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  • Google Balks at Turning Over Data to Regulators

    Kevin J. O’Brien: Google has balked at requests from regulators to surrender Internet data and fragments of e-mail messages it collected from unsecured home wireless networks, saying it needed time to resolve legal issues. I thought Google said the entire reason they kept the data after they discovered the ‘error’ was to provide it to…

    Kevin J. O’Brien:

    Google has balked at requests from regulators to surrender Internet data and fragments of e-mail messages it collected from unsecured home wireless networks, saying it needed time to resolve legal issues.

    I thought Google said the entire reason they kept the data after they discovered the ‘error’ was to provide it to the Government if needed.

  • Acer CEO shows off 7-inch Android tablet

    A physical keyboard? Really?

    A physical keyboard? Really?

  • B&N Launches a Nook iPad App [UPDATED]

    Matt Burns: One Million Digital Titles and Personal Barnes & Noble Digital Library Only iPad eReading App That Allows Sharing eBook with Friends Free Classics and Bestseller Samples Pre-Loaded for New BN.com Customers Looks interesting I am going to have to try it out. [Updated: 5/27/10 at 1:17 PM] Custom colors, no full-justification and Georgia.…

    Matt Burns:

    One Million Digital Titles and Personal Barnes & Noble Digital Library
    Only iPad eReading App That Allows Sharing eBook with Friends
    Free Classics and Bestseller Samples Pre-Loaded for New BN.com Customers

    Looks interesting I am going to have to try it out.
    [Updated: 5/27/10 at 1:17 PM] Custom colors, no full-justification and Georgia. Pretty sweet.

  • Introducing WIRED Magazine on iPad – Adobe Digital Publishing

    This is crazy that it was made in InDesign. Also I can’t wait to be able to make my own.

    This is crazy that it was made in InDesign. Also I can’t wait to be able to make my own.

  • Newsweek.com Redesigned

    Newsweek pushes a redesign and it looks great.

    Newsweek pushes a redesign and it looks great.

  • Google vs. Apple – Gaining Perspective

    If Google’s I/O conference taught pundits anything it is this: Google is out to hurt Apple. Gone are the days when Google and Apple would band together to fight the common enemy of Microsoft. Microsoft isn’t even a thought in the minds of these two giants anymore. They have their sights squarely focused on each…

    If Google’s I/O conference taught pundits anything it is this: Google is out to hurt Apple. Gone are the days when Google and Apple would band together to fight the common enemy of Microsoft. Microsoft isn’t even a thought in the minds of these two giants anymore. They have their sights squarely focused on each other. This is the last scene of a bad action movie, the two opposites had joined together to defeat a larger villain — now that the villain has been defeated they turn on each other.

    Just like in the movie, this is when the good stuff starts to happen. The original Mac forced Windows, Wordperfect forced Word, iPhone OS forced WebOS and Android. An increase in horsepower from BMW leads to more horsepower from Audi and Mercedes. This is competition at its finest — this is competition that benefits the consumer.

    There was a time when I thought Mac users were pathetic — Mac OS 9 looked like crap compared to Windows. Then I got a glimpse of OS X 10.1 and I saw something that was finally better than Windows. There was a time when I sung the praises of PalmOS and RIM’s OS — then there was the iPhone, and the game changed.

    Competition is the common denominator in all of these changes. Microsoft knew that DOS was dead when they saw the Mac, so they pushed and innovated. When the iPhone was announced in 2007 a story would pop up just about every week announcing that so and so was creating a new ‘iPhone Killer’, it’s 2010, where is it? Contrary to what most would think, each time I read about an ‘iPhone Killer’ I truly hoped that it would be just that because:

    1. The iPhone is so good, I would love anything that improved upon it.
    2. Better competition leads to more innovation.

    What this means for Google

    I started this whole post to talk about Google and Apple, not to give history lessons — so what does all this have to do with Google? It has a lot to do with Google, they are now stepping up to the plate trying to challenge Apple the same way that incumbents have been challenged in the past. Every example I have shown above was how the incumbent was eventually knocked back (sometimes regaining later), here we have Apple with the iPhone as the incumbent — but can Google knock them back? I am not so sure they can.

    This has nothing to do with design and everything to do with hype and marketing. This is where the mythical ‘Reality Distortion Field’ of Steve Jobs comes into play. It is even more than Steve Jobs though, it is a face, an image — a brand. Apple has it and Google doesn’t.

    Walk into a room of normal Americans and say the name Steve Jobs, they will know it. Say the name Bill Gates, again they will know it. They may not know exactly who these people are, but they will know the name. Now say the name Eric Schmidt, Larry Page, Sergey Brin — I doubt that 20% of the people in the room will know these names. Normally this isn’t a problem for companies, but in Google’s case they really need this recognition, they have three leaders — and nobody knows them. When nobody knows your leaders, nobody listens to them — you lack charisma, you have no ‘Reality Distortion Field’.

    Google’s Challenge to Apple

    Google is running with the open source guys, pushing all the features that users say they want and doing it on a wide range of Android devices. If Apple says that they won’t do it (Flash), Google quickly does it. Google is in a people pleasing mode — a dangerous mode to be in. Instead of doing the normal routine of copying all the good and improving upon the bad, they are copying as little as possible and barely improving upon the bad.

    One look at the home screen on the iPhone versus the home screen on an Android phone tells the tale. One looks modern and sleek, the other looks a bit clunky. It is clear which company values engineering more than design. Google has implemented an impressive amount of features and is building quite an App store to compete with Apple, and yet I still think they will fall short.

    Google is Missing the Point

    As it stands today Google will not and cannot beat Apple with their current strategy. Google is truly missing the point, it is not about features, design, price, openness, flexibility — it is about one thing: User Experience.

    This is what SanDisk failed to realize when they tried to compete with the iPod (by all accounts the Zune was decent — just late to the party). People didn’t want expandable memory (even though they complained that they wanted it) — people wanted all their music with them. People wanted better playlists (thank you iTunes) that they could retrieve on their iPods. No one at SanDisk seemed to understand this — now they are good at selling flash memory for cameras.

    Google, like SanDisk, is still missing the point that people don’t want all the features they say they do, they just want something that works, and is a pleasure to use. The lack of Flash, the overbearing approval process for iPhone Apps, and the AT&T network are all things that the iPhone lacks. Yet it still is killing Android because you can’t compete with the ease and reliability of the phone that Apple has brought to the table.

    User Experience and Grins

    The way I like to think about user experience is based on grin factor. Back in 2006 my father bought some new Sea Doos for the lake that he lives on. I, being his son, got to drive them first — they were brand new models with a staggering 215hp on a machine 10’ long. I hit the gas and went from less than a mile per hour (you can’t be standing still on one) to 70 mph in less than 3 seconds. That is scary fast, yet I was grinning with the excitement of a child the entire time.

    JUNE 2007

    I opened the box and pulled out the sleekest phone I have ever seen, it wasn’t activated, but I still grinned, that same Sea Doo grin, just sliding the unlock slider back and forth. Tapping keys and veiwing the internet smaller than I ever want to view it, yet I relished every second.

    JULY 2007

    I am checking my email, in the Bahamas when I find my self surrounded by wait staff. They had never seen the iPhone, they had heard about it, but it was not on sale internationally yet. I reluctantly passed it to the waiter and watched as his teeth and those around him lit up the room. They didn’t do a thing on the phone except stare at the screen dumbfounded, amazed.

    JANUARY 2010

    We all watch Steve Jobs sit on stage and show us his newest creation, the iPad. We are watching a billionaire surf the web, news websites, and we all watch as a grin flushes his face.

    APRIL 2010

    I opened the box and pulled out something hailed as a revolution, I was jet lagged and yet a grin shown across my face. How could something so simple, inflexible and underpowered be so damned amazing.

    I arrived at my office and set my iPad on the desk. The biggest Apple hater in the office came over and asked to see it. I pulled up a racing game (knowing that he races cars for a hobby) and watched as a grin spread from ear to ear — even while he was crashing into every wall.

    TODAY

    Google has absolutely nothing in their product arsenal that gives people that grin factor. Wave was supposed to, but it turned out to make people even more overwhelmed then they already are. If Google wants to start a real war with Apple they will need to start with grin factor.

    Finding the Grins

    The question then becomes can Google get the user experience right, and if so, how? Google absolutely can get the user experience right, they already have with Google Maps and Google Earth — what a great set of tools to use. I love street view and flying around in Google Earth is always a lot of fun.

    Google needs to add that fun into their Android phones. They need to make a mandate the carriers offer free OS upgrades on phones for two years after they are purchased, making sure that all of their users get the latest and greatest. Further, and more importantly, Google needs to stop worrying about what users want and start making things that users truly want.

    Huh?

    If you look at what the iPhone offered in 2007 – as a smart phone Windows Mobile had the iPhone out matched (so did Palm and RIM to some extent). Yet the iPhone took off. It took off because even though every other ‘guy’ had a web browser on their phone — no one had Mobile Safari and the amazingness it brought to mobile web browsing. No one had beautiful threaded text messaging — something that if you had asked a user if they wanted it pre-iPhone they probably would have shrugged it off and said “I guess.”

    The iPhone of 2007 had visual voicemail — the fact that voice mail is a huge pain in the ass wasn’t even a factor in deciding which phone to get, until the iPhone came out that is. Before the iPhone it was more common for someone to not have a data plan on their phone then it was for them to have one — let alone an unlimited data plan.

    Before the iPhone did you think that you would ever want a phone that didn’t have an answer and hang up button on it? I didn’t. Yet lacking those buttons have never tripped me up during the past 3 years.

    Google Needs to Think

    And by that I mean they need to stop engineering and start thinking about the usability of all their products. They need to find their visual voicemail moment with Android — that is they need to fix something that annoys everyone, even though they may not know it.

  • Apple, Google and the map wars

    A great look at why mapping is so important today, and what Apple can do to compete in this market.

    A great look at why mapping is so important today, and what Apple can do to compete in this market.

  • New Yorker’s Remnick Says He Won’t Censor to Make Apple Happy

    Ryan Singel: Remnick isn’t swearing off the app store, but in remarks at a Condé Nast breakfast discussion in New York, he made it clear that The New Yorker had no intention of catering to Apple’s whims. They and all other news and opinion publications should not have to remove or censor content. I get…

    Ryan Singel:

    Remnick isn’t swearing off the app store, but in remarks at a Condé Nast breakfast discussion in New York, he made it clear that The New Yorker had no intention of catering to Apple’s whims.

    They and all other news and opinion publications should not have to remove or censor content. I get that Apple doesn’t want porn, but censoring fashion magazines and political comments is going a bit far.

  • The Half Truths of Mark Zuckerberg

    Marshall Kirkpatrick: Perhaps that was a slip of the tongue, a mistaken oversimplification of how Zuckerberg intepreted things. It sure doesn’t seem true, though. Last December people who had never changed any of their privacy settings had their new defaults set to share far more content publicly, with the world at large. The prompt to…

    Marshall Kirkpatrick:

    Perhaps that was a slip of the tongue, a mistaken oversimplification of how Zuckerberg intepreted things. It sure doesn’t seem true, though.

    Last December people who had never changed any of their privacy settings had their new defaults set to share far more content publicly, with the world at large. The prompt to re-evaluate was a chance to opt-out of the new changes, but those settings and the defaults were certainly changed.

    Kirkpatrick is really getting to another problem that Facebook is facing: trust.

  • nikf.org ~ An Observation

    Nik Fletcher talking about the iPhone’s lack of Flash: I guess judging a device based on actual features and user experience, instead of its ‘inability to run a hypothetical, hither-to-unseen media plugin’, isn’t particularly exciting…

    Nik Fletcher talking about the iPhone’s lack of Flash:

    I guess judging a device based on actual features and user experience, instead of its ‘inability to run a hypothetical, hither-to-unseen media plugin’, isn’t particularly exciting…

  • Enough With The Excuses, Apple MUST Sell The iPhone At Verizon

    Dan Frommer: Rather than go through them one by one with counterarguments, we’ll just say this: The benefits of selling the iPhone at Verizon so completely outweigh every single hurdle that there is simply no way Apple can continue its AT&T exclusive for much longer. I am sorry, but this is the dumbest statement I…

    Dan Frommer:

    Rather than go through them one by one with counterarguments, we’ll just say this: The benefits of selling the iPhone at Verizon so completely outweigh every single hurdle that there is simply no way Apple can continue its AT&T exclusive for much longer.

    I am sorry, but this is the dumbest statement I have heard. Small market share does not mean a failed product. Apple is bigger than Microsoft financially, yet Microsoft has the market share advantage. Make no mistake – Verizon and its customers need the iPhone, not the other way around.

  • How Apple could slay Google at WWDC 2010 — RoughlyDrafted Magazine

    Daniel Eran Dilger: Imagine what could happen if Apple introduced Safari 5 at WWDC with support for a plugin API (as sort of postulated, teased, hinted or simply hoped for by John Gruber this week), and then demonstrated this new plugin architecture with a free, bundled plugin that blocked web ads. This would be a…

    Daniel Eran Dilger:

    Imagine what could happen if Apple introduced Safari 5 at WWDC with support for a plugin API (as sort of postulated, teased, hinted or simply hoped for by John Gruber this week), and then demonstrated this new plugin architecture with a free, bundled plugin that blocked web ads. This would be a bit like Tivo for the web, except far easier to do in a way that web advertisers would notice.

    Web blocking plugins are common on Firefox and Chrome, and already exist for Safari (using undocumented or deprecated APIs like SIMBL/InputManager). However, no major browser vendor, and certainly no major platform vendor, has ever shipped their browser with an ad-block plugin, and certainly not one that was activated by default.

    I tell you what would happen – a drop in depression and a rise in productivity.

    Also:

    Web ads are a noxious weed choking the intelligence and sophistication out of our society’s media, and Google is making its massive fortunes delivering this scourge. Do no evil? How ridiculous, that’s Google’s core competency!

    This would be bigger than the iPhone and iPad combined. I could not agree more with Dilger on this topic, the questions comes down to: has Steve Jobs thought about this. That we won’t know unless he releases something like this. I think Jobs is very proud of Safari – it always gets talked up when there is a new version. If you have click2flash installed or any other ad blockers you know just how much better the web is without ads. Imagine that as a native instrument, and Apple was the one implementing it.

    Google would declare all out war with Apple. There would be new ads that bypass it, and new updates to Safari that block the new ads. It would be phenomenally entertaining to watch (much like how Apple went back and forth with Palm over syncing in iTunes for the Pre).

  • Hey Nike, get your crap out of my newsfeed

    Paul of Think Outside In: Last week I learned that if you ‘Like’ something on Facebook, you give that entity permission to put updates (read: ads) in your newsfeed. I had no clue this happened – really lame.

    Paul of Think Outside In:

    Last week I learned that if you ‘Like’ something on Facebook, you give that entity permission to put updates (read: ads) in your newsfeed.

    I had no clue this happened – really lame.

  • Does Facebook Have a Fatal Cultural Problem?

    Mathew Ingram: Given that the network now has close to 500 million users, and their average age is somewhere in the mid-40s, that group of university students who have grown up with Facebook haven’t been the most important segment for the company for a long time now — not to mention the fact that every…

    Mathew Ingram:

    Given that the network now has close to 500 million users, and their average age is somewhere in the mid-40s, that group of university students who have grown up with Facebook haven’t been the most important segment for the company for a long time now — not to mention the fact that every year millions of younger users have adopted the network as a social hub, and continue to do so regardless of the public outcry over privacy.

    This is a major problem – the people who made the service popular are unhappy and now are in the minority and being ignored. This is what happened to MySpace and they are doing just swell now aren’t they.

  • 73 Democrats tell FCC: drop net neutrality rules

    Matthew Lasar: A slew of House Democrats have sent a letter to the Federal Communications Commission warning the agency not to go forward with its plan to partially reclassify ISPs as common carriers, a move needed to impose net neutrality rules. Figures.

    Matthew Lasar:

    A slew of House Democrats have sent a letter to the Federal Communications Commission warning the agency not to go forward with its plan to partially reclassify ISPs as common carriers, a move needed to impose net neutrality rules.

    Figures.

  • Motorola Shadow Spotted

    8mp Camera, that is sick.

    8mp Camera, that is sick.

  • McCann ACD/Flash Enthusiast Sends Message to Steve Jobs

    This is stupid. I bet he still uses an iPhone too – hypocrite.

    This is stupid. I bet he still uses an iPhone too – hypocrite.