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  • ‘AT&T to Start Blocking Stolen Cellphones This Week’

    I love this little bit of news from Brian X. Chen about AT&T: >The company said that its database would initially prevent reactivation of stolen devices on its own network. Later this year it plans to expand the database to work with other carriers. I am sure the meeting for this went something like: “Hey…

    I love this little bit of news from Brian X. Chen about AT&T:
    >The company said that its database would initially prevent reactivation of stolen devices on its own network. Later this year it plans to expand the database to work with other carriers.

    I am sure the meeting for this went something like: “Hey boss! I’ve a great idea: let’s track phones that have be stolen and block them. This will make current customers happy, and force more users to buy our subsidized phones!” Then the boss slowly turns with a glimmer in his eye and replies: “Genius, what a great, brand new, never heard before, idea. (With a subtle undertone of ‘that’s why I hired you — I’m so smart.’)”

    In other words: why hasn’t AT&T been doing this all along?

    If that was all that was in the story I wouldn’t have linked to it, but that’s not all in the story, the best bit comes right now:

    >Verizon Wireless, the No. 1 carrier, said that unlike AT&T, it has had its own database for disabling stolen cellphones on its network for years.

    That sentence is so perfect, on so many levels.

  • ‘Dear Internet: Please Stop ‘Reviewing’ Microsoft Surface Until You’ve Actually Used One’

    Craig Grannell making the point with a comparison to early iPad coverage: >I still like my iPad a lot and I don’t regret buying it, but it certainly doesn’t live up to the initial coverage online—and that’s something you only realise and can only tell after extended use, not through seeing a couple of pictures…

    Craig Grannell making the point with a comparison to early iPad coverage:
    >I still like my iPad a lot and I don’t regret buying it, but it certainly doesn’t live up to the initial coverage online—and that’s something you only realise and can only tell after extended use, not through seeing a couple of pictures online and a keynote video.

    Doesn’t matter who the person is, or what the device is — you cannot and should not review something that you have never used. Likewise I don’t recommend things that I haven’t used first. So the “Amazon Items of the Week” posts, yeah all those items are things I own, like, and therefore can recommend to you.

    I have no problem with speculating on announced products, but calling such speculation a “review” or “buyers guide” is basically out right lying to your readership.

  • HTC Defeats Apple in swipe-to-unlock Patent

    I’m actually really glad Apple lost this patent because it’s something that just seems silly to not have on touchscreen devices.

    I’m actually really glad Apple lost this patent because it’s something that just seems silly to not have on touchscreen devices.

  • The Amazon Smartphone

    Chuck Skoda, [responding to the rumors that Amazon will release a smartphone](http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-06/amazon-said-to-plan-smartphone-to-vie-with-apple.html), speculates that the Internet browsing and apps are what makes the iPhone a success, a component that Amazon hasn’t shown it can be good at, so Skoda asks: >How many books, movies, and tv shows are you consuming on your phone? When I…

    Chuck Skoda, [responding to the rumors that Amazon will release a smartphone](http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-06/amazon-said-to-plan-smartphone-to-vie-with-apple.html), speculates that the Internet browsing and apps are what makes the iPhone a success, a component that Amazon hasn’t shown it can be good at, so Skoda asks:

    >How many books, movies, and tv shows are you consuming on your phone?

    When I look at most everything Amazon does it is very clear to me that the strategy is consistently: sell more. The Kindle sells more ebooks, the a Fire is trying to do the same with media, so what the hell would a smartphone sell for Amazon?

    Do people really need an Amazon device to buy from Amazon? No.

    If this rumor holds it seems very much like a break in strategy and a ‘me-too’ move from Amazon, which is not how they got to where they are today.

    *Side note: am I the only one that wants Amazon to release a product named ‘Amazin’? I can’t be alone in this wish.*

  • ‘Web Designers: You Need a Retina MacBook Pro’

    Marco Arment makes a great argument for every web designer needing a retina MacBook Pro and I agree. The last design of this site I did was tailored first and foremost for the iPad. Now I am torn whether to tailor for the iPad or the retina MacBook Pro, because now I can’t decide which…

    Marco Arment makes a great argument for every web designer needing a retina MacBook Pro and I agree. The last design of this site I did was tailored first and foremost for the iPad. Now I am torn whether to tailor for the iPad or the retina MacBook Pro, because now I can’t decide which device I like reading on more.

    A couple of people wrote me to tell me that I should stop throwing out complaints about magazines and start offering solutions: step one is making all digital publications look great on retina screens.

    Oh and in case you were wondering about designing a site only on a retina screen, [Tim Van Damme has you covered](http://maxvoltar.com/archive/web-designers-you-need-a-retina-macbook-pro):

    >I think right now the perfect setup is a Retina MacBook Pro, and a non-retina external monitor.

    Just be warned, you won’t use that second screen for anything other than testing.

  • Retina MacBook Pro vs. Mac Pro: Aperture and Motion

    Rob for Bare Feats: >If apps like Aperture and Motion are your “bread and butter,” you can conclude from this test session that the 2012 MacBook Pro (Retina and ‘normal’) performs on par with the best Mac Pro with the best graphics cards. Aperture has always been a dog in terms of performance and thus…

    Rob for Bare Feats:

    >If apps like Aperture and Motion are your “bread and butter,” you can conclude from this test session that the 2012 MacBook Pro (Retina and ‘normal’) performs on par with the best Mac Pro with the best graphics cards.

    Aperture has always been a dog in terms of performance and thus I have usually preferred Lightroom. However since getting the retina MacBook Pro I have switched back to Aperture and haven’t noticed that dog slow performance in Aperture. Maybe the hardware has finally caught up, maybe Apple got around to optimizing Aperture.

    I do get some good satisfaction from how favorably the retina MacBook Pro and MacBook Pro compare to Mac Pros.

  • ‘Apple’s Fix for Corrupt Binaries’

    Marco Arment on Apple’s solution for the corrupt binaries: >By republishing “updates” to these apps, Apple is helping users avoid deleting them and losing their data. As Marco points out this is a smart move by Apple — because as a user I’d be pissed if I lost a bunch of data in an app.…

    Marco Arment on Apple’s solution for the corrupt binaries:
    >By republishing “updates” to these apps, Apple is helping users avoid deleting them and losing their data.

    As Marco points out this is a smart move by Apple — because as a user I’d be pissed if I lost a bunch of data in an app. I also think it was a clever way of avoiding the deletion of comments, which would have likely caused outrage among idiots.

    Sidebar: If your app stores all the user data locally, ‘just’ enable iCloud so that users can delete your app and later reinstall it without losing their progress/data. Or sync that data somewhere so that deleting an app doesn’t delete the data.

  • The Elusive iPad ‘mini’

    I don’t know about you guys, but I can’t wait for the iPad nano, with it’s 3.5″ retina screen. While we wait for those rumors, let’s take a look at what is going around this time. We’ll just blame this flare up on [MacRumors](http://www.macrumors.com/2012/07/03/apple-planning-for-7-85-inch-ipad-mini-with-igzo-display-later-this-year/), [Bloomberg](http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-03/here-comes-nexus-7-nightmare-the-ipad-mini.html), and the [Wall Street Journal](http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304141204577506471913819412.html) all together. Since the reports…

    I don’t know about you guys, but I can’t wait for the iPad nano, with it’s 3.5″ retina screen.

    While we wait for those rumors, let’s take a look at what is going around this time.

    We’ll just blame this flare up on [MacRumors](http://www.macrumors.com/2012/07/03/apple-planning-for-7-85-inch-ipad-mini-with-igzo-display-later-this-year/), [Bloomberg](http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-03/here-comes-nexus-7-nightmare-the-ipad-mini.html), and the [Wall Street Journal](http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304141204577506471913819412.html) all together. Since the reports are all similar we can break it down as such:

    – 7-8 inch screened iPad.
    – 1024 x 768 Resolution.
    – Before the end of 2012.
    – Sources “close to the matter”.

    This is nothing new, since “sources close to the matter” have been reporting an iPad mini, and Apple Television for well over a year now. The discussions are largely the same “yay” or “nay” depending on how you view the future of a smaller tablet, but I have a few thoughts about such a device.

    There’s been a [strong argument made by Joel Bernstein](http://castirony.com/post/26466421254/the-case-for-a-7-8-ipad) on why a 7.8″ screen would mesh well with the rumored resolution. His strongest point, I believe, is this one:

    >The iOS Human Interface Guidelines say “The screen size of iOS-based devices might vary, but the average size of a fingertip does not. Regardless of the device your app runs on, following these guidelines ensures that people can comfortably use your app. Give tappable elements in your application a target area of about 44 x 44 points.”

    So let’s just make it a given that Apple could/can/would produce a ~7″ tablet with little to no harm to the current crop of iPad apps. With that, then the question becomes: should they make one?

    In the “for” camp this argument from [Rene Ritchie strikes me as the strongest](http://www.imore.com/apple-release-7-inch-ipad):

    >The reasons Apple was planning this, we heard, was the same reason they planned and executed on the lower price point iPod mini and iPod nano — to take the oxygen out of the market. In this case, to leave no room for discount competitors like Amazon and Google.

    The reason this bit is so compelling to me is a two part answer. First, it is generally believed that Steve Jobs had a large hand in the product road map for at least the next 5 years at Apple. Part two, [is this quote (curiously the only source I could find for it is *Daring Fireball*) from Steve Jobs](http://daringfireball.net/2010/08/n92):

    >Once a company devises a great product, he says, it has a monopoly in that realm, and concentrates less on innovation than protecting its turf. “The Mac user interface was a 10-year monopoly,” says Jobs. “Who ended up running the company? Sales guys. At the critical juncture in the late ’80s, when they should have gone for market share, they went for profits. They made obscene profits for several years. And their products became mediocre. And then their monopoly ended with Windows 95. They behaved like a monopoly, and it came back to bite them, which always happens.”

    I think it is pretty certain that Apple knows they have a hit with the iPad. So now do they rest on their laurels or go for market share?

    For that we look at the iPhone — and yep, just checked, Apple still sells the 3GS. Why? Because they are going for market share.

    With the iPad it isn’t so simple because there are no carrier subsidies to drastically cut the price, but they have already started going for market share by keeping the iPad 2 around. With a smaller, cheaper, iPad they could aggressively pursue market share.

    That’s why *I* like the 7 inch iPad rumors right now, but there’s a problem with these rumors.

    The problem is: I don’t know where the hell a 7 inch iPad would fit for Apple users. The iPhone, iPad, and Mac all complement each other, but I have a hard time seeing where the 7 inch iPad would fit in.

    To me the 7 inch iPad would be a bit like the iPod touch, not likely something you would buy if you already have an iPhone. Again though the iPod touch does sell well, so perhaps I am just not the target market for the 7 inch iPad?

    So let’s just assume I am not the target market for such a device, that there actually is a group of buyers that is the target market, and that a smaller iPad would be cheaper — given all that I still have one question: how does Apple market it?

    Apple doesn’t like to market things as being cheap. You don’t see commercials for the iPad 2 floating around, because the only reason Apple keeps it around is because it is cheaper. You don’t see Apple engaging in marketing price wars.

    Right now Apple sells and markets devices by showing users why they need/want such a device. The amazing screen on the retina MacBook Pro. The amazing form factor of the MacBook Air. The intimate web and portability of the iPad. The amazing do everything, go everywhere iPhone. 10,000 songs in your pocket iPod.

    How does Apple market a seven inch iPad if they are only making it because it would be cheaper to buy? What is demonstrably better about a 7 inch tablet?

    Those are two questions I would expect Apple to have a firm answer to before they launch a tablet.

    I like carrying a seven inch tablet around because it is small and easy to hold, but I hate using them because they are too small to actually use.

    This should be a very interesting move if Apple makes it.

  • Apple to Remove One-star Reviews?

    Lex Friedman: >Sources told Macworld that Apple will be removing one-star app reviews developers earned unfairly because of the company’s server issue. I’m actually pretty surprised by this, but I hope it’s true.

    Lex Friedman:

    >Sources told Macworld that Apple will be removing one-star app reviews developers earned unfairly because of the company’s server issue.

    I’m actually pretty surprised by this, but I hope it’s true.

  • The B&B Podcast #68: My Socks Would Be Buttery

    >Shawn and Ben talk about popcorn, writing reviews of beta apps, using Checkmark and how it works alongside other reminder apps on the iPhone, and Belkin’s new WeMo device. I feel like Shawn and I went really in-depth on the popcorn discussion.

    >Shawn and Ben talk about popcorn, writing reviews of beta apps, using Checkmark and how it works alongside other reminder apps on the iPhone, and Belkin’s new WeMo device.

    I feel like Shawn and I went really in-depth on the popcorn discussion.

  • Problems Reported Mounting USB 3.0 External Drives on New MacBooks

    I’ve personally seen this issue on my retina MacBook Pro — what I thought was just a faulty hard drive is not. I hope this is a software problem and not hardware but it is an issue I am seeing as well. If I plug in my desktop HDD or USB 3 memory card reader…

    I’ve personally seen this issue on my retina MacBook Pro — what I thought was just a faulty hard drive is not. I hope this is a software problem and not hardware but it is an issue I am seeing as well.

    If I plug in my desktop HDD or USB 3 memory card reader it is rather hit and miss as to whether the computer will mount the devices. It’s less than 30% of the time right now. I have tried different cables and ports on the Mac — nothing matters.

    However the mobile LaCie USB 3 drive I have mounts 90% of the time. A bunch of people in forums seem to think that this is related to a low bus power that Apple is putting out, but I tend to think it is more software related.

    So buyer beware for now.

  • Wallpaper: Retina by Tim Van Damme

    A great looking retina-ized wallpaper from Tim Van Damme.

    A great looking retina-ized wallpaper from Tim Van Damme.

  • Fred Wilson’s New Nexus 7″

    Fred Wilson posted some early thoughts about the Nexus 7 tablet on his blog this morning ((Including a picture of his foot.)) and the thoughts are really interesting to me. Coming from a diehard iPad lover, this type of a post really amuses me. While Wilson seems to really like the Nexus 7, a lot…

    Fred Wilson posted some early thoughts about the Nexus 7 tablet on his blog this morning ((Including a picture of his foot.)) and the thoughts are really interesting to me. Coming from a diehard iPad lover, this type of a post really amuses me. While Wilson seems to really like the Nexus 7, a lot of the things he talks about seem like a joke that they are just now available.

    He states:

    >There is also something very comforting about getting a clean build of the most recent version of Android on a device.

    Think about that for a moment. Wilson is all about Android and just now, in July of 2012, is he getting an Android tablet with a “clean build”. Amazing. What does this remind you of? Perhaps Windows and all the preload crap that used to come with it from HP, Dell, Sony, et al…

    Two other things I want to point out.

    1. Wilson said he put some of his favorite apps on the home screen. What strikes me about this is that there aren’t that many apps on his home screen and a couple of his most favorite aren’t even available on this device. That’s one area where Apple is just destroying Android: all apps available on all devices with the only distinction being between iPhone and iPad. That’s phenomenally powerful and easy for iOS users. What is also striking to me is that the apps he chose are honestly pretty ugly UIs from what I have seen of them — of course I will know more when I get my Nexus 7.
    2. Wilson states that he really likes the Nexus 7, that his primary use case is reading in the Kindle app. Before he said all that though, he talks about how much better the Kindle app is on the Kindle Fire. I get that the Fire is a pretty shitty tablet, but if you really are primarily using it for reading, I have to believe it would be better than the Nexus 7 based solely on what Wilson is saying about the Kindle app on the Nexus.

    Again, take this with a grain of salt since I haven’t used a Nexus 7, but it’s kind of like when Apple made the transition from PowerPC to Intel and boasted how Macs are *so* much faster now and all the Windows geeks laughed at Apple nerds — because they had that speed all along. Kind of like that, except that Android isn’t even close to on par with iOS on tablets yet.

  • ‘Corrupt App Store Binaries Crashing on Launch’

    [Marco Arment talking about how his app was corrupted on Apple’s side of things](http://www.marco.org/2012/07/04/app-store-corrupt-binaries): >Because if this happens to you, all of your most active users, the people who will install updates within hours of them becoming available, will be stopped in their tracks. They’ll think you’re careless, incompetent, and sloppy for issuing a release…

    [Marco Arment talking about how his app was corrupted on Apple’s side of things](http://www.marco.org/2012/07/04/app-store-corrupt-binaries):

    >Because if this happens to you, all of your most active users, the people who will install updates within hours of them becoming available, will be stopped in their tracks. They’ll think you’re careless, incompetent, and sloppy for issuing a release that doesn’t work. And they’ll leave you a *lot* of angry 1-star reviews.

    Typically I am one of the first to install new updates, but because of the holiday I didn’t get around to updating Instapaper until yesterday. I had no problem by then, but as Marco notes this problem is widespread and in fact is an egregious error on Apple’s part.

    Let’s think about this for a moment from a non-geek user perspective of updating an app to a crashing binary:

    – Favorite app Instapaper is updated.
    – You download update.
    – You launch Instapaper to see what is new.
    – The app crashes immediately.

    Now, a few assumptions that I think are fair to make about these non-geek users:

    1. They don’t follow Marco or Instapaper on Twitter.
    2. They don’t/won’t think to go to the Instapaper blog to see things there.
    3. They probably Google for the answer, which probably just shows them more people complaining.

    So here are likely next steps/thoughts they take:

    – Assume Marco is actually a hack and doesn’t know what the fuck he is doing when he is releasing an update.
    – Look in the App Store at the reviews, see that others are bitching about the app crashing. Thus assuming they are out money that they spent, get pissed and write a one star review confirming that they now know Marco to be a hack and Instapaper to be a garbage app.

    Even if 1 in a 100 write a 1 star review it will tank an apps ratings — when the developer is not at fault, but Apple is.

    Here’s Marco’s recourse:

    – Email Apple.
    – Complain on Twitter.
    – Complain on his blog.
    – Wait
    – Wait
    – Wait
    – Wait
    – Wait
    – Wait

    Here’s what Apple is likely to do:

    – Quietly fix the problem.
    – Make no mention of the problem.
    – Do nothing to remove the bad reviews that they are at fault for.

    Here’s what Apple *should* do:

    – Admit the problem to developers and hold all updates until it is resolved.
    – Apologize via form email to developers that were affected.
    – Send out an email to all App Store users that updated an app during this period, explaining it was an error in the store and that crashing apps should be deleted and reinstalled.
    – Delete all reviews left for that version number, good or bad.

    I know it won’t happen though, and that is the problem. This is Apple’s Achilles heel and the thing that could bring this all crashing down. If you are a developer that wants to make money iOS is the place to be right now, but what if that changes? Would a developer that is constantly treated like shit from Apple really have the loyalty to *not* jump platforms if the opportunity presented itself?

    And if all the great apps leave iOS then so too will the users. Apple needs to pull its head out of its ass on this one.

  • Ultimate Fireworks Fails

    Happy fourth, good luck not making this video next year.

    Happy fourth, good luck not making this video next year.

  • Uber Plans a Cheaper Service

    I’ve only used Uber once, in San Francisco, but it was a great experience. What made it great however was not the car, what makes Uber great (to me) is two things: 1. Hailing a cab to you, via an app before you step outside. 2. Never having to open your wallet to pay for…

    I’ve only used Uber once, in San Francisco, but it was a great experience. What made it great however was not the car, what makes Uber great (to me) is two things:

    1. Hailing a cab to you, via an app before you step outside.
    2. Never having to open your wallet to pay for the ride: get in, get out.

    Those two points are what make your standard cab more of a hassle. So I am all for a cheaper option. I don’t know if Seattle has the hybrids yet, but I did get an email saying that the SUVs are available. I sincerely hope that Uber forces cab companies to be less of a pain in the ass.

  • Thinking Backwards

    Christopher Mims talking about the flaws of tablets, ends with this wish(?) for the future: >We’re going to get something vivid and dynamic and flexible and light enough to be a credible replacement for print, and at the same time it might also supplant even more of the tasks we currently perform on both our…

    Christopher Mims talking about the flaws of tablets, ends with this wish(?) for the future:
    >We’re going to get something vivid and dynamic and flexible and light enough to be a credible replacement for print, and at the same time it might also supplant even more of the tasks we currently perform on both our PCs and our smartphones.

    Mims is missing the point when he says: “credible replacement for print”. That exact line of thinking is why magazines are *not* thriving on the iPad. So let me lay this out as clearly as I can:

    We do not need, and should not want, to replace print with digital.

    We need, and should want, to find a way to make print irrelevant.

    This goes for more than magazines, because PDFs have long been the de facto standard of paper replacement on the computer — and frankly PDFs suck. It’s a very bad idea to get pigeonholed into thinking that we need to replace X with X and that we can do so on a one-to-one basis. We need to rethink these mediums. We need to get out of the box and realize that it is not just that we need to replace print, but that we need to rethink the very concept of a magazine.

    What would you rather have: a digital replica of a magazine — perfect replica — or would you rather have a completely new concept of what a magazine is. For me my magazine is Instapaper — and it’s the best one I have ever had.

  • Quote of the Day: Thorsten Heins

    “There’s nothing wrong with the company as it exists right now[…] I’m not talking about the company as I, kind of, took it over six months ago. I’m talking about the company (in the) state it’s in right now.” — Thorsten Heins, CEO of RIM (July 3, 2012)

    “There’s nothing wrong with the company as it exists right now[…] I’m not talking about the company as I, kind of, took it over six months ago. I’m talking about the company (in the) state it’s in right now.”
  • Sunstroke – a Fever Reader for iPhone

    Over the weekend the developer behind Sunstroke reached out and shared this app with me — I hadn’t heard of it before. I promptly purchased the app ((New TBR rule: I don’t accept promo codes any longer.)) and have been using Sunstroke as my RSS reader on my iPhone since then. Fast forward to today…

    Over the weekend the developer behind Sunstroke reached out and shared this app with me — I hadn’t heard of it before. I promptly purchased the app ((New TBR rule: I don’t accept promo codes any longer.)) and have been using Sunstroke as my RSS reader on my iPhone since then. Fast forward to today and Sunstroke is still being used over Reeder.

    I am 100% on Fever° as my RSS reading engine, and while Reeder supports Fever° — well it supports Fever° in a very Reeder like way. Meaning you aren’t really supposed to know what engine you are using when you use Reeder — which is fine.

    Sunstroke though is very much a Fever° client and I like that. Two things really stand out to me about Sunstroke:

    1. The hot list implementation is really great.
    2. The client marks items as read as you scroll past them — something that I would have to do with a gesture in Reeder. This feature alone makes it worth it.

    Of course not everything is roses. Sunstroke is not nearly as pretty as Reeder. The single item view is rough looking. Most of the mechanics are shared with Reeder: such as swiping left or right to perform a sharing action. Sunstroke is also much faster at syncing with Fever° for me — no really fast in comparison.

    Gun to my head, I don’t think I would recommend this over Reeder to many people right now, but I truly believe it is a solid offering and with a little design help it could be a better Fever° client than Reeder.

    #### Further Reading

    See also: [Viticci’s review](http://www.macstories.net/reviews/sunstroke-a-solid-fever-client-for-iphone/).

  • Quote of the Day: John Gruber

    “The iPhone is to cell phones what the Mac was to typewriters.” — John Gruber

    “The iPhone is to cell phones what the Mac was to typewriters.”