Yenting Chen and Joseph Tsai responding to iPhone 5 rumors:
>[…] however, the sources believe that the leaked specifications are rather the market’s expectations for iPhone 5.
Shocking.
Yenting Chen and Joseph Tsai responding to iPhone 5 rumors:
>[…] however, the sources believe that the leaked specifications are rather the market’s expectations for iPhone 5.
Shocking.
Al Lewis on how you kill HP in one years time:
>Raise your financial estimates, twice. Then miss them, twice.
He has a ton more examples of the mis-management of HP, but his penultimate paragraph really sums it all up: this is the new HP way.
So consumers get the peace of mind of “owning” the shows and studios get the higher per-episode-price that they want. Win-win?
Shawn and I spend way too much time talking about the design of this site and blog design in general. Luckily we find time to talk about application launchers and the review of one that Shawn is working on, as well as talking about Steve Jobs’ resignation.
Many thanks to our sponsor: [Paste Interactive](http://pasteinteractive.com/)
My thanks to Hunter Research and Technology for sponsoring the RSS feed this week. They specifically wanted to promote their Wx app that is one of the nerdiest weather apps out there.
I recommend that you check out [Wx for Mac](http://hrtapps.com/wxmac/index.html) especially with the storms that are brewing on the east coast of the U.S. — it’s an app that is packed full of information. It’s easy to find a ton of apps for iOS, Mac apps that go beyond the current weather though — those are much more rare.
Dan Provost on the rumored Amazon Tablet:
>For the life of me, I can not think of one good reason why Amazon would ditch all of the benefits of their e-ink display in favor of competing directly with Apple with a full-fledged tablet device. It would seem destined to suffer the same fate as all other iPad competitors.
He has a nice proposal of what he would like to see — a device that I could see owning *in addition to* an iPad. That would be a win for Amazon if you ask me.
Khoi Vinh:
>So our phones are the devices reflect us as individuals, while iPads seem to be the devices reflect our closest relationships. This is where I think it’s more accurate to think of the iPad as not just a post-PC device, but as harbinger of a post-personal flavor of computing, one that is more perhaps cooperative, and more open as a user experience.
I get what Vinh is saying and I even slightly agree with it, but I think as time moves on that the iPad will not take the “post-personal” route. I think that it is far more likely that the iPad follows the same path as the phone. The phone started by being rare, then one per household, then one per room (or a few cordless models), the one cellphone per family, then per car, now one (or more) per person.
If the iPad is the new computing paradigm it would seem far more logical — to me — that it would follow a similar path.
It’s interesting watching and listening about the preparation for Hurricane Irene from afar. I have seen tweets from Comcast and several other infrastructure providers reporting on getting crews ready to keep services up and running.
There is no doubt in my mind that cell networks will be overloaded — they always seem like they are at capacity on any given day, in most major cities. What will be far more interesting if what prevails as the best way to get news — so often it has been Twitter, but will people be able to get access to it?
Florian Mueller:
>Google will keep fighting, but realistically, the jury will get to see the Lindholm email. As a result, there’s a fairly high risk for Google that it could be found to have infringed Oracle’s Java-related intellectual property rights willfully, which in turn would result in triple damages and, even more importantly, an injunction — the maximum leverage Oracle could possibly get in order to dictate the terms of a license deal.
Yikes, sounds like even a settlement is really going to hurt the pocket book at this point.
James Allworth, Max Wessel, and Rob Wheeler for the Harvard Business Review:
>Now, the culture has coalesced to such a point that every time someone at Apple makes a decision — from the color of metal panelling in the retail stores to the animations on the iPhone’s interface — that Apple employee has one overriding thought:
>**What would Steve do?**
*(Emphasis theirs, not mine.)*
They conclude that this question will only be more pervasive as Jobs’ role is lessened. I agree.
Steve Jobs in his resignation letter:
>As far as my successor goes, I strongly recommend that we execute our succession plan and name Tim Cook as CEO of Apple.
Very sad, but very interesting to know that (as rumored) the plan was to appoint Cook all along.
Mike Gikas:
>Phones running the Android operating system dominate our newest cell-phone Ratings, thanks to incredibly sharp displays that often measure 4 inches or more and exclusive access to 4G networks, now available on all four major carriers.
If you [click on the chart](http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/electronics-computers/phones-mobile-devices/cell-phones-services/cell-phone-ratings/ratings-overview.htm?INTKEY=I95BEE0) (which you have to be a member to see the full chart) you will see that the highest priced phone is $200, ranging down to $30. I’m sure that has nothing to do with the high rankings. I am *sure* it is all about those “Big, Beautiful Displays”.
Claire Cain Miller for NYT:
>The fine, which the Justice Department said is one of the largest such penalties ever, covers revenue that Google earned from the illegal advertisers and revenue that the Canadian pharmacies received from United States customers.
Paul Eng:
>The Lenovo tablet’s touchscreen, for example, can accept input from a digital pen, which will allow users to draw and annotate documents and pictures. An optional portfolio case contains a built-in wireless keyboard, complete with Lenovo’s TrackPoint—an eraser-like nub that moves the on-screen pointer.
Prices start at $500. I bet RIM is scared now, Lenovo/ThinkPads are *the* corporate machine — and this tablet has email capabilities.
It may not sound great to iPad users, but I bet CTOs stuck with Exchange are going to love this — if only to shut up C-level execs who want tablets.
The difference between this Dashboard widget for Google Analytics users and the others that I have tried? This one actually works.
*(Side note: Please don’t email me about other analytics systems, I have tried them all. Also Mint is the best, but unfortunately it overruns my server for an unknown reason if I even allow access to the directory you install it in, so that’s out.)*
Another tip from Mac OS X Hints, this time about how with Xcode 4.1 you can enable HiDPI. I tried it out and was able put my Cinema Display into `960 x 600` HiDPI resolution. Things look amazingly huge, yet the text was crystal clear.
This should be cool once we get full software and hardware support (you know, so that we can have higher resolutions that what I tried out).
A very cool built-in tool with Lion that I had no clue existed until I saw this. This will help quite a bit the next time I need to position and set up a WiFi network.
Jeff on the Agile Blog (makers of 1Password):
>If people are forced to use a difficult and confusing system, they are likely to make serious mistakes. At best, a security product should make it easier to get your work done. At worst, it shouldn’t make things prohibitively difficult to complete your tasks.
One of the reasons that I used and love 1Password isn’t because it makes me more secure, but because it makes using website *easier* not harder. Not only for storing passwords, but for storing credit cards and more. In his article, Jeff, talks a great deal about how this idea is central to making users (sometimes as a fringe benefit to the user) far more secure.
Robin Wauters for Aol/TechCrunch:
>The upcoming iPhone 5 will almost certainly be a single phone that supports multiple networks, namely CDMA (such as the one used by Verizon or Sprint in the United States) as well as GSM (which is used by AT&T and T-Mobile in the U.S.).
What does “almost certainly” really mean? Nothing.
Also, on a related note, “proof” that a prototype exists does not mean it will be real.
Roger Johansson points to some concerns about using the [aforementioned](https://brooksreview.net/2011/08/webkit-adjust/) `-webkit-text-size-adjust:none` attribute that I posted about. Instead I flipped my code to 100%, should keep the layout tidy and respect resizing if needed.