Posts Tagged “Apple”

A new iPhone release is a good thing, on the whole. New shiny features aplenty

But a small request to Apple: make SMS reminder notifications optional!

Like many geeks, my phone has replaced my pager. So I get notifications and warnings aplenty. And the preview is usually enough to see what it’s about so I don’t ‘acknowledge’ them. This new release insists on doing just that, and insessently (well, twice) notifies me. And gets very annoying very quickly, as I can’t distinguish a new message from a reminder.

So, Steve, an option to disable this would be very welcome. Mmmmok?

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Today is the start of Apple’s Worldwide Developer Connference 2008, and the highlight of this is always the keynote from Steve Jobs, as he inevitably has product announcements. Given Apple’s innovation record, they’ve always been important in much of the tech community (where Apple has led by innovation, others have eventually followed), but since Apple entered the consumer marketplace with the iPod, and more recently the iPhone, the announcements have become even more widely watched. The event is always enjoyable given Apple’s intense secrecy (which doesn’t seem to have been particularly good this year!) about the products, Steve Jobs famous thoroughness, standard jeans-and-turtleneck outfit, and - of course - that he is a extremely accomplished speaker and presenter.

There are lots of predictions and rumours about what might be announced, but most attention is focused on the iPhone. It’s widely expected that iPhone 2.0 will be announced, and maybe even launched later this month, with the 3G technology and perhaps built-in GPS. Whilst that sounds attractive, it’s the launch of third party applications that I’m particularly excited about: Being able to run applications that help me do my job (OmniFocus for the iPhone is what I’m most excited about), and fill gaps in the toolset on the iPhone (where are calendar todo’s and central contact management?). Rumours also abound that Apple may relent at let mobile networks subsidise the iPhone, which together with 3G, could really help it’s adoption in Europe.

As for non-iPhone products, there are rumours of Mac OS X 10.6, although it seems too soon after Leopard, with no particularly key features being talked about yet. And a re-branding of Apple’s .mac, to make it focused more on the mobile user, is as overdue as it is welcome. I’ve never been particularly impressed with the pricetag or feature list of .mac, so will be intrigued to learn what they have in mind.

Certainly looking forward to it, and perhaps even watching (via the official video PodCast that now exists) the keynote on the train tomorrow morning :-)

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Because I had a nasty fall against a table when I was small, I’ve got slightly odd shaped left ear, so I frequently find that the headphones that come with personal stereos (well, iPods!) quickly get uncomfortable after an hour or so of continual use. Some years back though, I discovered the joy that was bud earphones, and having non-white leads also, I thought, would make me slightly less likely to get mugged for my 2nd Generation iPod (ie. back when they weren’t ubiquitous, and quite the mugging target).

Unfortunately, choices for bud earphones the iPhone were somewhat more limited. There was a set of bud earphones available, but as they cost over £100, they was simply waaaay over my budget. I just didn’t need them that badly. So when I read on TUAW that a cheaper product was available, I jumped at it.

The product was the ProCable In-Ear Isolation Headset for iPhone, from Radtech. The product even boasts the strapline “Comfortable and durable audiophile quality in-ear headset with Sound Valve Technology.“. For $24.99, and just shy of $10 shipping to the UK, $34.93 amounted to somewhere around £17, which was also below the customs duty level.

A bargain. Or so I thought.

Firstly, it’s worth stressing that the service I received from radtech was excellent. The package arrived in about a week. It was all very well packaged, and no problems (or charges) clearing customs. I really can’t fault them there, and I’d buy something else from them again, quite happily. It’s just that the headset itself that proved catastrophically, thoroughly and entirely awful, useless and a waste of money. That the buds didn’t quite fit in my ear was one (minor) thing. The big problem was that the sound quality is truly awful. Cheap for a reason.

I’m far from an audiophile. I know a few of these strange creatures, and I’m afraid I’ve really no interest at all in optimal room conditions, gold-plated cabling, filtered power supplies and records vs CD’s, AAC vs MP3 and so on. I just can’t tell the difference, and largely don’t care: So long as the speakers or headset I’m using sounds reasonable and has a respectable range, I’m happy.

Unfortunately I could immediately tell there was none of that with these headphones. I was listening to Arcade Fire’s stunning album “Neon Bible”, and my favourite track on the album “Intervention” makes impressive use of a powerful church organ. If you’ve not heard it, go find it on iTunes, and give it a listen. It’s one of the stand-out albums in the last few years. But with these headphones, it was, I’m afraid, pitiful. Absolutely no punch. The song sounded poor on every level. I immediately switched back to my iPhone headphones, and the difference was profound.

Others might find them fine. Perhaps you care less about the sound, or don’t use the iPhone for music as much as I do these days (twice weekly trips through to Edinburgh). They’d probably make acceptable headsets for telephone purposes. But not music.

Ironically perhaps, I’ve found I’ve subsequently got quite used to the iPhone’s bundled headphones. Whether that’s because they’ve changed the moulding from the previous iPod earphones, or that my ears have become more used to the shape, I don’t know.

In short: Avoid. Put your money elsewhere, or stick with the excellent headphones supplied with the iPhone.

Because the iPhone supplied headphones have a small but noticeable microphone, you also get to take part in the “is-that-an-iphone-or-ipod-owner”. I’m spotting them more and more, and with the 3G phone, and v2 firmware due very soon now (next week?), I’m sure we’ll see more of them on the streets. It’s still the best portable gadget I’ve ever bought.

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Finishing up with a client recently has meant that hardware VPN/firewall/router I used to get access their network needed to be unplugged, and I thought it was high time I did a refresh of my home network.

So I’ve plumbed for an Apple Time Capsule as the main wireless access device, and a Netgear DG834G router, but with the wireless component switched off.

I spent a bit of time in Maplins looking at pure ADSL modems, but just figured it’d be more useful to have a wireless router “just in case”, than a simple modem without such. Still a bit puzzled I had to go to Maplins at all, as Apple staff in Glasgow were largely bemused at my request for their ADSL modem recommendation, given the Time Capsule doesn’t have an ADSL modem I would have thought they’d get that question a fair bit more.

The Time Capsule looks good, but it’s proving rather slow to do the initial backup. 133Gb of data won’t be done in a hurry, certainly. This, I should add, is on top of my second hard disk in my Mac Pro. Given Time Machine makes doing backups so easy, it’s as well to have a few alternatives, so that if ever there’s a problem, or a burglary, I’ve got a few fall backs if my main computer gets nicked. Insurance covers the cost, but it’ll never cover the data, and to be honest my data is infinitely more important, so I don’t mind spending a bit of cash to ensure it’s safe.

An Apple network should also put me in good stead for the Apple TV when it comes out in the UK. Well, it is out in the UK, but when movie rentals comes here, I’m keen to get one. It’s the ‘killer app’ I’ve been waiting for. Of course, I’ll also need a TV with HDMI too… :-)

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