Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Fire away

Mozilla released Firefox 4 just recently and hit over 6 million downloads so far. It promised speed and security, so far the speed part is pretty evident.  It took just one bounce on the dock and the window appeared. Website loading appears to be fast, it matches Chrome's rendering power.

The UI is more streamlined now almost like Chrome's minimalist design, very useful on Macbook Air's smaller screen estate. It is also capable of running full screen, with a smoother transition than Chrome.

In my short experience with Firefox, I think it is a good alternative to Chrome, especially on the Mac OS platform. There are a couple of sites that don't render well on Chrome, so hopefully they run on Firefox.

Hope I can truly snowball Safari which frankly doesn't appeal to me, never has. Apple gives you a nice big widescreen but insists it is silly to view the internet in full panorama.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Thunderbook

A new nickname for the Thunderbolt enabled Macbook was seen circulating on Macrumours forum pages, sounds cool, maybe apropos for the new machines sounding all fury with no actual lightning?

Reports that the Pro version of the notebooks are failing have started trickling in. So how does this new star fall? Apparently it crashes under specific load on the system, the OS just freezes when the system is stressed to a certain point. Well every system has its limits, so the question is just how commonly is the supposed critical load level reached by power users. Funnily one of the application involved is Photo Booth which is suppose to "fly" on the new iPad. The other programs seem to involve development programs which would definitely overload a lot of machines, especially mobile units. Would be interesting if someone was running photoshop and processing several large photos and it crashes, then it would be something for Apple to be concern about.

Unless they run more regular applications as opposed to development heavy programs, most regular people would still buy the Thunderbook.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Crapple

iTunes.

Cr-App, they should call it that.

When you use the Mac App store, it remembers your purchases, even the iOS app store remembers. But iTunes is amnesic with your purchases, so you could probably end up paying for the same app twice if you forget. I did a quick experiment with a free app which was already on my Touch. In the App store, I clicked the buy button and iTunes merrily started to download the program after getting the right password.

I would think it should work like Mac App store, once logged in to the same account it should hold the info. It even worked perfectly when I shifted from my Macbook to the Air without having to migrate using any wizard. Just log on in the App program with the correct account and ta-da! Previous purchases intact.

No...not iTunes.

It started when I updated and synced my Touch, suddenly it reported that the Air is not authorised to accept  the Whatsapp app on the Touch. So I obediently clicked to authorise, since it threaten to delete the app if I didn't. Strange since it has been working for the past year. Then iTunes declared "Hey Silly, your computer is already authorised".

What the f***?

The Genius in iTunes has dementia?

Then I tried to reinstall the App by deleting it and re-syncing it. It refused to stay after syncing.

Finally it dawned on me, the App has somehow been disabled for Touch. I could not see it in the iOS App store when searching. Also I remembered that after the last direct update on the Touch, syncing has been glitchy, there was even a graphical glitch on the Touch passcode page.

So much for iOS 4.3 "bug" fix.

Ironically, had I not deleted the app directly, it would still be running on my Touch, but it made syncing annoyingly difficult. The worse thing is Whatsapp is a paid app and now it is disabled without any warning. Why? Then the crap app of iTunes goes into a convulsion instead of solving the problem.

Great way to crap on paying customer. Got an App for that?

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Lightening in a port

The Thunderbolted MacBook Pros are available for fondling and scrutiny in the stores.

It seems the flash based disk in the Air makes a lot of difference. Tried starting iTunes on both machines and the Air flies ahead with just 2 bounce compared to  5-7 for the Pro. The supposed raw power would probably be apparent when crunching videos and fitting a dog's head on your enemy's. Imagine outfitting the Pro with a flash disk, woo hoo, it would rocket overhead while wallets would lie below withering of malnutrition.

The FaceTime camera is a very visible improvement over the Air's iSight but doesn't detail your loved one's facial flaws too much.

Otherwise, the refreshed Pros looks decidedly the same and unremarkable.

The Aluminium City

I had just witness the magic of the Temple of Cupertino.

Personally I am not overly fond of the Apple Cinema Display, one for an LED backlit display it is not slim.  Second is the limited funds I have. So it is with great pleasure I observed how a friend was seduced by the promise of visual clarity and expanded vision. Now officially he has more Aluminium than I have.

Oh the excuses we give ourselves to justify owning a blessed Aluminum piece, I know, I am terribly guilty of it with getting the Air. Now you my friend are officially on the dark side of the force. 

Monday, March 7, 2011

I breathe therefore I can be

The future is looking more amazing and frighteningly like the movies. Cylons, Terminators or Avatars.

Humans.

End of line.




Comes with Thunderbolt port. It can hold 1 Pentabyte and has a natural cooling system.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

iPad Pro

After a whole week of Apple bashing, I shall balance it off with a little love.

Of course this is just another excuse to exercise my "Air fondling" as my friend would jealously claim. He unfortunately has not much time to do so. (Don't deny, given time you would too. Pot. Kettle.)

There are two aspects of the Macbook Air that I like. The hard and the soft. (Go on, run that dirty movie in your head).

Of course I am referring to the 11 inch. Not 13 inch Air. The 13 inch is just too large and budget blowing. (Mind totally in the gutter yet?)

The Hard part is the physical dimension. It is portable, feels lighter than the iPad while physically larger.  Other than e-book reading on a public transport, there is little advantage of the iPad over the Air. The full size keyboard is way more natural than the virtual version.

Incidentally, the chicklet keyboard is not has good as the older keyboard on the Titanium Macbook Pros. The previous version is more like firm sponge, with a nice supportive rebound. The current ones reflect the energy back to your wrist, I can feel the tension while typing. (Engadget's Nilay Patel called the Thunderbolted MB Pros "the still-best-in-class keyboard", really? Watch the Ambrosia please.)

Breathe.

Back to love. Back to stats baby. The Air has holes that I can..er...sorry ports that I can connect and expand the love, including the post PC iPod Touch. Transferring photos from a camera is easier and in multiple choice, less restrictive than the iOS design. I can bypass iTunes and iPhoto altogether.

The CPU is actually quite powerful and I can do even video conversion, though it would not be my first choice. Want to hear the Air mimic a jet engine? I ran the free App Miro Video converter to down scale a 30 minute AVI file to an iPod compatible mp4 recently. A fan  near the ESC key I wasn't aware of started whining away when it was near 90% to completion. Took another 20 minutes before it stopped complaining. It is also capable of playing 720p MKV files and HD QuickTime trailers. I didn't notice any heating problems as yet, but cuts the battery life a little.

Battery life is fairly decent. If you are just surfing, being a You-Tuber, it gives you enough time to loiter at Starbucks and be a nuisance to people waiting for a table. Some times the Air reports it has 8 hours of battery life when woken up from deep sleep, but I sure it is just a little groggy, mostly it's about 5 hours. After a month of usage, however I think the battery life is a little shorter than originally. An almost imperceptible reduction or just my imagination.

The trackpad, down where I do most of the fondling, is nice to use. The multi-touch, multi finger gestures are quite easy to use with a bit of practice and nice real estate for people with larger appendages.
(Oh stop blushing, you do your fingering in public on your iDevices too.).  Something I noticed, if you stick on a trackpad protective cover, (mine is a Moshi) it becomes noticeably less sensitive. Response is not as good naked, but I feel safer.

Let's get to the Soft part.

My main use of this machine is to surf the internet, minor photo management and iWorks. Other than iWorks, I could have used any Windows based machines, but so far very few fit the physical aspect. With iWorks mainly Pages, that limits my choice to OSX. Tried running OSX on a MSI netbook, but it could not handle transferring photos nor You-Tube well and iWorks was a pain to use.

What seems impressive for now is that Lightroom 3 runs a little better than on my Windows desktop which is decked out with 6 GB Ram. Although that could be it is not optimised and the Ram are a mixed lot.  Still the Air ran smooth, with 4 GB Ram. The screen is however a huge compromise, you simply cannot compare it to a 24 inch screen. The flash based drive is another concern, will working with multiple huge files wear it down faster?

The other advantage as I mentioned before is the fast sleep and fast wake modes. You really don't have to wait much. It is quite fast even from a cold start. So it feels like a iOS device, every ready. With the flash disk, I have less worry if it drops. Not that I would ever want it to drop. One negative about such beautiful sleek machines is a tiny dink looks horrible, it brings out the vain monster.

In the never ending argument about Mac vs Windows et al, there is no true winner, I believe it's all down to personal preference.  Mac OS has certain advantage like less complicated program installation process, made even easier with Mac App store. It talks to users in a simpler language, although I have found it stubborn and dismissive at times.  Plugging in external storage devices is a fast transparent process, Windows sometimes muck about and refuse to let you eject the device. Printers however are another story, there are just so many USB printer that the Mac refuses to recognise or at least be very condescending too. Of course the manufacturer is also to be blamed for not releasing the drivers, but is it them or Apple's walled garden policy. Unfortunately, there are also a few indie programs out there that do not work on anything but Windows. Not quite ready to subject the Air to virtualisation as yet.

Before this love of mine, I had considered the Alienware 11x as it can run Lightroom and my Windows games. But it is way heavier and 3 times thicker. So very few 11 inch options, and worst if I put iWorks into consideration.

Why iWorks? Well it's because I was put into a position where I had show off my fake desktop publishing credentials. I had used CorelDraw and fiddled around with other similar programs, so it was like riding a bike, Pages is really easy to use as page formatting. Unfortunately now I am officially stuck with the position, so Pages is stuck. Can I do it on an iPad? Probably not considering the amount of typing I have to do.

The last thing I love about my Air. It really looks good. No denying how sleek it looks. Currently I can carry it around and pretend I have the new iPad, clamshell version.

So that is my love, the true iPad Pro, my MacBook Air.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Sorry we screwed you, here's a hundred bucks

The price slip of the iPad 0.5 recently caught some buyers, who apparently have been living under a rock, off guard. So Apple kindly confirmed they would definitely refund, if you beg for it. Just simply trudge to the nearest temple of glass or offer supplication on their celestial line.

That is generous, I guess. Wonder how the person who bought 15 days before would feel?

Er..what about the Air or the Macbook Pro? The Air was the biggest surprise since it is still a relatively new model, but then again it is not unprecedented. Not sure if they have a refund policy for that. So maybe it is a Post PC World after all.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Post PC world

Engadget's chief envangelist, he who leans towards Apple, has just posted an editorial.

It is a bit of a surprise to me, as you all (whoever you are) know my bemusement of his gushing over shiny aluminium. Perhaps it's like sobering up after a drunken party, his piece wasn't about the High Priest or the new uni-cast aluminium block. It was the future that Apple is looking to.

(Incidentally, Mr Topolsky sounded like he was sobering up after drinking in all the Apple ambrosia when he describe the iPad 2 as "an iteration on an already existing product". Actually what I felt too.)

Post PC. What does it really mean?

The PC world which actually includes Apple was defined by the machines that people work on. Built, sold and marketed by geeks (no offence since I revel in geek-dom) it was all about how more powerful this machine compared to that other one. Apple in a way did move away from, but could not avoid it. (Remember PowerPC).

Apple's vision is summarized in the last bit of the March 2nd Keynote. Standing at the corner of Technology Street and Liberal Arts Avenue, it wants to bring easy access to technology for everyone.
In principle, I do agree that technology should not get in the way and the iOS platform has achieved it more successfully than others. Most of humanity won't and won't want to understand Ghz, Mb/s or Ram, they want to write a blog, call someone face to face, make their photos look better and even make music easily by themselves. No need to call some genius to make it work.

In real life, however, the geek is still needed. Take for example a piano, the physical non virtual version. It is an amazing piece of tech back then too, and you still need a tuner. The iPad is no different, why else they have geniuses populating the various temples of glass around the world.

While admirable the philosophy of no specs no tech, I suspect Apple is also hiding behind this to deflect accusation of charging a premium for a lower spec machine compared to the others in the PC world. If specs were not to be an issue, why stress on the A5 chip, the doubling of processing power and 9 times graphic capability. (The keynote would have been much much shorter and all about apps.)

The competition should fight more on the human experience with their machine. Apple being a provider of hardware and software makes it easier to produce something coherent. But there are others who don't like to play in a walled garden, so the PC world is still thriving. Mere humanity is making up the numbers for Apple... for now.

PS: Echoing a comment on some forum, in this post-PC world, why the heck do we still need to connect the magical devices to a PC with a umbilicus cord to do basic stuff like transferring music and video files. Worse is iTunes is the only portal possible. Not my favourite app.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

It's thinner and faster than a speeding supermodel


It is thinner and more comfortable. Twice the absorption ...er.. oops wrong device.

Well it has gotten thinner. Or to quote Engadget's top Apple Picker "...the absurdly thin new iPad 2"
Again Mr Topolsky gushes absurdly. Consider the Air, THAT is absurdly thin. The iPod Touch 4 is dangerously anorexic compared to the clunky iPhone 4. The simple fact is that this should have been the actual size of the iPad from the beginning, evidenced by tear downs of the original tablet showing lots of space.

It is also faster than before, "insanely fast", "blazingly fast". Hmm, wait, the first was blazingly fast. So how is the new cerebrally doubled new A5 CPU also "blazingly fast"? Again Mr Topolsky sounds like the company that he loves. It's the best device EVER.....like the one you tempted us with before? EVER! It is great that they put in a dual core CPU. They should since everyone else has announced dual cores in their "copycat" product.

Curiously, the Great One, no no not the Picker, the High Priest himself, said the iPad 2 will be "the first dual core tablet to ship in volume". Hmm didn't you just compare yourself to Tablet PCs earlier? Think there were quite a lot of dual core Tablet PCs around way back. Also isn't Motorola's Xoom commercially available in stores, definitely a two head device also.

Ok I nitpick too much at the Great One and the other great one, only because they annoyz me. While they laugh their way to the bank, I shall shout from my little hovel.

Looking through the specs, my take is that this is the real iPad. Early adopters were paying to be the beta tester. Finally a mature product and hopefully a more mature iOS on the way too.
iPad 0.5
iPad

Singapore the third class customer

The second magical device will be bestowed on us lower mortals starting 11th of March. Those on the land where the famed Temple of Cupertino reside will get first dibs, followed by a second release on the 25th to the citizens of the other Western kingdoms. The very kingdoms that almost brought the world economy to a standstill.

We in the east, where we slog and pay out debts on time, and where workers (China) un-magically slave away simply have to wait for the scraps to drop.

The US online stores show the new black and white iPad as available, while Singapore shows the old overweight first born. Magically the price slipped quietly by almost $200. Amusingly they did not drop the price of the refurbished units (which was listed as magically limited time offer: Hey presto time's up, you are screwed royally for believing)



How fortunate I wasn't tempted when it was a limited time offer. Now it's second hand at a premium of $80. Duh!

Update 4th March.
Singapore's online store just refurbished it's refurbish section. Now the pre-owned units reflect the global slip in price of the original iPad. Starting at $468, it is really tempting to own the beta iPad. At least you can get a taste of the future, even if it is a little old chunky.

They didn't even bother to excite us about the new iPad 2 on the local Apple site. In case the natives get restless.

Second of March Two Thousand and Eleven

The High Priest of Cupertino makes an appearance on the high holy day of Apple worship.

It is good to see him looking the same as the last time, hand to heart. Despite my undisguised disdain at times, I do think he is incredibly good at what he is doing, and I only wish him success in his battle with the terrible disease that afflicts him. Update: Just watched the keynote presentation, he visibly tires faster.

Back to the event.

Already the arrogance disguised as confidence is not oozing but pouring from every pore. Numbers thrown about are in the millionth and billionth. For the amount of time for human gestation, 15 million iPads were sold, which makes it more than all Tablet PCs ever sold, 90% of the market. Hey wait, now the iPad is a PC? Tablet PC sold previously were all running full desktop operating system. iPad took 90% basically because there were no comparative device out there. If any they would have to compare with iPhone/iPod which makes sense. The closest competitor was the Galaxy Tab, which mimicked the iPad and obviously Apple had a head start way way before anyone else. That was their true advantage, plus their strong foundation of a sensible UI from the iPhone. Criss Angel is scarily magical even though logically we know its all an illusion. So Steve sorry, it is still not magical, it was simply simple and unique

65 000 apps for the iPad. Most were ported over from the iphone, many are variations on a theme and largely games. Honey, Honeycomb is a new born compared to the more mature iOS market.

Yes Apple has made a device that is truly simple and fun to use, hey even a half year old baby knows how to swipe to unlock. It has also made George Romero's apocalyptic vision partially come to life. How many times have we encountered seemingly human person moving in a daze and repeating the same motion over and over again. Go on a public transport and you can see so many oblivious people, people focused on fingering their precious at the dining table. I admit I am one of those i-zombies, the social idiot, but I am a little self aware.

One screen shot of the keynote showed pilots handing off an iPad. New plane design : Fly by Pad.

"Hey Bob, get those pigs for me while I land the plane".

Unfortunately Apple's arrogance is how they achieved the current success. Confidence breeds arrogance and absolute confidence makes absolute arrogance.

The circle of an apple's life

Here we go again. In just a little over 4 hours another proclamation from the Temple of Cupertino. This time is a new iPad. So what can they improve? Actually quite a few things.

Firstly it needs to lose weight, it is actually heavier than the Air. For something that is meant to be held like a magazine or paperback, should weigh only as much. There are rumours of carbon fibre framework.

Secondly, straighten your back. What's with the Quasimodo back? This particular curvaceous look is not sexy and impractical while typing on a table top. (Sure get a cover, I would agree as much. Still the curved back is silly.)

Front camera at least, FaceTime is a good thing to keep up with family. Back camera for large crowds would be nice, but I definitely am going to ROTFLMAO for anyone taking pictures with their hands.

Can Apple start using micro-USB connectors for goodness sake? Unless they really go crazy and do Thunderbolt only. What about SD slots or Micro SD? But that would mean a file manager of sorts for iOS.

Orientation lock. Why lock only in Portrait mode? Can't we lock in either?

Frankly with the Air and iPod Touch, I am not particularly fond of the iPad. I would like to introduce it someone who is gadget phobic and totally clueless to even things like the DVD remote. But I do love my mother very much, so I figured the iPad might open a window to the internet, or a can of worms, whatever.

Say what thou great gods of Cupertino, my purse lays ready to present its offerings.