Friday, August 9, 2013
Yellow Journalism: Washington Post Already Sucking Up To Its New Boss (Jeff Bezos)
Couldn't make this up if I wanted to. In one of the first posts I've seen from the Post since Jeff Bezos bout the iconic print newspaper for $250 million, it's one about Bezos himself. It's five myths about its new boss.
The first one is this: Jeff Bezos is destroying independent booksellers. It makes good start to say that it was Barnes and Noble and Borders that started the trend and Amazon only stepped in later. The segment of the post also regurgitated Amazon's own statements about the Kindle and how its helping the industry.
Except it's also making sure that it can have titles all to itself cutting out booksellers, large and small. Of course, Washington Post didn't quite put it the way I just did.
I'm not an Amazon hater. I get stuff from them (pay the sales taxes), a Kindle user, and also a proud, new, and happy Prime user as well.
Speaking of taxes, the title of the post is "Five myths about Jeff Bezos" and, yet somehow, the post's author find it necessary to include myth number 4: Amazon’s key advantage is that it doesn’t collect state sales taxes.
Of course, Amazon benefited from it. It made sense, even to me, in the beginning of the dotcom era to leave e-commerce be without taxes and such so that it can grow and flourish. And yes, less government and taxes did help but it also helped put Amazon over the top as far as getting buyers to go to Amazon to avoid taxes that they would otherwise have to pay at Walmart, Best Buy, Radio Shack, Target, and you name it.
Well, because most readers aren't going to give too much hoot and dig in a bit, they'll take the "facts" of the post at its face value.
Let's remember who wrote this post. It's "Tricia Duryee is a former staff writer at AllThingsD, where she covered e-commerce, including Amazon". Makes one wonder how much this was a paid post and whether Tricia is gonna be getting a nice promotion soon enough.
Look, I'm not saying anything about Bezos other than that dude's brilliant and has changed the world much in the way other true tech titans have. And I look forward to his space program. Still...
Note: I wonder why this post didn't show up on the New York Times, WSJ, or elsewhere.
Caught Using iPHone To Pretend Using Galaxy S 4
I have no idea who Nicole Scherzinger but I do know. In addition to being a so-so singer, she's also a paid Samsung plant to use the Galaxy S 4. The problem with that? Nothing. It's the free enterprise, right?
Except this:

The tweet was from her iPhone.
I'm okay with people selling their souls and all but they've got to do it right! It'll be interesting to hear her explanation. What like those Chinese celebrities paid by Beijing to dump on Apple, she'll claim her iPhone was stolen or what not?
So, I know who Nicole Scherzinger is now. Just not in the way I'd expected.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
T-Mobile Looking To Become Apple's Official "Unofficial" Carrier
Apple and Mac bloggers are looking to crown Apple, specifically the iPhone 5, as T-Mobile's saviors as its first full quarter of carrying the iPhone net it more than 1.1 million users instead of bleeding them. Well, I think the iPhone 5 helped. Definitely.
After all, T-Mobile sold 900K iPhones (a very old device by today's mobile cycle standard) against 600K of the very new Galaxy S 4 from Samsung. So, it's likely that combined, both Apple and Samsung, more Apple than Samsung, helped T-Mobile.
Having said that, imagine what Apple can and will do for T-Mobile with the next iPhone.
Still, I think it's T-Mobile's "uncarrier" plans that play just as big of a role as the iPhone. When Sprint got the iPhone, it felt the Apple effect but not to the extent of T-Mobile just got. Sprint did not have a game-changing business model that T-Mobile current has.
I think in the next couple of quarters, we will see T-Mobile gain additional momentum as word of mouth of its plans spread through the mobile market. Mobile warriors like myself will look upon this and realize just how important the Apple-T-Mobile partnership really is.
Maybe only the Apple-AT&T partnership back in 2007 was more revolutionary.
Also, having said all that, T-Mobile is looking to Apple for more growth as it looks to add other Apple products and services in the future. By that, I figure its talking about the iPad. I just don't see T-Mobile or any other carriers selling any other Apple devices, do you?
But the enthusiasm that T-Mobile is now feeling for Apple's iOS devices (those with LTE capabilities) seems to indicate that it is willing to become the final destination for iPhone and iPad fans. Right now, I'm using T-Mobile's monthly $30 plan, 100 minutes and 5 GB of high speed data.
Perhaps, T-Mobile should announce a plan or two like this specifically to cater to iPhone users. Even with just the Uncarrier plans and just the iPhone 5 or the next iPhone, I can see T-Mobile begin to stabilize over the next couple of quarters and start stealing users from its three main rivals.
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
How Does 1 TB For Your iOS Devices Sound?
Source: The Droid Guy.
I have only 16 gigabytes on my iPhone. 32 gigabyte on my iPad. And 32 gigabyte Nexus 7. As you can see, adequate for today I am already considering 64 for my next device, whatever it is. There will come a time when we look back on this day and wonder how we could have lived on such small quantity of storage and not all of it available to the use remind you. Just ask those hapless Surface users.
Now, a new start up is going to try to bring that time closer by giving us one terabyte of data of storage for out mobile devices. The company is called Crossbar. The new storage is called resistive RAM or ReRAM. What's more amazing is that the new storage will be faster, smaller than today's memory chips, and use much less power.
How long until we see the new type of storage, ReRAM?
Well, there's a good news. They are ready to go into production. However, I recommend it will be very expensive won't be coming too the next Galaxy, iPhone, Nexus or any other mobile devices for quite a while. However, the company start working with Crossbar right now to make this happen. Companies like Panasonic an HP.
So meanwhile, I'll be looking to muddle along on 64 or 128 GB for my next mobile device or tablet until s such time.
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Apps and Services To Augment Mobile Market
I don't know if Apple's last quarterly announcement spoke to a saturation of the high end market or not. I don't know if Samsung's reduction of the just released Galaxy S4 spoke to the same thing. But there is a change in the buying habit of the smartphone market that could be bigger than just the top end.
But looking at Apple's iTunes revenue growing of 25% to nearly $4 billion, you have to take notice. It's likely that Amazon and Google saw some kind of growth that points to a shift in how they see their apps/mobile ecosystem.
More so than Apple, at least in the beginning, Google likely saw Google Play as a source of direct revenue and profit than Apple. Apple wanted to sell iOS devices and Macs and it's iTunes ecosystem was to be an integral part of that. It was mean to operate at a break even point only. But as revenue exploded, it's like iTunes has added to the billions in cash that Apple gets every year.
For Amazon, it's Kindle ecosystem was mean to get people hooked in and continue shopping with it. More and more, its own ecosystem is valuable as an avenue to direct profitability.
This comes to my point. These operators of App Stores will rely more and more on them as perpetual sources of income so long as their mobile users, be it iPhone, Nexus, or Kindle, continue to spend $.99 for an app or $1.99 for a TV show. All of that adds up.
It'll be interesting to get some kind of color on how much each mobile user spends after buying a phone or tablet. As the market matures and the app buying experience becomes more prevalent, the revenue Apple and Google will generate from each user will only increase.
- Posted using Mobile
Monday, July 22, 2013
Microsoft Needs To Continue To Invest In Surface, If Not For Its Own Fate, But To Put Competitive Pressure on Chomebook and Apple
It spent years on Zune and ended with an utter failure that decimated not only its own effort in the portable and streaming music industry but those of its partners as well. Xbox is a bit more successful and I think it's beginning to eek out a bit of profit even though the console market could be in trouble. For argument's sake, let's call this a success.
Either way, Microsoft didn't put one out product, see it fail, and walk away entirely. Even with Kin, which lasted only months, Microsoft is back now with Windows Phone with increasing success.
So, while Surface sales have not caught on like many in Redmond and Microsoft fans hope (I like to consider myself one of them. I have a Nokia Windows Phone), I also believe that Microsoft has learn from the market, which it usually do, and will make changes to the next generation hardware and put on a new marketing push later this year.
And maybe Microsoft will lose another billion between 2013-2014 but it is essential that it fight, bite, and scratch its way to relevance in the tablet market which most believe is the future of computing.
It's essential because we not only need Microsoft's vision for the future of computing, it also serves as a competitive force that Apple and Samsung cannot ignore. On top of that, because Microsoft has both an ARM and Intel version of the Surface, the future generations of tablets will continue to put pressure on the growing Chromebook market as well as Intel-based tablets.
It's likely that Apple will release its own OS X Intel Mac that is a hybrid between a laptop and a tablet (I'll explain why later).
For now, I'm taking a way and see attitude towards the Surface even thought one can be had for $350. I'm waiting to see what improvements Microsoft will make for Surface 2 before I decide.
For Microsoft, it doesn't have a choice even if it doesn't want to serve the market. It has to serve itself if it doesn't want to become irrelevant in the future of mobile computing. Already, Windows 8 adoption and sales have dropped due to a drop in global demand for PCs as tablets continue to grow wildly. Eventually, it could get to the point when even Microsoft's core businesses like Office gets affected as people realize they can live without it.
- Posted using Mobile
iPad Battery Life: Apple Has To Increase It To 15+ Hours Now That Macbook Air Can Do 12 Hours
Obviously, we are years if not a decade away from that realization. For now, I believe Apple has to increase the battery life on the iPad further. For three generations now, the iPad has been stuck at 10 hours. It's time that we see Apple increase that by 50% to 15 hours of battery life. There are a couple of reasons why the 2013 iPads slated to be introduced this fall has to have increased battery life.
One, like I said, it's been three years since the original iPad and we're still at 10 hours. The ability to have a nearly day-long battery for a mobile device has changed how we have become a mobile society. The ubiquity of the iPad cannot be understated. And that's all possible because of the 10 hour battery life.
If the iPad has only 5 to 7 hours, believe me when I said this and I'm sure you'll agree, a lot less folks would be carry it around as a laptop replacement.
Increasing the iPad's battery life now from 10 to 15 hours would elevate the iPad to another whole new level. This feature alone could propel Apple's fastest growing device to another level and further revolutionize how the modern society compute on the go.
The second reason is the new 2013 Macbook Air line and its incredible battery life. In the latest update, Apple has increased the Air's battery life a mind-blowing 12 HOURS for the 13" Air and 9 HOURS for the 11" Air. That is up from 7 hours and 5 hours respectively from the previous versions. Until the introduction of the 2013, the iPad was still the king when it comes to pure battery life. Now, it has been upstaged and given the increasing importance of the iPad for Apple and in the lives of mobile warriors, it's important that Apple remind the market that the iPad is the future of computing by increasing the battery life further (I'm sure Apple will add new features to the next iPad beyond just battery life).
And we do know that at some point, Apple will increase the battery life of the iPad, even the iPhone. But the increase in battery life has to be a bold statement. Increasing the next iPad's battery life from 10 hours to 15 hours would be a very bold statement. increase it from 10 to 12 hours is nice but will not have anywhere near the same impact.
And this is why I'm hoping that while there will be a new iPad mini like design for the regular iPad, Apple's need to make the iPad lighter and thinner won't come at the sacrifice of the ability to increase battery life. I love my iPhone 5 and if there is one major complaint I have with it: Apple made it thinner and lighter but Apple could have added more bulk and weight with a bigger battery.
Put these two reasons together, Apple would have some even better to knock over its competitors. It's hard pressed that Android or Windows RT tablets even have 10 hours of battery life even today. A fifteen hour long iPad would further solidify iPad's place as the most used and recognized device while it continues to decimate the PC market.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
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