Dan Hamilton's shared items

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Someone Please Save Universal Music From Itself!

Seth Mnookin (who also wrote an excellent book on the Red Sox) has an interview in Wired with Doug Morris, CEO of Universal Music.  The interview is a must read.  Its clear that Morris absolutely hates his customers:

Morris goes on to rail against criminal-minded college students and
low-life punks who steal the music that his artists work so hard to
create. He admits to being fairly ignorant about technology and insists
that his job is to nurture the creative side of the business — work
that's being threatened by all of this other nonsense.
...
He wants to wring every dollar he can out of anyone who goes anywhere
near his catalog. Morris has never accepted the digital world's ruling
ethos that it's better to follow the smartest long-term strategy, even
if it means near-term losses. As far as he's concerned, do that and
someone, somewhere, is taking advantage of you. Morris wants to be paid
now, not in some nebulous future. And if there's one thing he knows how
to do, it's use the size of his company to get his way.
 and despises Steve Jobs and Apple:

"We were just grateful that someone was selling online. The problem is,
he became a gatekeeper. We make a lot of money from him, and suddenly
you're wearing golden handcuffs. We would hate to give up that income." 
And Morris is still deluding himself about music subscriptions:

Total Music subscription would come pre-installed on devices like
the Zune, the Sony PlayStation, or a mobile phone. Universal is well
aware of the difficulty of convincing consumers to pay for music
subscriptions, so Morris wants the device makers to pony up the cash
themselves, either by shelling out for a six-month introductory offer
or by assuming the cost forever. This would be money well spent, Morris
argues, because it would help the Microsofts of the world eat into the
iPod's market share. He has already hammered out preliminary agreements
with Warner and Sony BMG and has met with executives at Microsoft and
several wireless carriers. If Morris is able to make Total Music a
reality, he will once again have succeeded in bending the industry to
his will — in this case, by using the combined catalogs of the major
labels to help establish a true competitor to the iPod. After all, why
buy an iPod if a Zune will give you songs for free?

Unfortunately, Total Music will almost certainly require some form
of DRM, which in the end will perpetuate the interoperability problem.
Morris likely doesn't care. He is more committed to Total Music — or
any other plan that allows protection — than he is to a future where
music can truly be played across any platform, at any time. "Our
strategy is to have the people who create great music be paid
properly," he says. "We need to protect the music. I know that."

I guess this is why Rick Rubin (Morris' cohead of Columbia Records) has drunk the cool-aid on music subscriptions.  The problem is that people do not want to subscribe to music - they want to own it.

I mean doesn't anybody at Universal get it?  Where are the stockholders?  Is this guy so powerful that he can run his company into the ground? I think Mnookin concludes that yes, Morris is that powerful and implies that if  the "Total Music" initiative fails and/or iTunes climbs the last hurdle:

This year, 22 percent of all music sold in the US will move
through iTunes. "If iTunes gets up to 40 or 50 percent, they'll have
too much power for anyone else to enter the business," says James
McQuivey, who analyzes the digital music industry for Forrester
Research.

that he very well may ruin Universal. 

Now, trying to unseat the iPod is not a bad business strategy but I think that everything known about consumers and how they want to purchase music says subscriptions are a dead end.  Every subscription service has failed or is failing.  What that tells me is that the wrong guy is running Universal:

"He wasn't prepared for a business that was going to be so totally
disrupted by technology," says a longtime industry insider who has
worked with Morris. "He just doesn't have that kind of mind."


Universal needs someone who recognizes that technology has transformed the music business and is willing to embrace this.  Someone who can take the world's largest music label and get it on the path to the future and not down some dead end to protect short term profits.  Someone with a lot of money on hand to take over Universal - say 15 or so billion dollars.  

Until that happens, all I can say is ugh! - Will someone please save the music business from itself?

Charles Starrett at iLounge has written an excellent editorial on the growing "War on iTunes" being initiated by Universal.  I urge everyone to read it.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

The Big List of iPhone Tips and Tricks

I've been collecting iPhone Tips and Tricks for some time now.  The list has gotten large enough that I thought I'd publish it.  Some of these are pretty good, some may not be - YMMV. For ease of use, I've also published this list as a standalone web page.  If you have any not listed here, please post them below and I'll add them to the iPhone Tips web page.

So, in no particular order....

Punctuation/Keyboard Tips
  • hit the space bar twice, you get a period.
  • Remember
    that the iPhone does not register a key press until you release your
    finger from the screen.  With that in mind, you can quickly get any
    punctuation mark by doing the following, all in one motion: Touch the
    “.?123” key, but don’t lift your finger as the punctuation layout
    appears then slide your finger a half inch onto the period or comma
    key, and release.  The ABC layout returns automatically. You’ve typed a
    period or a comma or any of the punctuation symbols with one finger.  
  • To type all in Caps, use the CAPS LOCK feature, make sure it is enabled in the General
    Settings. To use it, simply double-tap on the shift key. The shift key
    will turn blue.
  • If you are writing something and the iPhone flags a word as misspelled
    that you know is not misspelled, cancel the correction 3 times and the
    word will be put into the dictionary.

Double- Tapping
  • In
    Photos, Google Maps, and Safari (the Web browser), double-tapping zooms
    in on whatever you tap, magnifying it by a factor of two.
  • In
    the same programs, as well as Mail, double-tapping means, “restore to
    original size” after you’ve zoomed in. (Weirdly, in Google Maps, you
    use a different gesture to zoom out: tap once with two fingers. That
    gesture appears nowhere else on the iPhone.)
  • When you’re watching a video, double-tapping eliminates or restores letterbox bars.
  • If you double tap a video while it is playing, you will magnify the image so that it fills the entire screen.

Headset "Clicker"
  • Pinch once to answer an incoming phone call.
  • Pinch
    for a couple seconds to dump the call to voicemail. (You can also
    double-tap the Sleep/Wake switch on top of the iPhone to send the call
    to voicemail.)
  • During music or video playback, pinch once to pause the music; pinch again to resume playback.
  • During music playback, double-pinch to skip to the next song.
  • If you aren't using iPod at all and want some music, you can start up iPod mode
    with a double-squeeze then a single squeeze to start the music
    playing. It will automatically start playing the first song in your
    Songs list, and work it's way through.

Customizing the iPod Buttons
  • In
    the iPod tap  the More button, and then tap the Edit button (upper-left
    corner). Drag an icon from the top half of the screen downward,
    directly onto the existing icon you want to replace. It lights up to
    show the success of your drag.  When you release your finger, you’ll
    see that the new icon has replaced the old one. Tap Done in the
    upper-right corner.

Misc.
  • The iPhone will automatically capitalize the first letter of a new sentence, so don't bother doing it yourself.
  • Don’t put apostrophes in contractions - iPhone will do it automatically.
  • If you have multiple apps open like Safari, iPod, Youtube, stocks
    etc.,  when you press Home it does NOT actually clear or
    close apps., and this may affect battery usage.  To
    actually close (or Quit) an application, HOLD the Home button for about
    4-8 seconds while in the application.

Reset
  • Press and hold the Home button for six seconds to force-quit a program that seems to be stuck.
  • If
    the entire iPhone locks up press and hold both the Home button and the
    Sleep/Wake switch for eight seconds. The screen go black, and then the
    Apple logo appears as the iPhone reboots.

Phone
  • To
    stop an incoming call from ringing, press the sleep / wake button. To
    send the call immediately to VoiceMail, press the sleep / wake button
    twice.
  • If you select a photo for a contact from the iPhone, the selected photo is shown full screen for the caller ID.
  • If a contacts photo is transferred with the contact's info from the
    Address Book, the contact's photo is shown as a thumbnail for the caller ID.
  • Keeping the favorites screen open allows you to unlock the screen then dial with three motions.
  • The home button can be used to access unlocking instead of sleep wake.

Email
  • To delete email by just swiping left to right on the email in the list and press the delete button that pops up on the right.
  • If you want to save a message you’re working on so you can come back to
    it later, tap Cancel. Instead of deleting the message immediately, Mail
    pops up a dialog asking you to Save, Don’t Save, or Cancel. Tap Save
    and the message is placed in your Drafts folder. If your account
    doesn’t currently have a Drafts folder, Mail will create one.

Google Maps
  • Typing
    in the three letter airport code while in maps will bring the airport
    up on the map. So if you are trying to view a map of central NJ, Typing
    EWR  will bring up the Newark airport. It's relatively quick to zoom
    out, recenter over New York, and zoom in again. It seems to recognize
    all primary and secondary US airports and many overseas airports as
    well. Here's a Link to find airport codes.  
  • Tapping on the address in your contacts opens it up in Google maps.
  • You
    can send yourself a link (via email) to a map from Google Maps online -
    when you click on that link it will open in Google Maps (not Safari). 
    If you have a bunch of locations you want to save send email links and
    save them in an email folder.

Safari
  • When
    you've scrolled down to the bottom of a page, and you want to go back
    to the top- just tap on the top bar of the phone (where "AT&T" and
    the time are) and the page jumps right back up to the beginning.
  • If you want to scroll inside text area form fields and scrollable areas in a page, use two fingers to scroll.
  • To email a page to someone tap on the address bar. The Share button on the top left will create a message for you.
  • Page
    down. When not using a zoomed-in display, double-tap towards the bottom
    of the screen. The page will re-center around your tap. 
  • Zoom
    onto a single picture. Double-tapping images in Safari zooms them to
    fit your iPhone display. If the picture is linked to a URL, this can
    prove a little tricky but it works great for non-linked images.
    Double-tap again to return to the unzoomed display.
  • Zoom a
    column. You can zoom text columns as well as pictures. Double-tap on
    the column to fit it to the display. Double-tap again to return out of
    the zoom. Not only does Safari zoom block-quoted text independently of
    regular text but if you move your finger after the first
    double-tap-to-fit, it interprets the next double-tap as a re-center
    page command rather than a return-to-previous-zoom.
  • Stopping a
    scroll. After flicking a page to get it to scroll, you can tap the page
    at any time to stop that movement. Don't forget, you can also manually
    drag the screen display to reset the part you're viewing.
  • Manual
    zoom. To zoom into a Safari page, put your thumb and forefinger on the
    screen and move them apart. To zoom out, pinch the fingers together
    after starting with them apart.
  • Examining the URL. To peek at a
    link's destination, touch and hold the link for a few seconds. You can
    also do this with images to see if they are linked. If a link appears
    and you don't want to activate it, just slide your finger away until
    the destination text disappears.
  • Google Videos.  Point your
    iPhone browser to a video on google video and choose download for
    iPod/PSP and you can watch it right there in safari. 
  • Bookmarks:
    Create a separate folder / section for all your iPhone web sites. This
    makes is easy to locate them while browsing the we on your iPhone. 
  • RSS. If your favorite 'news' sites offer an RSS feed, bookmark and use that
    on your iPhone (I have an "all RSS" bookmark folder to collect them). This can make browsing,
    even while on EDGE much faster.
  • You can get on the internet during a call! You can only do this if your
    connected to a WIFI network (it wont work via edge), just hit the home
    key and click on Safari. Now your surfing while talking! The person on
    the other end can't hear the keyboard clicks either!

Address Book
  • Create several subgroups, this can speed up the location of a contact given the lack of an actual search function.

Notes Hack
  • Since
    the Notes cannot be manipulated on the desktop (yet), you can hack your
    way aound this to have notes that can be modified on your desktop: (1)
    create a new address book group called 'Notes'; (2) create a dummy
    address and give it company name "Notes" (3) populate the "Note" field
    of this contact entry with plain text This will now sync between
    multiple Macs/PCs and always be available on
    iPhone, even when it is offline. Simply look in the address group Notes
    for these items - not ideal but it works

Clock
  • When the alarm wakes you up in the morning, touching the
    sleep/wake button will "snooze" and sliding the wake up slider will
    turn off the alarm.

Camera
  • To get  better picture, press and hold the
    shutter button.  As long as you are holding the button, you can set up
    the picture.  When you release the button, the picture will be taken.

Stocks
  • If you touch the green/red boxes outlining the +/- movement of the stocks, it changes to displaying the %.

Weather
  • Click on the yahoo link on the bottom left and safari will launch into Yahoo city guide.

iPhoto (Mac Application)
  • The phone shows up in iPhoto by default.  To disable this, turn off in image capture
  • You can use 'Camera is not Apple iPhone' in a smart playlist
  • A contacts picture folder /album is a good idea
  • A wallpaper folder / album is a good idea - Create an Album (folder) called iPhone Wallpaper and load up your
    favorite 320x480 wallpapers. This makes it very easy to pick a new
    wallpaper on your iPhone.

Monday, November 26, 2007

iPhone Development

The iPhone is running a streamlined version of Mac OS X. It uses a Mach kernel, BSD Unix, Cocoa frameworks,
Mac OS X application bundles, and other portions of the Mac operating system.

The iPhone has 8192 MB (8 GB) of Flash RAM
installed. OS X and the iPhone default applications take up about 700 MB . The iPhone also has 128 MB of system RAM used by the running applications.

Sitting above the Mach kernel is the BSD layer with the following directory structure:

/bin
    Contains: launchctl, ln, mkdir, mv, rm, cat, expr
/sbin
    Contains: fsck, fsck_hfs, fstyp, fstyp_hfs, mount, mount_hfs, kextload, launchd
/etc
    Contains: bluetool, racoon, fstab, master.passwd, passwd, ttys, ppp, services, group, hosts, networks
/var/log
    contains: flat files
/usr
    /bin
       contains: ditto, sed
    /lib
       contains: libcrypto, libgcc, libobjc, libsqulite, libstdc++, libz
    /local
       contains:
    /sbin
       contains: fdisk
/Applications
       contains:
/Library
       contains:
/System
    /Library
       /CoreServices
          contains: SpringBoard, mDNSResponder
       /Frameworks
          contains: List of iPhone Frameworks:

- AddressBook
- AddressBookUI
- AppSupport
- BluetoothManager
- Calendar
- Camera
- CFNetwork
- Celestial
- CoreAudio
- CoreFoundation
- CoreGraphics
- CoreSurface
- CoreTelephony
- CoreVideo
- DeviceLink
- Foundation
- GraphicsServices
- GMM
- IAP
- IOKit
- IOMobileFramebuffer
- ITSync
- JavaScriptCore
- LayerKit
- MBX2D
- MBXConnect
- MeCCA
- Message
- MessageUI
- MobileBluetooth
- MobileMusicPlayer
- MoviePlayerUI
- MultitouchSupport
- MusicLibrary
- OpenGLES
- PhotoLibrary
- Preferences
- Security
- System
- SystemConfiguration
- TelephonyUI
- UIKit
- URLify
- WebCore
- WebKit


iPhone News Beat: November 26, 2007

Hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving.  I need another four days off though.  Here's the iPhone News Roundup for November 26, 2007:

Fortune interviews Greg Joswiak, Apple's Mr. iPod/iPhone.  He's gives some hints about the iPhone SDK.

Slow UK iPhone Sales?

iTunes can unlock German iPhones - for 999 Euros ($1473 dollars - my how the dollar has fallen!).

Steve has the Reality Distortion Field, Apple Stores have their own gravitational field.

3 Days before launch, Orange reveals iPhone service plans.

iPhone UK reception issues.


Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Black Friday Deals

Tomorrow being Thanksgiving, I probably won't be posting until Friday.  But, I'm keeping track of the Black Friday Deals.  I'll update this entry as new deals become available.  

Microsoft Office Deal
If you need Microsoft Office for Mac, then Friday is the day to buy.  Here's the deal: Buy any copy of Office 2004 (including the student and teacher edition) and get a $100 rebate.  Then:

For $6.99, when Office 2008 is released, Microsoft will send you Office 2008 Special Media Edition."
Microsoft already offers the Special Media Edition upgrade. The $100 rebate is new and available for only the one day.
What makes the deal sweet and cheap is its applicability to Office 2004 Student and Teacher Edition. According to NPD, the Office student version accounts for most copies of the productivity suite sold at retail. However, there is no upgrade option to other Office versions. For 2008, the Student version's Entourage—the Mac equivalent to Outlook—will not support Exchange Server. The offer creates a cheap upgrade path for Mac users looking at getting Office now and don't want to spend big bucks.

Apple Store Deals

No specific info yet, but from past Black Fridays you can expect some really tempting discounts on software, dot mac (I think they sold it for $20 bucks one year), iPods and accessories and Macs.   As soon as I hear, I'll post it.

Apple Online Deals



Apple Online Store


Apple Online Store





Amazon Deals

Amazon's got their own special section of Amazon.com for Black Friday Deals. 

Other

TBD...


The iPhone Killer

It seems every day there is talk of "the iPhone killer" coming soon.  Today's entry in the iPhone Killer sweepstakes is the Verizon Voyager. The Voyager, made by LG, sells for $299 and has a touch screen and a flip open keyboard and tries to copy the iPhone's UI.  Here's a review (conclusion: not an iPhone Killer), and another (conclusion: best Verizon phone).  There's also talk that the RIM 9000 series, coming next year (pic?), is out to kill the iPhone.  And of course, there was the much rumored Google Phone that then failed to live up to the hype.  The supposed iPhone killer list goes on:  there's a linux contender, handset maker HTC's entry, samsung's entry, Nokia's got one too.  But nobody seems to be asking the right questions - if the iPhone can be "killed" how can it be done? 

It seems strange to me that there even needs to be an "iPhone Killer".  I mean, my guesstimate based on Apple's latest iPhone sales numbers is that there have been about 2 to 2.5 million iPhones sold to date (based on Apple's released numbers and a guess factoring in approximate daily sales and the European release of the iPhone).  That's a drop in the bucket compared to the total number of cell phones sold (38 million in the U.S. last quarter alone) since the iPhone was released.  Even if you only compare the iPhone to other high end "smart" phones, the iPhone has 27% of the smart phone market but its not yet in a dominant position based on sales.  So why would you need to  have an iPhone killer?  two words: mind share.  The iPhone has simply come in and transformed the consumer mind share about what a smart phone should be.

Now, without disclosing details regarding my "day job", I get to spend a lot of time playing with many models of smart phones - including some of the "iPhone Killers" mentioned above, some that are not even available in the U.S., and a few that are not available anywhere yet.  Some are very cool.  But when you compare them to the iPhone in my pocket, they pretty much all suck.  Most are like small bricks - they are heavy, boxy and clunky - nothing with the sleek lines and minimalist feel of the iPhone.  Even if they have a nice design, they are generally running an operating system that just kills the user experience - Linux, Symbian, RIM or Microsoft (Microsoft is the worst of the bunch.  It takes several "clicks" to get even the most basic things done. Don't even get me started about RIM - an OS only a network administrator could love).

That is the first, most basic, reason there will not be an iPhone Killer anytime soon.  The other Mobile OS and UI designs are just not ready to compete.  Apple's OS X base is several light years ahead of everything else and the IPhone "noun" UI is just perfect for the touch interface.  Of course, the iPhone has its flaws too - it desperately needs voice dialing and/or a better way for hands free use on the phone side, the iPod "scrubber" needs a better UI, it needs "disc mode" like all the other iPods have - just to mention a few of my pet peeves.  But here's the thing - all of those things can be fixed with a software update when Apple works them out or by 3rd party developers when they get the SDK in February 2008.   If you have a crappy OS, then no amount of tinkering is going to be able to fix that.

That's the beauty of the OS X base - Apple has its own experience on the desktop side to draw from as well as all of its 3rd party developers.  The iPhone is just an extension of the Mac ecosystem - a reservoir that Symbian or RIM can't tap into.  Microsoft can't, to a large extent, make this claim either, given its specialized - and sometimes incompatible - flavor of windows for smart phones and PDAs.  Linux, well, is Linux - theoretically I suppose its part of the "Linux ecosystem" - if one even exists - but Linux is just not a player yet as there are very few Linux smart phones right now.  Despite my dismissal of Android, Google has the right idea to go after the mobile OS market instead of releasing an actual phone because that's the key advantage the iPhone has.

The other major advantage Apple has is that it is "Apple, the brand" and all that entails.   If Motorola introduced a phone with the exact same feature set as the iPhone a year ago, they would not have gotten the same amount and quality of attention that Apple did.  I don't see how the maker of any "iPhone Killer" can get around that anytime soon.

The final major advantage is the iPod.  There's no doubt that Apple is a monopoly in the digital music business and is not going to be caught there anytime soon.  Apple's video business is also up and coming.  Until someone can kills iTunes, they are probably not going to "kill" the iPhone.  That's why I have to laugh every time a supposed "iPhone killer" comes up with a phone tied to some minor "music store" or to the cell carriers ridiculously expensive "media store".  Please stop (and I am looking at you Verizon) the madness - iTunes has won.

Everything else is just features - screen size, touch screen, wifi, bluetooth, the webkit based safari web browser (and don't underestimate the iPhone's advantage here even though other manufactures can and do use webkit.  The web browsing experience on the iPhone is better that everything, and I mean everything, else right now).  The iPhone killers keep focusing on features and fail to realize that to "kill" the iPhone, features are the least important thing to concentrate on.  To paraphrase James Carville - its the OS stupid.  Until somebody can come up with an OS that rivals OS X, there will not be an iPhone killer anytime soon.

The iPhone Killer

It seems every day there is talk of "the iPhone killer" coming soon.  Today's entry in the iPhone Killer sweepstakes is the Verizon Voyager. The Voyager, made by LG, sells for $299 and has a touch screen and a flip open keyboard and tries to copy the iPhone's UI.  Here's a review (conclusion: not an iPhone Killer), and another (conclusion: best Verizon phone).  There's also talk that the RIM 9000 series, coming next year (pic?), is out to kill the iPhone.  And of course, there was the much rumored Google Phone that then failed to live up to the hype.  The supposed iPhone killer list goes on:  there's a linux contender, handset maker HTC's entry, samsung's entry, Nokia's got one too.  But nobody seems to be asking the right questions - if the iPhone can be "killed" how can it be done? 

It seems strange to me that there even needs to be an "iPhone Killer".  I mean, my guesstimate based on Apple's latest iPhone sales numbers is that there have been about 2 to 2.5 million iPhones sold to date (based on Apple's released numbers and a guess factoring in approximate daily sales and the European release of the iPhone).  That's a drop in the bucket compared to the total number of cell phones sold (38 million in the U.S. last quarter alone) since the iPhone was released.  Even if you only compare the iPhone to other high end "smart" phones, the iPhone has 27% of the smart phone market but its not yet in a dominant position based on sales.  So why would you need to  have an iPhone killer?  two words: mind share.  The iPhone has simply come in and transformed the consumer mind share about what a smart phone should be.

Now, without disclosing details regarding my "day job", I get to spend a lot of time playing with many models of smart phones - including some of the "iPhone Killers" mentioned above, some that are not even available in the U.S., and a few that are not available anywhere yet.  Some are very cool.  But when you compare them to the iPhone in my pocket, they pretty much all suck.  Most are like small bricks - they are heavy, boxy and clunky - nothing with the sleek lines and minimalist feel of the iPhone.  Even if they have a nice design, they are generally running an operating system that just kills the user experience - Linux, Symbian, RIM or Microsoft (Microsoft is the worst of the bunch.  It takes several "clicks" to get even the most basic things done. Don't even get me started about RIM - an OS only a network administrator could love).

That is the first, most basic, reason there will not be an iPhone Killer anytime soon.  The other Mobile OS and UI designs are just not ready to compete.  Apple's OS X base is several light years ahead of everything else and the IPhone "noun" UI is just perfect for the touch interface.  Of course, the iPhone has its flaws too - it desperately needs voice dialing and/or a better way for hands free use on the phone side, the iPod "scrubber" needs a better UI, it needs "disc mode" like all the other iPods have - just to mention a few of my pet peeves.  But here's the thing - all of those things can be fixed with a software update when Apple works them out or by 3rd party developers when they get the SDK in February 2008.   If you have a crappy OS, then no amount of tinkering is going to be able to fix that.

That's the beauty of the OS X base - Apple has its own experience on the desktop side to draw from as well as all of its 3rd party developers.  The iPhone is just an extension of the Mac ecosystem - a reservoir that Symbian or RIM can't tap into.  Microsoft can't, to a large extent, make this claim either, given its specialized - and sometimes incompatible - flavor of windows for smart phones and PDAs.  Linux, well, is Linux - theoretically I suppose its part of the "Linux ecosystem" - if one even exists - but Linux is just not a player yet as there are very few Linux smart phones right now.  Despite my dismissal of Android, Google has the right idea to go after the mobile OS market instead of releasing an actual phone because that's the key advantage the iPhone has.

The other major advantage Apple has is that it is "Apple, the brand" and all that entails.   If Motorola introduced a phone with the exact same feature set as the iPhone a year ago, they would not have gotten the same amount and quality of attention that Apple did.  I don't see how the maker of any "iPhone Killer" can get around that anytime soon.

The final major advantage is the iPod.  There's no doubt that Apple is a monopoly in the digital music business and is not going to be caught there anytime soon.  Apple's video business is also up and coming.  Until someone can kills iTunes, they are probably not going to "kill" the iPhone.  That's why I have to laugh every time a supposed "iPhone killer" comes up with a phone tied to some minor "music store" or to the cell carriers ridiculously expensive "media store".  Please stop (and I am looking at you Verizon) the madness - iTunes has won.

Everything else is just features - screen size, touch screen, wifi, bluetooth, the webkit based safari web browser (and don't underestimate the iPhone's advantage here even though other manufactures can and do use webkit.  The web browsing experience on the iPhone is better that everything, and I mean everything, else right now).  The iPhone killers keep focusing on features and fail to realize that to "kill" the iPhone, features are the least important thing to concentrate on.  To paraphrase James Carville - its the OS stupid.  Until somebody can come up with an OS that rivals OS X, there will not be an iPhone killer anytime soon.

Can Amazon Fire Up eBooks by Kindling?

Amazon debuted the kindle on Monday.  Engadget has a good photo gallery of the device.
The kindle will let users read books ($9.99), Magazines ($1.99/month), Newspapers (varies from $5.99-$14.99/month), Blogs ($0.99-$1.99), your own files ($0.10 each), RSS feeds ($1 per feed).  Not withstanding the potential monthly fee nightmare, The Kindle is a tempting little device.  But how tempting can it be at $399?  That's a lot of money for the device and then you have to buy the books, newspapers, blogs. 

Plus, it looks like the Kindle got hit with the ugly stick.  I get the fact that they wanted it to "feel" like a paperback in your hand but, ugh!, the white-beige color scheme is 1980's retro - but in a bad way.

Now, I read a ton of books in a year.  And, in the past, I had eBooks on my Palm Pilot and enjoyed the fact that I could carry several books in my pocket that were available to me whenever I had a spare moment.  But, when I ditched the Palm, I did not feel some great loss because I didn't have my eBooks anymore.  Its not as if you can read and walk at the same time or read and drive like you can with music.  And that's the problem I think the Kindle has got.  There just isn't a longing to have books available on demand.  Not to mention the fact that the paper book is pretty well perfected after about 600 years.

So, although I like the idea, I don't think Amazon has got "it" with the Kindle.  The high cost of the device, the "nickel and dime" monthly costs, the fact that there just isn't a clamor for eBooks and the fact that the alternative is damn near perfect tells me that Kindle is a dud.  I think the best that Amazon can hope for is to start changing the environment for eBooks by getting people to want them.  If they can do that then maybe Kindle version 2 or version 3 will take off.  Until then, I just don't see it.

iPhone News Beat: November 21, 2007

Ok. So I'm a day late.  Yesterday was a slow news day anyway.

Take off the tin foil, cool the jets, stop the hate, the iPhone doesn't send IMEI information.

German Court says iPhone has to be sold without a contract in Germany.

Is the German Court's ruling a good thing?

In the Duh department - Apple has a way to unlock the iPhone.

No real news here but an interesting read: iPhone/iPod accessory makers have to be quick to react.

Most unlocked iPhones end up in China.

Kindle needs to be the iPhone of Books, not the iPod of Books.

More iTunes Movie Rental evidence.

Finally, don't forget that Amazon's got some Black Friday Deals. Save yourself an early wake-up and shop from home this Friday. 


Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Digital TV Shorts

NYT



Monday, November 19, 2007

iPhone News Beat: Nov. 19, 2007

Its snowing in Princeton, New Jersey so, here's the wintery mix edition iPhone News:

Looks like I was right about Apple's no cash policy for iPhones.  At least Michael Flynn agrees (with more research).

Kindle eBook Reader vs. iPhone.

Is the Kindle the last shot for eBooks?

Kindle vs. iPhone again.

Today must be the eBook/eReader day.  Zinio has released free magazines on the iPhone -Macworld, GQ, Mens Health, Playboy (no pictorials), Popular Mechanics to name a few.  Here's the iPhone Link.

Good review of Twitter iPhone Clients.

What to do if you loose your iPhone.

Is Apple tracking iPhone IMEI Numbers?

Alternative iTunes video viewing.

Don't forget that Amazon's got some Black Friday Deals. Save yourself an early wake-up and shop from home this Friday. 



Are First Run Films iTunes Next Act?

If you've been reading this blog with any regularity, you know that I am a major advocate of iTunes movie rentals.  While we'll have to wait for movie rentals, there is an interesting experiment going on in the movie section of the iTunes Store.  Apple has started to go after the short films market and, beginning tomorrow, will offer the first-run full-length feature film, Purple Violets, for download. 

Purple Violets is a film by Ed Burns, who's first film, The Brothers McMullen, went from indie acclaim to commercial success (you may often catch it running on the various cable movie channels).  Purple Violets has been called Burns' best film since The Brothers McMullen,  so it is kind of surprising that Burns is willing to take an unorthodox route in releasing first on iTunes (exclusively for 1 month) instead of going through a major studio for distribution in theaters.  According to Burns, the iTunes release experiment is worth the gamble:

we were talking with several distributors and had an offer from a company that I had worked at before and it was the same model--the platform release, New York, LA, let’s wait for the reviews [and] our per-screen averages that first weekend, and we’ll go to the next eight markets, the next 12 markets and we’ll roll out that way. That has been my career for 12 years, but I would say for the last seven years that hasn’t worked for my films...So myself and my two producers, Aaron Lubin and Pam Murphy, were brainstorming and the idea came up, ‘What about approaching iTunes?’ They had never premiered a film before… We thought this is where it seems to be going, so why not be on the cutting-edge of this technology-- and we can’t do any worse than the last three films of mine have done theatrically, so maybe we can do better.


The strange thing is, at least up until now, Apple does not seem to be hyping this up too much.  There's no prominent mention of the film on the iTunes store yet (although that may change tomorrow), just a buried entry for it in the "coming soon" section of the movie store.  What makes Apple's lack of hype even more puzzling is the fact that Hollywood seems to be looking at how successful Apple, the de facto only game in town, can make Purple Violets

"They're obviously the leader, by a long way," says Jamie Chvotkin, president at CD Baby and Film Baby, two services that help musicians and filmmakers offer their work in digital form. "Their share in movies is probably similar to what it is in music, somewhere in the 80% range."
...

"Purple Violets," which stars director Ed Burns, Debra Messing, and Selma Blair and was made on a $4 million budget, will be a crucial test for iTunes, the first movie it'll have before it is available anywhere else.


Properly marketed, "Purple Violets" or another indie exclusive could turn into the kind of breakout hit that could nudge digital downloading into the mainstream -- something that hasn't happened yet.

It is no secret that the movie studios have been reluctant to deal with Apple on movie downloads:

Privately, studio execs have expressed hope that iTunes won't turn into the single dominant retailer of digital movies -- with all the accompanying negotiating leverage -- that it has become for music. They don't want to be in business with a partner that dictates terms to them, rather than the other way around..."It's not that those studios don't want more distribution, it's that they're not willing to sell movies at a price lower (than the DVD wholesale price) to Apple," says CinemaNow's Marvis. "Someone is going to have to blink."

Given the fact that the major studios have, until now, been reluctant to deal with Apple on downloads (rentals may be another story), you would thing Apple would be going all out on this release.  So far, besides the promotion Burns is doing himself, Apple has not made a big splash - even though Purple Violets could jump start the stalemate between Apple and the studios:

"Properly marketed, 'Purple Violets' or another indie exclusive could turn into the kind of breakout hit that could nudge digital downloading into the mainstream -- something that hasn't happened yet."

So, keep an eye on iTunes over the next couple of weeks to see how successful Purple Violets is.  You can order the film (I believe for $12.99 today and then I think for $14.99 tomorrow) on iTunes.  Here's the link (which will open in iTunes): 




Purple Violets

Sunday, November 18, 2007

iPhone News Beat: Weekend Edition - November 18, 2007

Slow news weekend, but here's the round up:

Seems HiJacking your iPhone has consequences.

Why Google's Android is wrong.

What Android means for Apple.

The iPhone Java fantasy continues...

I'll second this wish for iPhone WiFi podcast downloads.

Of course, the big news this weekend was the impending Monday morning launch of the Amazon Kindle eBook reader.  Newsweek has the cover story (oddly without pictures but Engadget has some).

Finally, we are 4 days until black friday.  If your in the market for Apple products, set you alarm clocks early friday and get down to the nearest Apple Store as they have historically had some good deals.  For everything else, and to save yourself a trip out after eating all that turkey, check out Amazon's Black Friday Deals Page.



Friday, November 16, 2007

2008: iTunes Movie Rentals?

I've been saying for some time that Apple needs to offer iTunes Movie Rentals.  I am not the only one.

Recently, a college student noticed that with the release of iTunes 7.5, there are clues burried in the code that movie rentals may be coming soon. 

Related to this is the ongoing struggle with TV content and digital distribution.  Yet, despite the fears of the TV networks, viewing TV content online or via iPods and iPhones through iTunes, is not the cause of the decrease in TV viewership. 

There has been some hope that Movie Rentals would come before the holidays
While I would love to see movie rentals before the holidays, I don't
think will happen until January 2008 at the Macworld conference.  With the holiday shopping season due to kick off next week and the iPhone launch in France on November 29th, Apple will probably be quite content to sit on Movie Rentals until MacWorld. 

Of course, I could be wrong.  In just the past two weeks we've had a MacBook update without a press release and a significant upgrade to Final Cut Express with a simple press release.  Anyone who has been following Apple for some time knows that back in 2001 to early 2003 both of these would have been fuel for at least an "Apple Special Event". But, ever since the "MacWorld NY controversy",  Apple has announced products on its own time table and in a tiered manner - "low key" announcements (press release - generally speed bumps to existing products), "medium key" announcements (special events - usually at the Apple Town Hall or at industry functions), and "high visibility" (macworld, wwdc,  any special event held at Moscone).

So, why does this matter?  Well because Movie Rentals would have to fall into at least the "medium" category.  That would require at least an Apple Special Event which means that invitations would need to go out to the press.  In the past, Apple has given at least 2 weeks notice as to when these events would occur (sometimes more, and I believe, on one occasion, 1 week notice - but I could be wrong on that one).  But, I would argue that a Movie Rental announcement would be "high visibility".  With the holidays approaching any Apple Event would need to happen the first week in December (since, due to the Thanksgiving holiday, next week is out and Apple would not want to steal the thunder of the iPhone France launch on the 29th).

But, the next "high visibility" event is already on the calendar and only 8 weeks away - MWSF on January 15th.  So what's on tap for MWSF?  Well, the scuttlebutt says some sort of portable tablet.  And that's about it right now.  We know there'll be no OS X announcement since Leopard was just released.  Ditto for iLife and iWork.  The iPod line was just completely refreshed so that's probably a zero (with an outside chance of a storage bump/price cut). 

So what does that leave in Apple's product line to announce?  New displays?  Maybe, but that's been anticipated for a while (and still hasn't happened).  New iMacs? They were refreshed recently too.  MacPros?  Ok, well they are due for a refresh but, they are not really "consumer" machines and Apple likes to target Macworld with consumer products.  So, other than the ultra-portable and laptop line, the only thing that is due for a needed redesign is Apple TV.  How much sense would it make to announce Movie Rentals along with a new Apple TV with say, an integrated DVD player and maybe DVR capabilities?  (Yes, I know there's the iPhone, but I've gone on record already as saying iPhone 2 is not happening the first half of 2008). A lot of sense I think.

So, despite the speculation, I don't think we will see iTunes Movie Rentals until MWSF.  I expect that the iTunes portion of the keynote will include both Movie Rentals and the Beatles.  Until then, keep that Netflix subscription going. 

iPhone News Beat: Nov. 16, 2007

With 1 week until Black Friday and 9 weeks until MWSF, here's the iPhone news for November 16, 2007:

Canada's finally getting some lower mobile data fees, thanks to iPhone.

Fortune gets in on the iPhone bashing for website hits game.  Nothing to see here. Move along.

An Amazon eReader? (and it looks like it got hit with the ugly stick).

Plans to hack Java onto the iPhone.

Maya: Temple of Secrets launched for iPhone (here's the iPhone link).

Id Software and Steve Jobs battle over iPhone games.

Is Apple worried about hackers rather than new features?

A proposed alternative to the iPhone scrubber.

Best Buy to sell iPhones on Black Friday?

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

iPhone News Beat: Nov. 15, 2007


iPhone news roundup for November 15, 2007:

As noted yesterday the BBC has launched an iPhone and iPod Touch optimized streaming podcast site.

Security Expert says 80-90% of iPhone malware in the future.

iPod Touch is an iPhone killer.


iPhone and rain may not mix.




iPhone and iPod Touch Enhance Video Podcasts

If you are looking for new and interesting content for your iPhone or iPod Touch, then let me recommend that you check out the Podcast section of the iTunes Store. 

I had dabbled in audio podcasts in the past with my iPod.  Unfortunately, I found that I had neither the time nor the inclination to keep up with many of the podcasts I was interested in.  As a result, I had not checked out the podcast section of the iTunes store in some time.  Since then, how things have changed.  While I was aware at how popular podcasting had become, I was not aware of the extent of content available.  IThere are a plethera of not only audio but video podcasts - some of the quite good.

With there large screens and video resolutions, the iPhone and iPod Touch just scream out for video content.  But, you can only buy so many TV episodes and movies from the iTunes store.  Apple's YouTube application tries to help fill that void, but I find YouTube so full of junk that its near worthless (not to mention the fact that much of the video available on YouTube looks horrible).  Enter the Video PodCast.  There are some real gems available with excellent production and content.  The best part - most are free.

In the past week, I've looked at cooking podcasts (something that really shines in a video as you can watch the recipe being made), the Philadelphia Eagles week in review (26 minutes of video reviewing the Eagles week and there are similar podcasts for each NFL team), National Geographic Video Shorts (sharks, nature, history), The Discovery Channel Video PodCast (additional content from the Discovery Channel Shows) and many others ( network news shows, comedy podcasts network TV shows, newspapers, tech magazines and websites - just a large variety of content is available). 

To give you an idea of what's available, check out these links:

VideoPodCast.tv Directory

PodCast Alley - Video PodCast Section

PodCasting News - Video PodCasts

Podfeed - Video PodCast Reviews

and, of course, the PodCast section of the iTunes store.  It is well worth the visit.

The BBC I think shows the potential future of podcasting.  Up until now, you had to download a podcast to your computer and sync it up with your iPod.  With the iPhone and iPod Touch, that's not a requirement any longer.  The BBC Podcast directory allows you to use Safari to select a BBC podcast and stream it right from WiFi or the Edge network.  While the BBC podcasts are audio only, I expect we will see many video podcasts go this route (as could TV shows and even movies - given enough bandwidth).

iPhone News Beat: Nov. 14, 2007

Here's today's iPhone News Beat for November 14, 2007:

iPhone is Wrong

Access your Mac from your iPhone with iGet Mobile.

Re-thinking Android.

How to write an iPhone Application.

iPhone as Gameboy (warning needs Jailbreak).

Usability Study says iPhone Keyboard error prone.

RIM CEO: iPhone not up to par.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

iPhone vs. Android: The New Platform Wars?

Paul Murphy over at ZDnet has an interesting take on the Mac OS X Leopard reviews making the rounds on the web.  Murphy (rightly I think) points out some inconsistencies of the reviewers in failing to note certain aspects of Leopard but, more importantly, he says:


But if you ignore the partisan reviewers and ask what the real bottom line on “Leopard” is, the answer turns out to be the iPhone - because the current Mactels are this generation’s Apple IIIs.



What’s going on is that 10.5 is a mixed bag reflecting both short and long term agendas. In the short term it cleans up some x86 issues and offers some new user features raising the bar for Microsoft’s next effort -particularly with respect to time machine because this will be hard for Microsoft to duplicate while Apple’s adoption of ZFS means that all of the compexity here will disappear in the next release.



In the long term, however, what 10.5 is about is positioning Apple’s application developers to jump to the integrated server/playphone world of the future - that’s why there’s so much Solaris and Java development stuff there.



I think he's got it right. The important thing about Leopard is that it is the iPhone OS.  I believe that Apple has determined that the future of computing (or at least where there is money to be made) is in these smaller devices - iPods, iPhones and smaller laptop/tablet form factors.  The Mac OS X technology stack - Cocoa libraries (especially the "Core" libraries), H.264, Webkit - and the "noun" interface (which includes the Gesture input methods) is Apple's future.  To this stack, Apple has bolted on some complementary technology (for e.g. ZFS).

Add it all up and you have a very good OS stack for small devices like iPhones, iPods (and it is clear that the iPods future is the iPod touch and not the iPod classic), "Tablets" and event set top boxes.  The missing piece of this puzzle is the iPhone SDK.



Which brings us to Android, Google's new phone OS.  There has been some speculation that Apple will use Android as its SDK.  After all, Android uses the webkit rendering engine, which is the basis of Apple's Safari.  And, there does seem to be an "Apple" like influence to Android's UI.  But, I don't see it happening.



First off, Android uses Java, which Apple has shown some distain for.  Apple is seems to be firmly committed to Objective C.  But more importantly, the Android platform is meant to run on handsets from any manufactuer.  Anyone who knows anything about Apple and Steve Jobs knows that controlling the whole widget is important:



“We define everything that is on the phone,” he said. “You don’t want your phone to be like a PC. The last thing you want is to have loaded three apps on your phone and then you go to make a call and it doesn’t work anymore. These are more like iPods than they are like computers.”



The iPhone, he insisted, would not look like the rest of the wireless industry.



“These are devices that need to work, and you can’t do that if you load any software on them,” he said. “That doesn’t mean there’s not going to be software to buy that you can load on them coming from us. It doesn’t mean we have to write it all, but it means it has to be more of a controlled environment.”



So, what we have is Apple's more or less "closed" platform vs. Android's open one.  Not to mention the fact that Microsoft and Symbian will want to join this battle.

This is not unlike the Mac vs. Windows war of the late 1980's and early 1990's.  Who "wins" this war will depend on what Apple learned from its battles with Microsoft and, in no small part, to what degree the Android platform finds users.

iPhone News Beat

Today's iPhone News:



O2 having problems meeting iPhone iPhone activation requests.

Way found to make custom ringtones using iTunes 7.5 and iPhone 1.1.2 software.

iPhone going to China?

Two-thirds of UK iPhone buyers switching to O2 from rivals.

iPhone to get spotlight search function next year.


Monday, November 12, 2007

Google's Android: Java and a lot of Money

As promiosed, Google released the Android SDK today. The big news - Android is Java based.  The really, really big news - Google is offering up a ton of money ($10 Million) to developers to program applications for Android.

First, a run down (and don't take this as definitive, I'm still slogging through the documentation)

  • Android will run on windows, linux and mac
  • Develop in Java on Eclipse
  • There's an emulator to test applications right now
  • The UI elements are available, but may not be the final version
Its pretty clear that Android is a flavor of J2ME, but to say that really takes away from what Android is.  J2ME is simply an sandbox that runs on phone that support it.  In that sandbox, developers can write applications but, they can only control the phone to the extent that the handset maker offers through its APIs.  Android lets developers access to just about everything on the phone.  Kind of like telling someone they have to stay in their hotel room on vacation (J2ME) and giving them free reign of an entire resort (Android).

The bigger news is that Google is willing to put its money where its mouth is.  It's going to give 50 application $25,000 in its design contest. Twenty of those will then get $275,000 or $100,000 to bring the application to market. 

As I noted before, this is not an iPhone killer.  But, it is clearly something that may work.  The fact that Google is willing to subsidize application development for this platform is a good sign.  But, until we actually see a phone that this works on, the success of this effort is still in doubt.

iPhone Due for more features

Apple has some more features for the iPhone on tap.  According to the website Pocket-lint, a spokesman for Apple stated that:

All the complaints and feature requests we've had can be fixed and added by software upgrades
Features referenced in the article include recording video and streaming data and music via Bluetooth 2.0.

Now, given Apple's tight lipped policy regarding announcements of new products or features, I can of find it hard to believe that an anonymous Apple spokesman actually said this.  But, the premise of the article is correct, the iPhone, because it is based on OS X, Apple can easily add features and, Apple has made it known that it intends to add more functionality to the iPhone over time.

That being said, I think you have to lend some credence to this report, simply because adding features to the iPhone is an easy way to keep the iPhone relevant and gain more profits for Apple.





Sunday, November 11, 2007

iPhone Java: Not Gonna Happen

There's been some speculation that the Open-Sourcing of Java might eventually lead to Java coming to the iPhone.  I'll be blunt:  I don't see it happening.  Despite the hopes and wishes of the Java community, Java on the iPhone is a  pipe dream. 



iPhone News Beat

Welcome to another Monday! Only 9 Days until Thanksgiving.  Here's today's iPhone News, trying to make it until the four day weekend edition:

Although I don't recommend it, Jailbreak 1.1.2 has been released.  Have fun hacking your iPhone.

The first iPhone HiFi dock?

A Doctor who makes house calls, thanks to his iPhone.

Is the iPhone (and its competitors) the grim reaper for PDAs?

O2 says hundreds of thousands of iPhones sold.

iPhone O2's fastest selling device ever.

iPhone disrupted cell phone market.





Saturday, November 10, 2007

iPhone Beat: Weekend Edition



Now that the iPhone UK and German launches are complete, here's a look at the weekend's iPhone news. Oddly enough, the iPhone Software update is available, but not through iTunes yet.  Very curious.....

So the iPhone has brought some iPhone Joy.

Yet another call to Set the iPhone free.

iPhones sell at 4.2 per second in Scotland.

iPhones European Launch "Failure".

iPhone still scaring CIOs.

O2: UK iPhone Sales exceeding expectations.



Friday, November 9, 2007

Essential iPhone Apps

Welcome new iPhoners! 

After you are done playing with the iPhone's installed applications, you may be want to expand your horizons with new iPhone Applications.  You may be tempted to Jailbreak the iPhone to install applications.  Just hold that thought for a moment.  You may have heard that Apple really really does not like you to do this.  But there is a way to expand your iPhone horizons - iPhone Web Apps.

Now, Apple's contention that iPhone Web Apps is a great way to expand the iPhone's functionality has gotten some Bad Press.  But, there are some very cool Web Apps out there.  So let's take a look at a few you may want to try out (all of the links below will go right to the iPhone enabled web app).

First up is, of course, Bejeweled, the classic and addictive game.  Just use your finger to point the way and you'll be zapping gems without end.

Want to see a movie?  Check out its reviews at the Tomato Meter. Then, find movie times and buy tickets at Fandango.

Want a good meal and to avoid food poisoning?  Check out Zagat for a restaurant then Find It (and for our UK friends there's Yell.com.)

Be Productive - access your Docs and Spreadsheets at Google Docs.

Translate and Speak other languages at Ultralingua.

Keep up-to-date on the news and your web feeds at Google Reader and digg.

Socialize at Facebook  and Blog about your life at TypePad.

Be a Bookworm:  Harper Collins has a nifty little web app to let you browse inside some of their titles and links to buy at them at Amazon.com.

Check out more web apps at Apple's Web App Page and iLounge.com's iPhone Software Page.

So, there's lots to do and explore before you hijack that iPhone and perhaps void your warranty.  And don't fret, the  iPhone SDK is coming soon so you'll get to have those "real" iPhone Apps shortly.


iPhone News Beat

With a little over two hours to go until the UK iPhone launch, here's a look at today's iPhone News...

As noted early this morning, iPhone and iPod Touch Software update has been posted by Apple.

The Burst.com lawsuit against Apple  has been narrowed a bit.  Apple didn't get the complete dismissal it wanted but  14 of Burst's claims has been dismissed.  If you have not been following this story, Burst contends that Apple is violating its patents for compressing, storing and sharing media over a network.

Google has updated its Goggle Reader for iPhone.

A look at the current iPhone killers (or clones depending on what your perspective is).

The Register has Six Months of iPhone on one handy page.

Analysts remember Apple's iPhone Accounting of course, they could have just listened the first time this was announced.

Still Loving the iPhone.

British Invasion.

Preview Harper Collins Books on the iPhone.  Here's the link to point your iPhone to:  harpercollins mobile.

Times Online: iPhone: Expensive but Exceptional.




Thursday, November 8, 2007

iPhone/iPod Update Out (kind of)

Late Night quick post:  

Looks like Apple has posted the iPhone/iPod Touch Software update 1.1.2 to its download url.  iTunes doesn't seem to know about it yet though.  While its probably best to wait until iTunes prompts you, Engadget has the details and direct download link here:  


No big surprises - iPhone hacks are broke again (and apparently quickly on the way to being hijacked again).  Well actually one surprise, apparently the iPod Touch calendar application will let you enter calender items on the Touch.  Yippie.  Nice to see Apple respond to all of those complaints (why they thought that people would not want the Touch to enter calendar entries is beyond me).

Meanwhile, folks in the UK are waiting through the night for their iPhones.  And it looks like  a fun Midnight Madness release in Germany.

The iPhone News Beat

A new feature of the Blog, daily iPhone news....

CEO of ARM says iPhone's ARM11 processor elderly technology.

Starting to Line Up in the UK for the iPhone.

iPhone software update tomorrow.

RIM CEO says iPhone keyboard difficult to use an iPhone not a threat to Blackberry.

UK Police to iPhone customers: hide you iPhone or get mugged.

Apple vs. the iHackers.

MacWorld UK; should you buy an iPhone or iPod Touch?

iPhone Review: Beautiful.

Blackberry is a Ford, iPhone is a Ferrari






Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Eisner says Blame Apple. He's Wrong.

Leave it to Michael Eisner to prove exactly what's wrong with the studio mindset regarding video digital distribution:

The studios "make deals with Steve Jobs, who takes them to the cleaners.
They make all these kinds of things, and who's making money? Apple!
They should get a piece of Apple. If I was a union, I'd be striking up
wherever he is."
Ugh.  As I have noted before the mindset that Apple is to blame for the supposed lack of profits on video digital distribution is simply hog wash. 

First of all, the studios haven't seriously taken a shot yet at digital distribution.  Apple's only got around 1000 videos for sale on the iTunes store.  Moreover, I am convinced that video sales of films are just not what people want - rentals are where the volume (and money) is (and I am not the only one who thinks this).

More importantly, the movie and TV studios are just irrationally wedded to an advertising model.  They think that ads will make them money, the same way it makes them money on TV.  But it will not work in the digital world.  They have to offer their products digitally in a manner that is convenient, simple to use and, can be accessed anywhere.  For many reasons, an ad based model doesn't fit that bill (not to mention the fact that it is very easy to eliminate ads in digital distribution - and that absolutely drives the studios nuts).  And they have to offer the content at a price that is reasonable ($9.99 for a movie download - without the DVD extras - and $1.99 a TV episode is pushing the upper limits here.  And yet, they want higher prices!).  And of course, they continue to insist on restrictive DRM

Not only is Eisner an idiot for his Apple comment, he's just plain wrong on the writer's strike:


For a writer to give up today's money for a nonexistent piece of
the future -- they should do it in three years, shouldn't be doing
it now -- they are misguided they should not have gone on the
strike. I've seen stupid strikes, I've seen less stupid strikes,
and this strike is just a stupid strike.
Now, I admit I don't know all the details about the writer's strike, but I do know that the whole reason there is a strike is because the writer's forgot to deal for DVD's the last time.  Seems reasonable to me that the writers don't want to let several years of digital revenue pass without them having a deal to getting a share of it.

So, after all this BS, where does Eisner think the of video distribution future is?   Yup, you got it - the internet.  Thats where is putting his own money.  What a clown. 

Waiting for iPhone...

It's two days until the UK and German iPhone launch which means that its time for some more iPhone Reviews.  The Guardian publishes the Part III of its iPhone review (Part I, Part II, Part III).  The BBC takes a different approach discussing how competitors have responded to the iPhone with the now typical comments from phone makers that they are not too worried about the iPhone (and I have this land in Florida I'd like to sell you...).

Elsewhere, we've got a plea for Apple to enable the ability to turn off the phone but keep the WiFi on. And a ponder about how long AT&T will continue to prominently promote the iPhone. On a related note it appears there's a touch screen shortage.

Finally, there's this  column about how Apple should allow 3rd party application support and not kill them off with the anticipated iPhone software update. 

Now, I am of two minds on this.  I don't think Apple should worry about killing off iPhone hacks.  I know first hand how difficult it is sometimes to support a product.  If you tacitly allow folks to use you product in a way it was not intended to be used or, in a way you specifically told them you would not support its use, then, to be honest, they get what they deserve.  No complaining. 

On the other hand, not allowing development on the iPhone on day 1 was a big  mistake on Apple's part.  The iPhone was released with fan fair and hype as the next big thing and positioned as a big part of the future of Apple.  By not including its developers in this it not sent the wrong message, but the "use webkit and build web apps" was a BS attempt by Apple to make it look like Apple was responding to developer concerns. 

Of course, Apple says it will rectify things in February with the release of the iPhone SDK, but it has got to be a tough decision on Apple's part - do they kill all hacks or do they allow iPhone/iPod Touch 3rd party application hacks but just kill SIM card unlock hacks? 

Right now, I guess the answer is kill all hacks.  I suspect that Apple will have to worry about this  for one more software update cycle.  After that, Apple will kill all SIM card hacks and the SDK will take care of everything else.  Now, what exactly the SDK will allow and how it will allow it is another story...