I'm not saying that the iPad 3 is coming. Nor am I saying the iPad 2S is coming. I simply don't know what's coming but I do know that Apple is up to something. And if you're a tech fan or fellow mobile warrior, you probably know that Apple has released a new iPad in the late winter or early spring timeframe. So, I think I'm am not too far off if I say that Apple is going to be releasing something in the next 4 to 6 weeks.
This four to six weeks is just enough for me to be within the ball park. The original iPhone introduced by Steve Jobs on January 27, 2010. However, preorders did not start until March 12th and did not start shipping until April 3rd to long, long lines. I know. I was there.
The iPad 2 was unveiled on March 2, 2011 and did not start shipping until March 11, 2011.
For the next iPad update, I think I am within that ballpark. It's unlike that Apple will delay its release by months the way it did last year with the iPhone 4S. It's possible but highly improbably. Apple wants to keep the momentum going and release a new iPad now will really keep consumers who bought into the original iPad an opportunity to grade while try to keep the pressure on its competitors.
Now, we don't know with certainty what new features will accompany the new iPad nor will we know what suffix it'll have, 2S or 3 or entirely something else.
There's been talks that we might see a natural improvement with the processor and the screen. Just as Apple gave the iPhone 4 the Retina Display and the A4 chip, we are hoping that the next iPad will sport an improved processor with better graphics capability as well as higher pixel density screen.
Over the next three weeks, we're going to hear a lot of rumors. As a matter of fact, we go plenty of juicy iPad 3 rumors (which I won't go into - again, I don't traffic in rumors. Speculations, yes. Rumors, no). The pace of these rumors will pick up.
So, you've been warned. Plausible iPad 3 rumors galore headed our way with chances of heavy wishful thinkings at times through into the mix.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Sunday, February 5, 2012
With Avid Studio, Did the iPad Hit Puberty?
I've used iMovie on the iPhone and iPad and it's great. I like it a lot. And I'd like it even more if I had an ounce of creativity for making music and video. Alas, I don't but you know what, that might not really matter. iMovie is really easy to use and this week, Avid Studio from Avid was released for the iPad.
So, I pose this question: has the iPad hit puberty? And the tablet market is due to explode as professional mobile warriors, particularly the creative sort, find more innovative uses for tablets and realize their full potentials.
So, I pose this question: has the iPad hit puberty? And the tablet market is due to explode as professional mobile warriors, particularly the creative sort, find more innovative uses for tablets and realize their full potentials.
Saturday, February 4, 2012
5.3" Galaxy Note Could Be More Acceptable To Mobile Warriors
The Galaxy Note running Android from Samsung could well be a silent hit in ways that no one expects. And it isn't just the huge screen with dense resolution though I love it. It isn't the stylus though I can see why Samsung included.

First, we need to figure out what the Note is. Well, is it a smartphone or a tablet? It can barely fit into one's pocket and you look ridiculous holding it up to your head to make a call. And by most definition, the screen, which is a bit bigger than the top end Android devices, is too small for tablet use. At the end of the day, most users will use the Note for productivity rather that using it as a phone. So it is safe to call the Note a tablet that makes phone calls.
More than that, Samsung is on to something. The note is a truly unique productivity pad that is useful across a broad range of disciplines. Students, office workers, mobile salespeople, the law enforcement, etc.
I can really see myself with the Note sitting at Starbucks studying and taking notes or doing a paper.
And if I need to make or take a call, I can simply use the wired or Bluetooth headset.
Go forward a couple of years, the Note may be connected in some manner to those wearable PC or watch that some mobile companies are developing. This will further enhanced a mobile warrior's productivity.
We know that Apple is entirely dedicated to the 3.5" screen on the iPhone and iPod touch and 9.7" on the iPad. Its competitors like Samsung have experimented with different screen sizes in the marketplace.
The Note is one such experiment that has gained momentum in the market. Hopefully, we will see a WiFi only version as well.
More at Wired.
- Posted using BlogPress

First, we need to figure out what the Note is. Well, is it a smartphone or a tablet? It can barely fit into one's pocket and you look ridiculous holding it up to your head to make a call. And by most definition, the screen, which is a bit bigger than the top end Android devices, is too small for tablet use. At the end of the day, most users will use the Note for productivity rather that using it as a phone. So it is safe to call the Note a tablet that makes phone calls.
More than that, Samsung is on to something. The note is a truly unique productivity pad that is useful across a broad range of disciplines. Students, office workers, mobile salespeople, the law enforcement, etc.
I can really see myself with the Note sitting at Starbucks studying and taking notes or doing a paper.
And if I need to make or take a call, I can simply use the wired or Bluetooth headset.
Go forward a couple of years, the Note may be connected in some manner to those wearable PC or watch that some mobile companies are developing. This will further enhanced a mobile warrior's productivity.
We know that Apple is entirely dedicated to the 3.5" screen on the iPhone and iPod touch and 9.7" on the iPad. Its competitors like Samsung have experimented with different screen sizes in the marketplace.
The Note is one such experiment that has gained momentum in the market. Hopefully, we will see a WiFi only version as well.
More at Wired.
- Posted using BlogPress
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
VW Superbowl Commercial Part 2!!! (With Little Vader...Maybe)
So, the little Darth Vader captured our heart with the VW commercial last year. It was brilliantly done. I've provided it as a reminder. But now, there's a sequel.
Hey, George Lucas. Please take note.
How We Got To Best Buy Using Pioneers In Their Superbowl Commercial
Here are two posts that I thought would merger well together today. Actually three. And it’s about Steve. As in Steve Jobs. First is one about Best Buy being inspired by Steve and instead of using celebrities, they will use some folks we consider to provide more meaningful services or, what we consider today, builders of some sort. Second is a post on the eve of Facebook’s IPO where Mark Zuckerberg, who we all know doesn’t give a rat’s ass about his users’ privacy. Third, is about Steve and his return to Apple.
Put all three together, it’s about coincidences and that not even folks we consider geniuses are always right. Sometimes, they’re so wrong but circumstances pulled them right back “on track” if you will. Or put it another way, history will not be denied.
First, Best Buy's Superbowl commercial will be using tech pioneers like Kevin Systrom of Instagram . This was done from the inspiration of Steve Jobs but I surmise it’s probably the iconic Apple commercial, “Here’s To the Crazy Ones”. But think about it. Had Jobs not come back to lead Apple, will this have happened? Or was history going follow Steve no matter where he goes?
See, I started reading this post about Mark Zuckerberg and his early days of developing Facebook. Apparently, he wasn’t too keen on keeping Facebook as his main focus. As luck would have it, events forced him to stay and focus on develop Facebook. Had he left Facebook early on, perhaps Zuckerberg would have left his mark on something totally different.
The same can be said about Steve Jobs as he resurrected Apple – iMacs, iPods, iPhones, iPads, and, quite possibly, Apple’s push into television. But if you read through “Steve Jobs” and other information online, Steve was helped along by a series of events that did not necessarily have anything to do with his decision.
For instance, after Steve returned to Apple, he was not keen on selling Powerbooks to enterprise because if the inherent IT bias towards Macs. And yet, Macbooks are thriving and even threatened to disrupt Wintel machines in businesses more than ever before.
Sure, the dude was a visionary with no one coming in close. He saw things that no one else did and make it all work out. Supposedly, had Steve Jobs accepted the CEO position at Google when the founders wanted him, could any of the iOS revolution still have taken place?
How would today’s mobile revolution look like? I reckon it would still have happened. Google would still be great but in a vastly different way. Apple might not be around but with the bulk of us using gOS instead of iOS or Android.
Which comes back to Best Buy’s Superbowl commercial. Steve could still have made waves in mobile, music, and disrupted all these industries that Apple did.
Think Different might still have happened but it would have just been “different” because genius will not be denied.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Apple Should Tackle Privacy
The iPhone 4S just went on sale in China. I am sure it's selling like hot cakes, regardless of what possible shortcomings Apple might have put into place to keep Beijing happy.
For instance, I about my friends in China are able to sign into Twitter since the microblog site is essentially blocked. (I just sent out an inquiry on Weibo about Twitter what what possible replacement Apple might have or have not offered Chinese customers.)
And while Facebook or twitter being blocked in China, Iran, and the likes, this is more of a censorship issue. Dealing with foreign censorship is something that Washington or the State Department should deal with But I like to see Apple tackle the privacy issue.
I started using a new search engine called Duckduckgo. It's an alternative to Google, Bing, Yahoo, and others that make it their mission to track our travels across the Internet and sell that information essentially to their advertisers.
Now, Apple has already put the stop to the newspaper and magazine publishers from wholesale access to its iOS users, I like to see Apple go a step further.
It's already been suggested that with Siri, Apple has positioned itself between its users and those services that are collecting information through conventional Internet means.
One of the things that Apple lack is a social network. Apple took a stab at it with Ping and we know how well that turned out. Even Apple's Game Center isn't quite where I like it to be. There is no direct interaction between users.
In iOS 5 with the inclusion of Twitter and iMessage, Apple may be taking its first baby step toward building a social network in the sense that its native apps like iMessage could act as the top layer overseeing other social networks like Twitter and maybe even others like Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, and others even Microsoft's Xbox Live.
This could potentially give iOS users greater control over which network they like to share with and how.
See, part of the failure of Ping was that Facebook wanted greater access to iTunes information that Apple was unwilling to share.
It was a bad move on Apple part in trying to deal with Facebook at that point. But I reckon that Apple has learned from that. And today, things are much more different.
Apple has sold over sixty million iOS devices in the last Christmas quarter and shows no sign of slowing down. Apple may enter the living room war with an assault on the traditional television in one form or another.
Social networks would be foolish not to deal with Apple if Tim Cook comes calling even if Apple has restrictive terms that social networks and even search engines must comply with to protect iOS user privacy.
We won't know for sure until Apple shows its hands with future product and OS updates so there is a lot of uncertainty in just how Apple will mother over its users and the information it has collected.
Personally, I like to see more of what Siri is capable of once it's out of beta and whether iMessage expands beyond being a SMS killer.
And it is entirely possible that Apple guarding the privacy of iOS users are accidental. Nevertheless, it's definitely better than how Facebook, Google, and other companies that profit off information they collected from their users.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
For instance, I about my friends in China are able to sign into Twitter since the microblog site is essentially blocked. (I just sent out an inquiry on Weibo about Twitter what what possible replacement Apple might have or have not offered Chinese customers.)
And while Facebook or twitter being blocked in China, Iran, and the likes, this is more of a censorship issue. Dealing with foreign censorship is something that Washington or the State Department should deal with But I like to see Apple tackle the privacy issue.
I started using a new search engine called Duckduckgo. It's an alternative to Google, Bing, Yahoo, and others that make it their mission to track our travels across the Internet and sell that information essentially to their advertisers.
Now, Apple has already put the stop to the newspaper and magazine publishers from wholesale access to its iOS users, I like to see Apple go a step further.
It's already been suggested that with Siri, Apple has positioned itself between its users and those services that are collecting information through conventional Internet means.
One of the things that Apple lack is a social network. Apple took a stab at it with Ping and we know how well that turned out. Even Apple's Game Center isn't quite where I like it to be. There is no direct interaction between users.
In iOS 5 with the inclusion of Twitter and iMessage, Apple may be taking its first baby step toward building a social network in the sense that its native apps like iMessage could act as the top layer overseeing other social networks like Twitter and maybe even others like Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, and others even Microsoft's Xbox Live.
This could potentially give iOS users greater control over which network they like to share with and how.
See, part of the failure of Ping was that Facebook wanted greater access to iTunes information that Apple was unwilling to share.
It was a bad move on Apple part in trying to deal with Facebook at that point. But I reckon that Apple has learned from that. And today, things are much more different.
Apple has sold over sixty million iOS devices in the last Christmas quarter and shows no sign of slowing down. Apple may enter the living room war with an assault on the traditional television in one form or another.
Social networks would be foolish not to deal with Apple if Tim Cook comes calling even if Apple has restrictive terms that social networks and even search engines must comply with to protect iOS user privacy.
We won't know for sure until Apple shows its hands with future product and OS updates so there is a lot of uncertainty in just how Apple will mother over its users and the information it has collected.
Personally, I like to see more of what Siri is capable of once it's out of beta and whether iMessage expands beyond being a SMS killer.
And it is entirely possible that Apple guarding the privacy of iOS users are accidental. Nevertheless, it's definitely better than how Facebook, Google, and other companies that profit off information they collected from their users.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
iPad Selling On The Road, Will Other Tablets Join?
Here is a very pro-iPad GigaOM post but if you step back you can appreciate just how tablets in
general has already changed how mobile warriors, particular mobile sales forces are able to accomplish more.
The instant-on feature, long battery life, wireless connection, and essentially a laptop replacement are features that have the iPad going for it.
On top of that the light-weight of the iPad is definitely a plus. Furthermore, all of what is the iPad allows the worker to accomplish its tasks more efficiently and spend more time away from the office.
Obviously, tablets running on Android, Blackberry OS, or the forthcoming Windows 8 should be able to do the same. The question would be just how efficient they will be compared to the iPad.
Another matter I like to bring up which the post didn't not address is the size of the iPad or other 10" tablets relative to productivity of the sales force.
That is definitely something worth analyzing when smaller tablets go on the road in this capacity.
It'll be interesting to see if Apple is right on its conviction that the 10 in-ish screen is truly optimal for tablet use.
- Posted using BlogPress
general has already changed how mobile warriors, particular mobile sales forces are able to accomplish more.
The instant-on feature, long battery life, wireless connection, and essentially a laptop replacement are features that have the iPad going for it.
On top of that the light-weight of the iPad is definitely a plus. Furthermore, all of what is the iPad allows the worker to accomplish its tasks more efficiently and spend more time away from the office.
Obviously, tablets running on Android, Blackberry OS, or the forthcoming Windows 8 should be able to do the same. The question would be just how efficient they will be compared to the iPad.
Another matter I like to bring up which the post didn't not address is the size of the iPad or other 10" tablets relative to productivity of the sales force.
That is definitely something worth analyzing when smaller tablets go on the road in this capacity.
It'll be interesting to see if Apple is right on its conviction that the 10 in-ish screen is truly optimal for tablet use.
- Posted using BlogPress
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