Posts tagged with: services


Jul 08

Well, the iPhone 3G release is just days away now, yet for some reason, the hype doesn’t seem as awe-inspiring as last year’s did. Which is quite surprising, given that right after I watched Steve Jobs’ keynote last month, my thought on the new iPhone and the 50% price reduction was, “At last, Apple finally got the iPhone right.” And that’s a big statement coming from me, as someone fully certified as being immune to Uncle Steve’s Reality Distortion Field. But yet, in the past month, many revelations have come out to smash Apple’s party, and most of them from the cell carriers, the gatekeepers needed to allow the iPhone to function.

In the post I made yesterday on MacFocus Magazine I ranted about cell phone carriers and how they hinder the iPhone, which has been more than clear in the past month. Even ignoring how other cell carriers are screwing would-be iPhone customers (I’m looking at you, Rogers), the iPhone 3G comes with plenty more strings attached. I could start with the basic craziness of charging an extra $10/month for the 3G service for the iPhone, which not only eliminates the iPhone’s $200 price drop, it actually makes the total cost of the iPhone more expensive. I could then go to the unexplained reason for the iPhone no longer being activated in iTunes. Not only does it take one of my favorite attributes of the old iPhone and throw it out the signature-free window, but it’s going to make the already ridiculously-crowded Apple Stores much worse and cause people the hassle of having to go through all the usual cell phone heck. (Plus, not having an online option is going to mess it up for the people who don’t live near an Apple or AT&T Store; are people going to have to make iPhone pilgrimages now?)

Oh, and it’s nice that AT&T will finally offer an contract-free option (note how AT&T didn’t say “unlocked” anywhere) for the iPhone, but putting it at a $400 surcharge, plus tax, is ridiculous! It would be smarter to buy the iPhone for $200 or $300 (instead of $600 or $700), sign the contract, pay for one month of service, then cancel and pay the $175 early termination fee on the contract. By my math, that would save you over $150 over the contract-free option. And why exactly can’t the iPhone be activated with GoPhone pay-as-you-go yet?

That’s why I’m still not interested in an iPhone. The phone itself is nice, and finally is something I would desire except for it having to go through AT&T under a two-year contract at a substantial monthly fee. No thanks, I’m not that desperate to go mobile.

The alternative would be the iPod touch, which thanks to its imminent App Store upgrade will finally become the best non-cell phone PDA out there. (Palm originally beat it in my opinion by having open access to applications that actually did things, but now the iPod touch has that too, and with far better quality.) The only main differences now between the iPhone 3G and the iPod touch are the phone part, the lack of GPS (though the iPod touch still has the somewhat-less-accurate Skyhook function, but even the original iPhone didn’t have that), and–oh yeah, the ability to be online without access to a wifi hotspot.

See, that’s my one remaining issue here. Yes, the iPhone has the ability to be online wherever there is a good cell connection, while the iPod touch is restricted to just wifi networks. At that point, wouldn’t it just be smarter to rely on my laptop instead, since it also can only connect to the internet at wifi hotspots? Besides that, at present, the iPod touch (which clearly has less functionality) is $100 more than the iPhone. Granted, the iPod touch doesn’t have to be hindered by a service plan, but it does make one wonder if Apple isn’t planning to up the specs on the iPod touch this fall.

I have never been interested in an iPod because I’ve always said that I’m satisfied with listening to iTunes on my computer, and don’t really need my music elsewhere in most cases (except maybe a 12 hour flight, which I don’t do very often). I’m not strongly interested in an iPod touch, because it pretty much has the same, if not less, functionality of my MacBook, albeit in a smaller form factor and a different interface. I might be interested in the iPhone, since it does have a few tricks that my computer doesn’t, except for it being connected to AT&T and therefore being far more expensive than I could ever hope to afford in my current position thanks to that darned service plan crap.

What exactly is the place of these pocket-sized devices in my life? They may be more attractive to me than they were a few years ago, but Steve Jobs is going to have to full just a few more tricks out of his hat before I’m in the mood for one of these iDevices.

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Sep 01

Have you ever wanted to be able to have one central place on the internet that would allow you to keep track of all of the comments and conversations that you have on blogs and Web 2.0 sites? If you’re saying that that idea has never even crossed your mind, then you’ve had the same first reaction that I had to the Web 2.0 site coComment. However, coComment is just that. This site seeks to be a place which can track and share conversations that you have on blogs, sites like Digg and Flickr, and even on sites with absolutely no type of comment form whatsoever. It’s a very intriguing idea, which I decided to check out.
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Aug 30

Something that a number of Mac bloggers have been doing recently is sharing what they have up in their menubars, and so I thought that I might as well share mine as well. So, without further ado, here is mine:
My Menubar

From left to right (I’ve linked to reviews where applicable):
CoverSutra - Really nice iTunes controller that I love.
Quicksilver - Without a doubt, the swiss army knife of Mac OS X.
Skitch - One heck of an application for snapping, annotating, and sharing images.
iClip - That nice thing for keeping a clipboard history.
Twitterrific - The driving force behind my addiction to Twitter.
Wakoopa Tracker - Sitting there, quietly monitoring what apps I’m using.
TextExpander - If I forget a snippet or want to quickly add a new one, the menu item is there to help me.
International - Quick access to the Special Characters palette.
AirPort - Because I’ve got to know when I can go wireless.
Clock - The small version because it’s good enough, saves menu bar space, and because I wear a watch all the time anyway.
Battery - How much juice do I have? Am I getting thirsty?
Spotlight - It’s slow and I really don’t use it. I know there’s a way to scrap it, I’ve done it before, but I’m just too lazy to mess around with my precious system in that way.

I realize that my blog has been slumping–apparently I haven’t done a non-review article in a week! I’ll be catching up soon, I hope…

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Aug 26

There’s a lot of corners and niches around the Web 2.0, meaning that your online world is split up among all these places. Mugshot is a website that aggregates your data from most of the major Web 2.0 services out there and display it on a single page for anyone to see, however it’s pretty apparent that the site was designed by someone who couldn’t come up with an original idea of their own.
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Aug 15

claimID is a pretty basic service that makes two major offerings. First of all, it supports the new OpenID standard based on the idea of having one login for many websites. When you register on claimID, you get your own OpenID URL which you can use on any other OpenID-supported website to login.

But the main feature of claimID is that it provides a place where you can keep track of all of your identities across the internet, and group them together. For example, on my claimID page, I have a group listing all of the Web 2.0 services that I’m a member of, with links to my profile on all those services. I also have a group that lists all of the blogs that I am a part of, a group that lists all the sites that I’ve designed, and all the forums that I’m a member of, and I’m considering adding a few more as well. When you add links to your claimID page, you can indicate whether or not they’re by you or someone else, and whether or not they’re about your or something/someone else, and of course, tag your links. claimID also allows you to verify that the links you add are yours by adding a provided meta tag to your website–this shows that you actually own your links. You can then share your claimID link with others so they can find all of your identities on the web, and then hook up with other claimID users for your Contacts. claimID also generates an hcard of your links.

claimID is a fairly simple but well-designed service for compiling all of your identities around the web, sharing them, and connecting them using OpenID. If you find yourself spread across the web using a number of different services and maintaining different websites, I highly encourage you to create a claimID page. Oh, and add me as a contact. ;)

Final Rating: W87.info WW87.info WW87.info WW87.info WW87.info W

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