Tag apple

Τέλος Εποχής

Η ερμήνευση της — προσωρινής, έστω — αποχώρησης του Στήβ Τζόμπς από την θέση του διευθύνοντα συμβούλου της Apple ως ένα από τα σημαντικότερα γεγονότα της τελευταίας δεκαετίας στον χώρο της βιομηχανίας προσωπικών υπολογιστών σε καμία περίπτωση δε θα μπορούσε να χαρακτηρισθεί ως υπερβολική. Η Apple, μια εταιρία θρύλος που εδώ και κάποιες δεκαετίες ορίζει […]

N97: a mediocre stop-gap solution or has Nokia lost it?

Nokia just announced the N97, its first flagship touch phone. The device is evolutionary, or if you prefer ‘marginally improved’ in some areas, compared to, its predecessors, the N95 and N96, while it includes a touch-screen and the new Symbian S60 5th Edition. The new phone seems largely irrelevant in the post-iPhone world and it […]

'Sparse' in all ways.

Yep, the iPhone SDK does not support dynamically linked libraries. And that’s truly fantastic news for all iPhone developers wishing to leverage existing code out there. You can, of course, use a statically linked library in your code, or — if you have the code for the third-party libraries you’re going to be using — […]

Oh the Irony [2]

Time for a humorous break. Check this 1980s French Apple Computer Inc. television advertisement. It shows an old wealthy businessman showing his company's assets to his son (?) in their luxury automobile while explaining that all this will become his, but he should make the decisions alone because his workers should not think, but only execute as they cannot handle making decisions and should just stick to following orders. The ad ends with the narrator saying that "this is one way to run a company, but fortunately there are others", at which time the apple logo fades in. And this is why for so long so many people thought Apple was an elitist, out of touch company. For many years its products were mostly appealing (in terms of price and marketing strategy) to people exactly like the old man: elitist and wealthy. If the ad were from the late 1970s/early 1980s (before Jobs left), it'd probably be a snipe at IBM --- the 'evil' giant of the time that only had mainframes and micros and dismissed personal computers as toys. Or equally, those that didn't think personal computers could increase the productivity of their workers. In which case it'd make some sense, but still be be laughably ironic, for Jobs' own managerial style is probably more authoritative, selfish and hierarchical than any (based on what's been written about him in numerous books, articles etc.) and would probably make the old man look like an egalitarian-supporting socialist running a cooperative business and making as much as everyone else. But, according to Gruber, the ad came out after Jobs left. It makes little sense: the alternatives to the Mac in the mid to late 1980s, a time of so much competition and so many different architectures and offerings, were more affordable, generally equally productive (at least given the software that was out for a significant part of the tasks people performed at the time) and were definitely accompanied by less arrogant, more pragmatic marketing campaigns, while IBM was clearly far from the all-mighty player in the industry it was half a decade earlier. [via daringfireball.net]

SquirrelFish Extreme (SFX)

The people behind the best HTML engine around (yep, that's WebKit for those that don't know it yet) just announced the next generation of their new Javascript engine, SquirrelFish Extreme, just a few months after SquirrelFish itself was announced and before it was even adopted in any product. In the performance chart they posted in the linked page the engine is around 3 times faster than JavascriptCore and two times faster than SquirrelFish. Impressive.

iΠακέτα ηλιθιότητας

Η Vodafone Ελλάς ανακοίνωσε τη διαθεσιμότητα του iPhone 3G της Apple στην χώρα μας. Πέραν τις ιδιαίτερα ακριβής τιμής απόκτησης του τηλεφώνου (ιδιαίτερα για τα ελληνικά δεδομένα), η Vodafone κατάφερε να δημιουργήσει κάποια από τα αθλιότερα πακέτα που έχω αντικρύσει διεθνώς, σε βαθμό που ακυρώνουν πολλά από τα χαρακτηριστικά του iPhone (250MB μηνιαίως;), τόσο σε απόλυτη τιμή όσο και αν λάβει κανείς το πραγματικό εισόδημα του μέσου έλληνα. [Γράφει σχετικά και ο Γιώργος στο Reality-Tape]

Marginally better than expected.

But certainly worse than what I hoped for. The iPhone 3G is a marginally improved device that builds upon the very solid foundations of the first iPhone by adding 3G connectivity (though without the video conferencing part) and version 2.0 of the software and does this at a significantly reduced price --- which is probably the highlight of the keynote. It's also available in many more countries, including Hellas. While I may get my hands on one pretty soon, I still think that the Nokia N95 is a superior device in many ways, and one that's mostly hurt by the vastly inferior (from a usability point of view) application software stack. The new iPhone seems like a buffer solution to the consumerism that brands the original as 'old' and whose price and attractive featureset, augmented by a software ecosystem, wider availability and faster network performance are certainly going to serve as catalysts while it becomes a(n even more) mainstream product and expand Apple's market share in this difficult market. That is, until a much evolved model appears in 12-18 months from today. Update: I've already read several comments about the contract prices in various countries; it'll be interesting to see how this plays out in Europe and especially in Hellas, a country where mobile internet access costs about 70% more than the US. If 3G access is forced onto consumers buying the iPhone (which it will), the adjusted $199-$299 price points won't make a difference to people --- especially if the contract means a monthly cost higher than €30. Update 2: It is now blatantly clear that the price reduction, even in the US, is marginal at best; the new contract coupled with higher prices for data connectivity make the new iPhone cheap to buy, but expensive to maintain.

Steamrollin'

Early last week a report was published online according to which Apple's share of the retail computer market for the first quarter of 2008 was 13.8%, a figure about four times higher than the company's market share in 2004 and six times higher than its share two years earlier. But the most impressive part of the report wasn't this figure. It was the fact that Apple owned 66% (!) of the $1000+ market. From the relevant Computerworld article:
And Apple essentially owns the $1,000-and-up market, according to NPD's data. Overall, Macs accounted for 66% of all personal computers in that price category sold at retail during 2008's first quarter, taking 70% of desktop sales and a 64% share of notebook sales.
This is an astounding percentage for a single company going against the whole industry, but it's also somewhat concerning given the weakness of Microsoft and lack of alternatives. Yes, Apple is a very US-centric company that seems to not-give-a-damn about the rest of the world for the most part, and it's certainly too early to start sounding the warning sirens ("Ahoy, new monopoly in sight! Not exactly incompetent like that last one, captain"), but if this report holds any water I'm pretty certain that it'd be no surprise if Apple became the No. 1 personal computer manufacturer in the next five years. As Steve Jobs told the Panic people when they refused to 'sell' Audion to Apple: "We're a giant steam engine about to run you down." Somehow this frightens me.

Powerbook power plug woes

In a few weeks my laptop will be 4.5 years old. And for all intents and purposes it still holds its own pretty well for practically everything, but the most CPU-intensive tasks. Tasks that I typically perform on much faster desktop machines anyway. Some weeks ago the laptop, a 2003 17″ Apple Powerbook G4, started […]

Realignment: Complete. Almost.

The XServe RAID is no more. It won't be missed by many and was probably owned by fewer. Still its existence, along with that of the XServe were the primary reasons I entertained the idea of an enterprise friendly Apple back in 2003-2004. Admittedly not for long. [via the daringfireball.net]