Mar 08

Despite some the very hilarious truths outlined in the “Happy now, bitches?” article from the Secret Diary of Steve Jobs, there is a very important ingredient missing from the new iPhone SDK.

You may have noticed this Missing Feature when using your iPhone to read e-mail.

Its the feature that made RIM’s Blackberry so successful.

Guessed it yet?

The only thing iPhone does outside the context of the currently active application is tell you about incoming phone calls, SMSs, voice mail, and calendar alarms. Therefore, unlike RIM’s Blackberry, you cannot use your email box as a “paging” system or interactive collaboration scheme with your e-mail-bound colleagues.

Okay, granted that Steve says that they will have Mail “push” in the next version of iPhone OS, so the Apple Mail app may overcome this problem, but what about us SDK users?

Having been a Blackberry user for several years, I can tell you the single most useful thing about it was the ability to have the little bugger buzz against your buttocks the instant you receive an incoming email message. Especially if it was a meeting invite, whereupon you could immediately accept or decline. It made for very efficient and effective inter-office communications … perfect for someone who doesn’t sit at their desk in front of their computer all day long.

iPhone’s Email application only checks your mail boxes when you invoke the application. It wont tell you about inbound email when your phone is in any other application, or at the main menu screen. Worse still, you have to wait for the Mail application to talk to all of your IMAP/POP servers while you sit and stare at the spinning wheel-of-progress in order to see if there is anything for you. No such thing as downloading your emails in the background, ready and waiting for you to read them the instant you invoke the Mail app.

So, what does this mean for you excited iPhone SDK downloaders? That’s right. You aren’t going to be able to do that either with your apps. No RSS feed readers telling you asynchronously when there are new stories to read. No instant messaging applications that will buzz your butt when the boss needs to tell you to pick up milk on the way home from the office.

iPhone is not a RIM killer. Yet. (Hint Hint, Apple)

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Mar 06
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Steve Job’s press conference today about the iPhone Software Development Kit was to me better than I had hoped in many ways.

  • Going after the Enterprise. Apple is making iPhone interoperate with Microsoft Exchange server. A huge factor in making the iPhone viable for business users.
  • An awesome desktop simulator, for developing, testing, debugging iPhone apps, including an excellent performance metric tool.
  • Availability of the Cocoa API.
  • Excellent support for games, and alliances with Games publishers (Is iPhone going after the NDS and PSP?)
  • Apple will be providing marketing, distribution and deployment services for a 30% cut for all applications, and for free, for Freeware applications, through their AppStore.

Check out Apple’s iPhone Dev Center

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Feb 26

New versions of the MacBook Pro have been released today. They come loaded with up to 2.6GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn processors, and the MacBook Air’s trackpad which allows for multi-touch gestures. The low-end MacBook has also been upgraded. Full specs and prices after the jump.

MacBook $1099
MacBook Air $1799
MacBook Pro $1999

Check out the Apple Store.

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Feb 19

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Conspicuously missing from their Server Storage pages on the Apple website, is the Xserve RAID product line. Interestingly, if you go to http://www.apple.com/xserve/raid/, it redirects you to the Promise VTrack storage product page.Looks like they’re pushing the Promise VTrak product to run their Xsan software on.I guess this is no surprise … Apple’s server technologies have always seemed to be an afterthought, probably to garner support from business IT departments for their product line. OSX Server is definitely been a notch lower in quality of usability from their desktop and portable product lines.I’m glad i dont have an Xserve RAID.

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Feb 17
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Apple, who doesn’t normally do demo versions, is giving up a 30-day version of the new Aperture, Apple’s pro-photographer-oriented version of iPhoto.

The last time i tried Aperture, it took so long to do anything on my Dual G5, that i stopped using it in frustration. Now that i have a new Intel desktop machine it may be alot different.

Read the Cool OSX Apps article about it here.

Download the free trial from Apple here.

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Feb 15

My friend Valerie brought this hilarious short film to my attention today. A sad but true commentary on the state of courtship in the age of the internet.

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Feb 11
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Nice package of updates for MacOS 10.5.

You need to run Software Update now.

Here’s Apple’s Release Notes

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Feb 11

From TUAW: 

Our sibling site, Engadget, is reporting that Apple has apparently applied for trademark protection on a gaming device. The trademark in question would protect the word ‘APPLE’ under the following circumstances: ‘toys, games and playthings, namely, hand-held units for playing electronic games; hand-held units for playing video games; stand alone video game machines; electronic games other than those adapted for use with television receivers only; LCD game machines; electronic educational game machines; toys, namely battery-powered computer games.’Engadget also reminds us about Apple’s recent patent filing of a touch gaming device. Could this mean that Apple is working on Pippin 2.0? Time can only tell. However, I wouldn’t hold my breath, since Apple often randomly trademarks names and such.

Original source: trademork.com

(Via The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW).)

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Feb 10
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Windoze users just dont know anything about seemeless “it just works” computing environments. It always amazes me how hard-core Windoze fanatics have just learned that OS upgrades are a major month-long migration activity requiring IT savvy to undertake, and that the BSOD is just … natural.

The mini-site is called Find Out How

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