things introduced to the App Store by Apple last week with "Editor's Choice" and a Free App of the Week we were reminded by Scott Lowe on The Verge. The iPhone choice was Flipboard and Extreme Skater, while for the iPad it is the Autodesk app, Sketchbook Ink, and Airmail.
He was right. In a fairly rare confirmation as reported by Chris Welch on The Verge, Apple confirmed that the use of non-public APIs was the reason for pulling the app. However, later information suggests that the developers disagree with the reasoning and are waiting to hear from Apple. Once there is a communication and confirmation on the specific API problem, this may be put right and the app returned to the App Store.
This is what Burns has done as he saw the potential for his note-taking system the moment the iPad was released. The article outlines some of the apps he has used and the way he works with the iPad (including dealing with glare). One of the apps was Note Taker HD so I had a look. I don't often watch demo videos all the way through, especially if they are 10 minutes long, but I was fascinated by this. When the presenter showed one feature, I thought there was a familiarity about the way this worked. The reason was that I had an early version of Note Taker on the iPhone. I had downloaded it when it was still new (version 2) and had had a lot of good mentions because of the way a user could keep writing even after coming to the end of the page on the screen. It may not have been right for the iPhone, but on the iPad the space to make this work, and the use of a far wider range of features, including keyboard as well as hand-written input, plus the ability to handle and make notations on PDFs, looks as if my quest took a step in the right direction. Note Taker HD Version 6.7 is now on my iPad. That video showed the presenter using a stylus, and we know what Steve Jobs said about the stylus for the iPhone: if you have to use a stylus you have failed. I think that needs some revision as when he said that, there were none of the apps for the iPhone that we have now, and the iPad did not exist. While the presenter was able to write clearly on the iPad, my finger input is a mess. And so is my drawing when I try that on the apps I have for that. I know David Hockney can produce some great pictures on the iPhone and now the iPad; but I am not David Hockney. I think I am going to have to look at the stylus; but then the other part of Jobs' comment comes in: you have to get them out, you lose them. . . . Oh, as a note, the developer of Note Taker HD is Dan Bricklin: the same man who came up with VisiCalc. This was the first spreadsheet application. As an additional note, the iPad was in another room playing music, so I entered iTunes, made sure the Note taker HD app was on the right screen for me, and pressed sync, without leaving my chair. Now that I have wifi sync working, I will use it to the full. The only oddity is that I have to sync first to put the app onto the iPad and then rearrange the app into the location and screen I want.
Another app came my way on Friday that produces an effect on an imaged like an old CRT TV. Black and white, lots of lines, some interference. You would think there was nothing to this, but it was the method that produced the image that I found the most intriguing: the app sends an image to the developer in Sweden, it is displayed on a CRT screen which is photographed, and the image is then returned. This takes varying times as each image is an individual production, so there is the occasional loss. But not 100%. That was what I had. Despite communication with the developer of InstaCRT, I could not figure this out until I went to bed. Because of the problems, I turned off the wifi, having decided I would try it all again in the morning, but while laying there, I thought, What about 3G? And it worked first time. The next morning it was not so good, and the wifi still gave 0% success. Later out shopping, I tried again with 3G and was successful: from the camera and the Photo Album. The difference? 3G is DTAC, my wifi is True.
Half and HalfAnother tablet has bitten the dust and I bet you had never heard of this one. We read on Electronista that Cisco is to stop producing the Cius. Along with a lot of people, I was not aware that they had ever started. It is clear from the article and Cisco's reaction that the iPad was the reason, as BYOD -- bring your own device -- was preferred. And still there is surprise?
Other MattersLast Friday I mentioned the departure of another RIM exec: Patrick Spence. They will have to open another box soon. As another indication that things are not going all that well, we read in an item by Dante D'Orazio on The Verge, of job cuts. They are following HP who recently announced reductions in the workforce of around 27,000 souls, but RIM (much smaller of course) is to see a cut of around 12% which may translate into 2,000 jobs: 4,000 within 12 months? How long can this company keep going?And what happened to Patrick Spence? That comments made when he left (resigned, ran from, jumped) RIM appear now to mean that he already had a landing spot as Tom Warren reports on The Verge that Spence is now heading for Sonos.
We also read that Facebook is hiring former Apple engineers and the expectation is that there will be a FB Phone (FacePhone, Zuckophone?) next year: might that be related to the Opera rumour (above)? It has the codename, Buffy -- Vampire killer -- we are told by T. C. Sottek on The Verge who adds that they are doing this with HTC as FB could not figure it out on their own. That figures: if you can't buy it, get someone else to make it for you. Just after writing that, I found an amusing re-Tweet (Federico Viticci - the MacStories man): "If the "Facebook Phone" is anything like the Facebook App, even blackberry has nothing to worry about". I caught the tail-end of a BBC program on Saturday evening and there was an analyst on there who was expressing the same ideas as we have put in this column: early days with Facebook, many IPOs see a fall at the beginning as there is profit-taking, and we should wait and see. If the share price falls to (say) $5 in 3 months time, I would worry; if it is still hovering around the mid-$30s then, there is some stability and with a massive user base, there will be some income generated. They just need to figure out how and without alienating the users. An effect of the problems surrounding the Faceboook IPO, is that Formula One which was to follow suit in Singapore has put the idea on hold for a while, according to Jonathan Noble on Autosport: perhaps just to let the dust settle.
I read about a good example of this on the BBC News site on Sunday when it was reported that a a former Communist Party official was arrested for rape (of at least 10 girls), after widespread outrage among web users. By acting on such public outrage, the government is able to show that it does listen, it does act, and will deal with those who are wrong. Let us hope that this trend continues.
Graham K. Rogers teaches at the Faculty of Engineering, Mahidol University in Thailand. He wrote in the Bangkok Post, Database supplement on IT subjects. For the last seven years of Database he wrote a column on Apple and Macs. |
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