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Posts tagged: iphone

Will Cell Phone Video Recorders and Handheld Projectors Cause Mayhem and Joy?

Very very small iPhone movie projector
Image by stevegarfield via Flickr

When the iPhone 3Gs came out, YouTube noted a very fast uptick in the number of mobile videos being posted to the site.  It doesn’t hurt that one can post with just one click directly from the iPhone.  While not the first phone able to do this, it is certainly one with a large and fast-growing user base and while they are leading the way other makers will be forced to offer similar features soon.

Now, add to the mix the emergence of powerful, pocket-sized video projectors that can operate on battery power and project images the size of a large-screen TV onto any flat surface. Still in their early stages, these projectors will improve over time and it can’t be long until anyone with the equipment can beam billboard-sized video onto the wall of their choice.

Now, combine these two devices and try to imagine the possibilities:

1) A major riot breaks out in a big city.  Someone sees an act of police brutality. They film it with their phone and then, before you can say “hey, you” the footage is beamed onto the wall of a building for the whole crowd to see.

2) A group of people are waiting in line for tickets to a new film.  A young filmmaker gives those in line a preview of his own latest work, beamed onto the side of the cinema itself. For free.

3) More scary, advertisers arm workers with short video ads and ask them to walk around town and beam them on any wall near a crowd.

I could just keep going and going.  I don’t even want to think out the new laws that will be created and the absurd policing to follow.

And we haven’t even discussed just beaming it live…

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iPhone Will Track Your Happiness

A smiley by Pumbaa, drawn using a text editor.
Image via Wikipedia

Someday we will all be asking ourselves, “what did we do before our cell phones told us what make’s us happy?”

Thanks to Matt Killingsworth, a doctoral candidate in psychology at Harvard University, iPhone users may now take part in a completely free study exploring just what it is that makes us happy:

To participate, volunteers sign up for the experiment through the study’s Web site, fill out an introductory survey and schedule the number of times each day they want to be alerted by an e-mail message or text message reminding them to take another survey. Periodically, volunteers are also provided with a “happiness report” that could provide some insight into the factors — like amount of sleep, exercise and other daily activities — that affect their own happiness.

“The more that people adhere to it, they more they will learn about themselves,” he said.         LINK

Not only will your data help the overall experiment, but you will also receive personalized reports on what make you happy.

One might argue that iPhone owners, as a sample pool, are already a skewed group, but I love the use of the device in the name of science.

Kinda makes that iFart app look a little more pointless…

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Free WiFi and Barnes and Noble and Beyond…

Wi-Fi logo
Image via Wikipedia

Word is that Barnes and Noble is now offering free WiFi.  This is cool simply for the fact that the more business that offer free WiFi, the more pressure will be other businesses to do the same.

Speculation is that the free WiFi in Barnes and Noble has happened in part to allow users of their new, forthcoming eBook reader to download books while in the store.  I wonder if this could threaten the underlying brick-and-mortar sales?  Probably not, at least until a much greater number of people are using an eBook reader.  Right now, I still consider the spotting of a Kindle in the wild as a special occurrence.

I’m surprised the struggling Starbucks hasn’t extended their free WiFi beyond iPhone users and Starbucks cardholders.  This would help to keep them distinguished from competitors like Dunkin’ Donuts and McDonalds.  Actually, I have seen free WiFi offered in a number of McDonalds so the competitive edge might be lost already.

The larger question is whether or not we will ever see the dream of free WiFi anywhere we roam. For a while, there was free WiFi in a number of NYC’s parks and all of Philadelphia was nearly given free WiFi before plans fell apart.  One has to suspect the biggest obstacle to providing free WiFi is the existing internet service providers who do not want to see their core business eroded.

Still, it seems like a strong tide is rolling in and it will not be long before we are all logging on for free, at least for slow-speed connections.

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The PalmPre versus Apple iTunes Sync Fight is Confusing

iTunes 7.7, the previous version of iTunes.
Image via Wikipedia

According to today’s news, the PalmPre is once again able to sync directly with Apple’s iTunes.

This will last exactly as long as it takes for Apple to figure out how disable the feature and then PalmPre users will be temporarily blocked once again.

Now, I can see why Apple might have a lot of hate for the PalmPre.  It was developed almost completely by ex-Apple folk and was released in an attempt to be a direct competitor to the iPhone, though most critics agree it loses in any sort of head-to-head battle.

What I don’t understand is why Apple thinks blocking the PalmPre’s ability to sync to iTunes is a wise move. Sure, it takes away a capacity many people like in their media players but it also opens the door wide to competitors looking to give folks a reason to try something other than iTunes as a media manager.  People will only look for an alternative if they can’t get access to the original, popular and rather well made iTunes software.

Not only that, but this discourages PalmPre owners from purchasing any music via iTunes.  This is a direct loss of potential revenue and again offers a great opportunity for competitors to step in and offer an alternative.

Considering how much effort is going into blocking the PalmPre from syncing with iTunes, Apple clearly has  their reasons.  I just can’t seem to fathom those reasons.

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Five Reasons Why Buying Music is Headed for the History Books

Tower Records on the Sunset Strip
Image via Wikipedia

The collapse of the traditional music industry has been well documented.  The Virgin MegaStore just closed for good in Union Square and the Tower Records franchise that was once a vibrant hub for music is gone from the landscape.  The number of CDs sold is at an all-time low and I am willing to bet if you eliminated all sales of CDs to anyone over 30 the figures would be staggeringly low.

Sure, for the moment, there is still a brisk business in the sale of legal digital downloads.  iTunes and Amazon both seem to be making some reasonable coin on the practice.  Still, it is hard to imagine that this will last much longer.

Here are five reasons why buying music is headed for the history books:

1) The legacy of Napster – Napster, in its original incarnation, was our first taste of how easy, fun and beneficial it was to be able to share your entire music collection with other people all over the world and have the chance to share the music libraries of those very same folks.  Sure, the free aspect was cool, but the best part was the endless selection and immediate accessibility.  Napster taught us that music did not have to be locked down on physical formats or hidden behind DRM.

2) The Return of “Radio” – Sure, traditional, terrestrial radio may not be a threat to record sales, but the world of webcasters combined with the fact that all those traditional stations are available online means that there are an endless stream of free listening options that combine the ability to refine genres with the chance to discover new music.  From Pandora to Last.FM to the basic “radio” options embedded in iTunes, it’s easier than ever to simply tune in, sit back and enjoy.

3) The iPhone (and its brethren) – Nearly every major music webcaster now has an iPhone application that will stream content to you anywhere you can get a signal.  This is not limited to WiFi zones but most will deliver content of 3G and even Edge.  This means that unless you spend a lot of time underground (like I do in the NYC subways) you never have to disconnect from the flow.  Why cart around 10,000 songs when you can just press the Slacker icon and gain access to over 1,000,000 tunes.

4) Songza et. al. – For those not familiar with the site, Songza.com is a music search site that scours the web (mostly YouTube, actually) for recordings of any song or artist you enter into the search box.  This solves the, “I wanna hear the song right now” problem that you face with Pandora and the like.  Whether the major labels and RIAA like it, just about every song and artist I can come up with results in a successful search on Songza.  The point is, legal or otherwise, every song is out there somewhere already, making it tough to convince me why I should pay to buy it.

5) The Generation Gap – Try this: find any kid under the age of 15 and ask them what was the last album they bought.  Chances are, there is no last album.  In fact, studies in the UK have shown that kids are  buying less music online but they are not replacing that with some kind of piracy – they’re just not downloading music to “own” for free or for a fee.  What’s the point of buying music when it is already out there to be heard?

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Apple Approves Marijuana Finder for iPhone, Still No Boobs.

Marijuana
Image via Wikipedia

It’s becoming redundant to question the logic behind those apps that Apple approves for the iPhone and those that are rejected.

Still, when they do something like this it forces a reaction:

Apple has approved a new $2.99 iPhone app, aptly named Cannabis [iTunes link]. It’s made by the also appropriately-named Ajnag.com. The purpose of the app is to help locate legal medical marijuana in states and locations where it can be found.         LINK

Now, I don’t personally have a problem with people having more convenient ways to find pot but the truth is that, according to Federal law, the stuff is still illegal, no matter how many Californian’s with a touch of “insomnia” and a note from their doctor beg to differ.

Meanwhile, last I checked, there were no laws against adults looking at naked pictures of each other.

So, just to recap: illegal drug finders are allowed in the iPhone App Store but anything displaying a pair of naked boobs is banned.

Got that?

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Kindle Actions Explain Popularity of Piracy

NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 09:  Amazon.com founder an...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

While the major publishers, studios and labels bitch and moan about how piracy is destroying their business they continue to make decisions that only reinforce the reason people resort to piracy in the first place – and no, it’s not all about price.

Take this for example:

This morning, hundreds of Amazon Kindle owners awoke to discover that books by a certain famous author had mysteriously disappeared from their e-book readers. These were books that they had bought and paid for—thought they owned.

But no, apparently the publisher changed its mind about offering an electronic edition, and apparently Amazon, whose business lives and dies by publisher happiness, caved. It electronically deleted all books by this author from people’s Kindles and credited their accounts for the price.      LINK

Now, Amazon has backtracked slightly, claiming these titles had been released without proper authorization but that doesn’t change the underlying issue.  In the good ol’ Industrial Age, if you went to a store and bought a book and took that book home than that book was yours forever.  No matter what some publisher decides later, nobody could come into your home and take back that book without being charged for theft, even if they left a few bucks on the shelf.

In a similar manner, when I acquire a song or film or ebook via a file-sharing service and I download that file to my iPhone or laptop, that file is mine and, without a fair amount of hacking, nobody can take that file away from me.  I can move it around, copy it and even share it with other friends because it is mine.

With a Kindle, the fact is your never OWN anything.  All you really are buying is an extremely limited license to read the book on your Kindle unless Amazon decides otherwise.  This is not the same thing as buying a book.

Unless the major content distributors of the world figure out the difference they will continue to lose to the gray market that allows people to truly own their content.

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TV Everywhere Scheme Includes Ads Everywhere, Too

Television
Image by nickfarr via Flickr

So, Comcast is getting ready to roll out its attempt to compete with Hulu and Bittorrent and the host of other options to watching traditional cable television, something they have given the misnomer of “TV Everywhere.”

As defined by NewTeeVee:

TV Everywhere is an authentication system whereby certain premium content (TV shows, movies, etc.) are available online — but only if you can prove (or “authenticate”) that you have a subscription to a multiservice operator (e.g. cable, satellite, telco TV).      LINK

So, by everywhere, they don’t actually mean, say, being able to download the show to watch offline on an iPhone or to burn onto a DVD to take on a trip.  Sure, the same can be said for Hulu or any other streaming solution, but it isn’t TV Everywhere.

Now comes word that TV Everywhere will also include ads everywhere:

The Wall Street Journal follows up this morning with a story about how shows from OnDemand Online participant Turner, including My Boys and The Closer, will both carry their full load of ads from traditional TV, which is more than four times as many ads than the typical ad load on many sites. And as a bonus (for advertisers), the ads can’t be skipped.       LINK

So, once again, the corporate giants are making the key mistake of pretending to offer a better service when they are really offering something less than what is already readily available.  Unlike, say, DVR’ing a show and being able to fast-forward the ads, or watch via Hulu and get limited ads, TV Everywhere forces the viewer to sit through the entire ad-load, something most of us haven’t done for years, outside of major sporting events.

As competition to either Hulu or file-sharing, TV Everywhere strikes me as a weak entrant into the field.  It also doesn’t help anyone who has already severed ties with the cable company for being over-priced and offering poor customer service.

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Nudes Still No-Go For iPhone but Booze Apps No Problem

Picture 7Since Apple has decided, wrongly, to play moral gate-keeper over the App Store, banning any iPhone App they deem “inappropriate” for a score of muddy reasons, I think it is fair to ask why they are banning nude women but happily allowing booze brands like Absolut to promote drinking through sponsored applications.

Absolute’s new iPhone App, “Drinkspiration” is free to all and simply requires that the downloader click a box promising that they are over the age of 17.  Now, let’s forget about how worthless this is as an effective age barrier, how about the fact that the legal drinking age in the US is 21?

In truth, I don’t think Apple should ban this App, or any other App for that matter.  Instead, I am trying to make the point that Apple has opened itself up to a world of criticism now from all  sides.  If they ban the App they are unwanted gatekeepers and if they allow it then they are aiding in the corruption of America’s youth.

Maybe Apple will someday relinquish their role and let adults decide what they want to see in the App store but until then I hope Apple gets nothing but grief for every decision, pro or con, they make in regards to Application approval.

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The Myth of Cable’s “TV Everywhere” Plan

A bunch of news about Time Warner and Comcast beginning to roll out a service being called “TV Everywhere.”

TV Everywhere aims to put full-length cable programming online, but require viewers to prove that they have a cable subscription before they’re able to watch. Currently most full-length episodes from cable networks aren’t available on the web.    LINK

Of course, by everywhere, they mean on this one firewalled site.  Forget about downloading an episode and watching in your iPhone or saving it for offline viewing.

While it’s nice to see the cable companies trying to get more programming online, I’m not sure this is the solution that will save them from obsolesence in the coming years.

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