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Recent Articles

  • A Bit Precarious

    Brent Simmons on the current, rather precarious, position that Google is putting RSS readers in with the possibility of killing of the syncing of feeds via unofficial APIs: >I’m not an RSS reader developer any more. But if I were, I’d start looking for an alternative syncing system right now. I’m not either, but I…

    Brent Simmons on the current, rather precarious, position that Google is putting RSS readers in with the possibility of killing of the syncing of feeds via unofficial APIs:
    >I’m not an RSS reader developer any more. But if I were, I’d start looking for an alternative syncing system right now.

    I’m not either, but I am worried about this. Simmons makes the excellent comparison that right now RSS readers are a lot like Twitter clients:

    >It’s been an especially good thing for RSS reader users, who can mix-and-match clients on different platforms, who can move with relative ease between one client and another. (The situation is similar to Twitter clients: users are not stuck with one client from one particular developer.)

    It’s what makes it so easy for me to stay up to date with news no matter the device I am on. If all of a sudden I have to be “locked-in” to one system you can bet it will be Reeder — and that really sucks for other developers as I will have no way to easily try their apps.

  • The Argument for 3G MacBooks

    A while back — [when a non-unibody MacBook Pro prototype showed up on eBay](http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/08/14/purported_macbook_pro_prototype_built_in_3g_appears_on_ebay.html) with a complete 3G setup — I was going to write a little post about how Apple really needs a 3G MacBook. Things happened and the post was forgotten. Until now, when I was cleaning out my drafts folder and I…

    A while back — [when a non-unibody MacBook Pro prototype showed up on eBay](http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/08/14/purported_macbook_pro_prototype_built_in_3g_appears_on_ebay.html) with a complete 3G setup — I was going to write a little post about how Apple really needs a 3G MacBook. Things happened and the post was forgotten. Until now, when I was cleaning out my drafts folder and I saw the file name and thought: this is more true now than it ever has been.

    Up and until a few months ago the following used to be true about 3G wireless internet:

    1. It was slow.
    2. It was expensive.
    3. It wasn’t *really* needed.

    Obviously one is no longer true, with the 4S capable of speeds that are much faster than many home broadband connections (my 4S gets me between 4-7Mbps download at my home). You may argue that ~$25 for 2GB of data is pricey, but in practice not many people (even heavy users) come close to this amount each month and the general ubiquity of WiFi and better software monitoring built into the OS would help mitigate the need for more data thus removing number two as a factor.

    The third item though is what has really changed — more and more the average user could really benefit from easy 3G access on their MacBooks to keep on “working”.

    ### Multiple Devices

    At this point I think it is pretty safe to say that most Mac users are also toting a secondary device — likely one of either an iPhone or iPad, perhaps both. It used to be that these secondary devices were strictly used for a particular type of task — likely communication or short-term entertainment — now though these devices are increasingly used to *create*.

    So what happens when a savvy traveler gets off the plane after crafting a report on his iPad and arrives at his hotel. His hotel is one that someone shelled out big bucks for and because of this the hotel has a paid WiFi network that has a relatively poor speed — perhaps the network is even just Ethernet only (not uncommon in stupid expensive hotels) and he only has a MacBook Air. ((Argue all you want, but I have found that the more expensive the establishment the worse the WiFi and more expensive the connection cost. The Trump International in Miami set me back $17.99 a day for 756Kbps speed — a day.))

    Now you can’t work on that report until you find an Internet connection, thus you have a crappy scenario for most users. With a 3G connection on your MacBook Air you would have solved this lacking all the pain associated with how things currently are. The experience would have been far better for the user.

    ### Cloud

    More over, we are increasingly becoming dependent on internet connected services to “work”. Where it used to be that all you needed was a computer, fax, and a floppy disk, the web is more often becoming a floppy disk and the fax has been replaced by online communication systems.

    So guess what? You are not alone when you feel like your computer is ham strung by the fact that you don’t have a working Internet connection. It’s increasingly more true that a person can’t compute without the Internet.

    ### iCloud

    The above didn’t matter much to Apple because their cloud services were limited and it was always the feeling at Apple that email was just as good on your iDevice.

    With iCloud 3G becomes a bit more important.

    If Apple wants to sell iCloud as a Dropbox like service that just works to keep your documents updated on every device, well your device is going to need a reliable way to get on the Internet no matter where you are. That is: you can’t show a commercial with a traveler working on an iPad while flying, getting off the plane, sitting down with the MacBook, and opening that same document. Because right now that scenario actually looks like this:

    – Get off plane.
    – Connect iPad back to 3G
    – Wait for sync
    – Open MacBook Air
    – Find a WiFi network
    – Pay for WiFi and/or accept a ToS to use it
    – Test if it is actually working
    – Try again
    – Sync with iCloud

    Some steps can’t be eliminated, but 3G would eliminate most of the problems with “free” or “public” or “available” WiFi networks: mainly that you are often better off not using them. Every iPhone and 3G iPad owner knows what it is like to use a device without having to worry about an Internet connection — bliss.

    ### A Real Need

    It’s true that I have mostly centered these examples around travelers and that this group has always had a need for these types of devices, but I think now the average consumer really has a need for these devices too.

    When you really think about how the average person is using their computers, I don’t think it is much of a stretch to say that the overwhelming majority of what most people do on a computer is web-centric.

    Taking a look at how my Wife uses her computer to it becomes clear to me that often the most powerful and convenient tool she has is her iPhone 4. She has a full Apple compliment of devices: iPhone 4, iPad, MacBook Pro. However only the iPhone has a cellular connection and my Wife can often be heard saying: “My iPad is useless without 3G.”

    She feels the same way about her MacBook Pro, but truth be told she just means that for her any computing tool is useless if it doesn’t have an Internet connection — I agree.

    So it’s quite obvious that with more and more cloud enabled users, creating a seamless and “just works” Internet connection is becoming even more important to crafting a great user experience. It’s just that this isn’t all there is, because if that was all, the easier solution is to get more WiFi hotspots or go to Starbucks which is minimally painful to use WiFi at (and free). So it’s not about easy spots to get Internet — it’s about constantly being *able* to be connected without searching it out.

    ### Security

    You see the last bit that is going to become increasingly more problematic with more and more less paranoid and security conscious users on “cloud” services is the security of all these free WiFi hotspots (that are incredibly important to today’s computer users).

    If you keep all your financial data in a Numbers spreadsheet that is seamlessly synced via iCloud along with your calendars and the schedule of your kids — it certainly wouldn’t take much for someone to swipe that data for you on a maliciously setup, free, WiFi network. Which means you need a VPN, and while services like [Cloak](https://www.getcloak.com/) make it dead simple, they also are services that the average user must seek out — something that I doubt many users will know that they *should* seek out.

    Thus the more private data we keep in the “cloud” (and we are increasing the amount we keep there very quickly) the more we need to make sure that the networks we use to access this data is not only ubiquitous, but is relatively secure. Not only then would a 3G MacBook be more convenient, it would be more secure.

    Security, convenience, and a better user experience all come from a 3G/Cell equipped MacBook — sounds pretty Apple-ish to me.

    **UPDATED** (on Oct 24, 2011): Apparently iCloud is [securing with SSL](http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4865), so that shouldn’t be a security concern. Thanks to those that emailed this in.

  • Netflix Loses

    Ryan Lawler on Netflix: >The company ended the quarter with 23.8 million subscribers in the third quarter, which is down 810,000 from the previous quarter. *Ouch*.

    Ryan Lawler on Netflix:
    >The company ended the quarter with 23.8 million subscribers in the third quarter, which is down 810,000 from the previous quarter.

    *Ouch*.

  • ‘Regarding the Condition of a 17-Month Old, Well-Used, iPhone 4’

    Shawn Blanc: >After using my iPhone 4 every single day for nearly a year and a half, the glass on the front and the back was still in near-mint condition. Ditto here, in fact the most scuffed up parts were the metal banding and the annoying plastic around the very edge of the glass. My…

    Shawn Blanc:
    >After using my iPhone 4 every single day for nearly a year and a half, the glass on the front and the back was still in near-mint condition.

    Ditto here, in fact the most scuffed up parts were the metal banding and the annoying plastic around the very edge of the glass. My iPad 2 on the other hand has an aluminum back that is dinged and scratched and worn. Glass is clearly better for wear, whereas aluminum is better for dropping.

  • The Apple Way to Disrupt

    Dan Frommer on how Apple would/should disrupt the TV industry: >Launching an Apple television without TV service would have been like launching the iPhone without phone service: It might make sense to a few people, but Apple makes products for everyone. So Apple needs to be able to say: This is the best machine in…

    Dan Frommer on how Apple would/should disrupt the TV industry:

    >Launching an Apple television without TV service would have been like launching the iPhone without phone service: It might make sense to a few people, but Apple makes products for everyone. So Apple needs to be able to say: This is the best machine in the world for watching all the television you already love. And it does all this other cool stuff. That’s a winner. (That’s the approach Apple used for the iPhone.)

    What’s the end product look like? Who knows, but you can be sure this is a large part of the goal.

  • Photo Stream Conundrum

    Dave Caolo on one of the biggest annoyances of Photo Stream under iOS 5: >What’s worse is that you can’t delete such throwaway photos from your Photo Stream with an iDevice. Instead, you’ve got to visit icloud.com and click “Reset Photo Stream,” which nukes the lot, good and bad. That’s why I’ve started using Camera+…

    Dave Caolo on one of the biggest annoyances of Photo Stream under iOS 5:

    >What’s worse is that you can’t delete such throwaway photos from your Photo Stream with an iDevice. Instead, you’ve got to visit icloud.com and click “Reset Photo Stream,” which nukes the lot, good and bad. That’s why I’ve started using Camera+ again for tweeting pictures.

    During the developer betas this bugged the crap out of me — I hate(d) not being able to delete photos that don’t “belong” in the Photo Stream. Because of that I completely get where Dave is coming from, but I must admit that having used it for so long I decided to not worry about it — that’s done wonders for me.

    I bought an iPhone with tons of storage because I don’t want to have to think about such things as which photo app to use for each scenario I find myself in. To me, it’s worth the price of admission.

    Sure, it’s a couple hundred bucks more for 64GB, but that’s a couple hundred bucks that means I don’t have to worry about such things as space for Photos and circumventing Photo Stream. It’s a couple hundred bucks that gives me all the convenience in the world and none of the hassle.

    The ability to delete photos from the Photo Stream was a popular thing to file a bug report about during the betas and Apple still chose not to enable it — the problem is that if you delete a photo from the Photo Stream, should that photo also be deleted from all devices that downloaded it? And if so, then what do you do when a user *wanted* that photo to stay on a particular device?

    So Apple went the Apple way: make it painful for edge cases and perfect for the average user.

  • iPhone 4S First Phone for Low-Power Bluetooth

    Peter Svensson reporting on the iPhone 4S and the bluetooth tech Apple packed inside: >The phone, which went on sale Oct. 14, is the first one to have a new type of Bluetooth chip that can connect using very little power. The chip uses so little power that it can go into devices that are…

    Peter Svensson reporting on the iPhone 4S and the bluetooth tech Apple packed inside:
    >The phone, which went on sale Oct. 14, is the first one to have a new type of Bluetooth chip that can connect using very little power. The chip uses so little power that it can go into devices that are powered only by a standard “button cell” or watch battery.

    He notes that this allows communication with devices like watches, glucose and heart monitors — pretty neat.

  • [SPONSOR] Edovia Screens

    Screens, the acclaimed VNC client on iOS is now available for Mac. Screens – It just works.

    Screens, the acclaimed VNC client on iOS is now available for Mac. Screens – It just works.

  • Celebrating Steve

    A nice video of Apple’s event to remember Steve — best viewed on your iPad.

    A nice video of Apple’s event to remember Steve — best viewed on your iPad.

  • The Metaphors Breaking The Future

    Jon Gold on fine Corinthian leather: >But I’m pretty sure there’s not a thing in my physical living room called a ‘Find My Friends’. The metaphor is empty. It’s not referring to anything. It’s just a leather texture. It’s a great post about a trend that drives me nuts. [via @flyosity]

    Jon Gold on fine Corinthian leather:
    >But I’m pretty sure there’s not a thing in my physical living room called a ‘Find My Friends’. The metaphor is empty. It’s not referring to anything. It’s just a leather texture.

    It’s a great post about a trend that drives me nuts.

    [via @flyosity]
  • Power of iOS 5

    Fraser Speirs after spending a week only using iOS 5 powered devices: >Put it this way: I’m home now and there’s not one task that cropped up during the week that I had to say “I’ll have to wait until I get back to my Mac to finish this”. That, to me, is the interesting…

    Fraser Speirs after spending a week only using iOS 5 powered devices:
    >Put it this way: I’m home now and there’s not one task that cropped up during the week that I had to say “I’ll have to wait until I get back to my Mac to finish this”. That, to me, is the interesting bit.

    This has been my experience too, the iPad 2 is an incredible tool for allowing people to travel very lightly — thankfully it just continues to get more and more powerful, while getting lighter and faster. Amazing.

  • The B&B Podcast – Episode 31: The Fanny Pack

    >Shawn and Ben talk about Siri, iPhone 4S battery life, Fanny Packs, Sushi and a whole slew of other tech gadgets that seem to be popping up like weeds these days.

    >Shawn and Ben talk about Siri, iPhone 4S battery life, Fanny Packs, Sushi and a whole slew of other tech gadgets that seem to be popping up like weeds these days.

  • CleverKite Cloud

    My thanks to CleverKite for sponsoring the RSS feed this week. They have great prices on some very fast SSD powered cloud servers. One of my favorite FAQ responses is in CleverKite’s [FAQ](http://www.cleverkite.com/faq): >But if you treat us poorly and unfairly, we will probably ask you to leave. These guys get “it”. [Go check them…

    My thanks to CleverKite for sponsoring the RSS feed this week. They have great prices on some very fast SSD powered cloud servers.

    One of my favorite FAQ responses is in CleverKite’s [FAQ](http://www.cleverkite.com/faq):

    >But if you treat us poorly and unfairly, we will probably ask you to leave.

    These guys get “it”. [Go check them out](http://www.cleverkite.com/).

  • Making Seattle My Home

    A great overview of moving from Boston to Seattle by Matt Welsh. Though there is excellent chinese food in the city — just not in North Seattle where Welsh lives.

    A great overview of moving from Boston to Seattle by Matt Welsh. Though there is excellent chinese food in the city — just not in North Seattle where Welsh lives.

  • Up to 1TB in a Consumer SSD

    Estimated price: $1,300. Not too shabby and great news for what may come in future MacBooks.

    Estimated price: $1,300. Not too shabby and great news for what may come in future MacBooks.

  • Jobs’ Quest to ‘Destroy Android’

    Not that shocking, but I wonder whether Cook will keep up this quest against Android.

    Not that shocking, but I wonder whether Cook will keep up this quest against Android.

  • “Tremendous Demand”

    Jordan Golson reporting on a statement from AT&T Mobility CEO, Ralph de la Vega: >We’ve seen a tremendous, tremendous demand for that device even though it’s a generation old. And actually, we’re getting more new subscribers coming on the 3GS on the average than other devices. Wait, people want a free iPhone? *Shocking*.

    Jordan Golson reporting on a statement from AT&T Mobility CEO, Ralph de la Vega:
    >We’ve seen a tremendous, tremendous demand for that device even though it’s a generation old. And actually, we’re getting more new subscribers coming on the 3GS on the average than other devices.

    Wait, people want a free iPhone? *Shocking*.

  • iPad at Work

    I got my copy, did you get yours? (It’s very thorough.)

    I got my copy, did you get yours? (It’s very thorough.)

  • This Occupy Wall Street Stuff

    If I am honest I feel kind of guilty for not posting more about this [Occupy Wall Street](http://occupywallst.org/) movement. I’ve been following along and there have been many interesting things that have occurred, I just never felt this was a topic I wanted to poke. Because to me the message of the movement has always…

    If I am honest I feel kind of guilty for not posting more about this [Occupy Wall Street](http://occupywallst.org/) movement. I’ve been following along and there have been many interesting things that have occurred, I just never felt this was a topic I wanted to poke. Because to me the message of the movement has always been clear, but — problematically — the end goal of the movement has always been elusive.

    An end goal of: “Help Us” — well — that’s not really a goal.

    As best as I can make out the movement has some very legitimate objections — too many people are getting screwed over while under the false pretense that they are/were doing everything “right”. However, it would seem that the goal (though I could not find it explicitly stated) was to have someone — someone *else* — fix the problem. I completely get that, hell I take my car to a mechanic when I can’t figure out what is wrong, but it seems to me that the problem of the “99%” is not a problem that we should be relying on the “1%” to fix for us — the 1% created the problem (or had a hand in creating it) and therefore should not be trusted to fix it and therefore the movement is Occupying the wrong streets.

    Earlier [John Gruber linked](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2011/10/20/ows-lemony-snicket) to [this post “by” Lemony Snicket](http://occupywriters.com/by-lemony-snicket) in which there are 13 observations noted. Let’s take a look at number five:

    >5. There may not be a reason to share your cake. It is, after all, yours. You probably baked it yourself, in an oven of your own construction with ingredients you harvested yourself. It may be possible to keep your entire cake while explaining to any nearby hungry people just how reasonable you are.

    That’s a pretty apt summary of what is going on here — everyone is hungry for more money all while the very elite few hold the vast majority of it. It is, simply put, not fair.

    The problem though is that the world isn’t really designed to be fair.

    Acknowledgment of that fact does not in any way minimize the grievances of the movement — you just need to accept the unfairness before you can reasonably expect to change the world. That is: the issue isn’t really about “that’s not fair”, but the solution must recognize that we do not live in a world where perfect fairness has been proven to work.

    You see, the real issue I have here with this movement is the intended solutions. If you take the above analogy (cake) as the basis of the problem that needs solving, there are but three obvious solutions:

    1. Stingy rich guy solution (currently in practice): “It’s not my fault I have cake — I learned how to make the damned thing. You go out and make your own.”
    2. Guilty rich guy solution: “You can’t have my cake — it’s mine. BUT, I will teach you how I made my cake so that you too can make cake. All you need to do is get the ingredients.” (a.k.a.: The I feel guilty, but not *that* guilty, solution.)
    3. The 99% solution: “Share your cake.”

    It should be obvious to any reader here that none of these solutions work. We have stuck with the second for most of my life, because it eased the guilt of the obscenely wealthy while “inspiring” the poor. That, and the wealthy are in power.

    The third can be twisted into meaning communism, or more intelligently seen as a plea to stop hoarding all the money (depending on if you are Sarah Palin or not).

    The first is what happens when people stop noticing that we have a severe lack of number 2 and 3 happening.

    Snicket, again:

    >13. 99 percent is a very large percentage. For instance, easily 99 percent of people want a roof over their heads, food on their tables, and the occasional slice of cake for dessert. Surely an arrangement can be made with that niggling 1 percent who disagree.

    If you have read this entire post thinking that I am a jackass who doesn’t agree with the Occupy Wall Street notion — then you, sir, are wrong. In fact I agree with all of their grievances — every single one.

    What I don’t agree with is their methods for trying to change things, asking the 1% to concede. It seems to me that nothing gets the Occupy `Insert name of City` Twitter accounts more excited than the thought of *potentially* being arrested. A goal of a protest should never be trying to get arrested, it should be to try and get the cops on your side — that’s a winning movement. You take to the streets when you aren’t being heard, which is problematic for this movement because:

    1. The message isn’t clear.
    2. The “leadership” isn’t clear.
    3. The goal isn’t clear.

    People will only listen to complaints so long before they stop and ask: “and what would you like me to do?” There seems to be a profound lack of a clear answer to that question — the only question that really matters.

    You see it is easy to agree with a movement that has no goal, just a common complaint. I am asking for a goal.

    ### The Wrong Target

    At the end of the day, my biggest complaint here, is that the Occupy Wall Street movement is targeting the wrong people. The fat cats on Wall Street aren’t the problem — they just saw a shorter check-out line and stood in it — the real problem is the government agencies made to protect us from these situations and their failures to do just that: protect those that elected them, preferring instead to protect those that paid to elect them.

    We should be Occupying DC and every government office and asking them to get control of the 1%, which is — after all — their job.

    You can be mad at someone who learned how to make the system work exceptionally well for them, but should you get pissed at the system for not paying attention when people circumvent it.

    That is: should we be mad at Wall Street for doing their jobs exceptionally well, or mad at the governments for doing their jobs exceptionally poor?

  • Using Siri to Add Reminders to a Shared List

    Great tip here from Shawn, can’t wait to set this one up.

    Great tip here from Shawn, can’t wait to set this one up.