Thursday, August 15, 2013
iPhone 6 (or 5S): If It Does Have a Finger Print Scanner, It Could Give Apple Greater In-Road Into Enterprises
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Next iPhone 5/6: Do Yourself A Favorite And Go 32 GB - 64 GB Would Be Better (128 GB Would Be The Best)
- iOS is getting bigger and need more space.
- Apps are more sophisticated and better. That also means taking up more storage.
- With the original iPhone, it came on two versions: 4 GB and 8 GB. Most people opted for the 8 GB version and the next iPhone with 16 GB will fee like the 2007 4 GB iPhone.
- Camera and video quality are getting better. More pixels also means bigger picture sizes. Same goes for videos too.
- The iPhone ain't a toy no more. It's a part of us. Evolution but not in the biological sense. You'll put more apps, including games, to augment and make your life better and more connected.
- We watch more videos and consume more information. Books and magazines. All that takes space. More than ever before. A lot of Apple mobile warriors are using their iPhones and iPads to serve as their entertainment center. And it's not only in the living room.
- Music - Ain't gonna be an iPhone today without the iPod. Seven out of ten of us sported one. Apple had always controlled 70% of the MP3 player. Music on the go will always be with us and will become more so. Again, the iPhone is the next step in evolution in some ways.
- This is the biggest reason why you should go with a 32 GB iPhone 5S or iPhone 6 but I'm gonna make you scroll all the way down to find out.
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Google: You have No Reason To Expect No Privacy
"Expect no privacy" is what Google is telling the court and users. This was found in a brief filed by Google attorneys trying to dismiss a class action lawsuit brought on by Gmail users.
Don't we kinda already know that? I suppose.
But to hear Google actually say it, somehow, it's different, you know? The exact words are "Indeed, 'a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties".
Los Angeles To Possibly Consider City Wide Wireless Internet Access
Read again. It's only to discuss a motion to start thinking about how feasible it is to set up a city-wide WiFi access.
Newly minted council member, Bob Blumenfield, head of City Council's Innovation, Technology and General Services Committee, will introduce a motion, that requires approval, to ask city employees how this could be done.
Now, this is the City of Los Angeles. Flat, spread out, pockets of the LA city, here and there. Not concentrated like SF or NY. So, I reckon they're probably talking about downtown Los Angeles, north of the 10, east of the 110, southwest of the 101 and 5.
The city could probably be talking about West Los Angeles and midtown. But south of the 10, you know, South Central and Watts area? I certain hope the city council does include that large segment of the city because that's where we need free WiFi access to many who truly cannot afford it there.
So, you can judge by my tone of voice that I'm not all that excited. The move is only to ask for permission to begin talking about city-wide WiFi access. Personally, I've been waiting for years to see what White Spaces could do for a big and spread-out city like Los Angeles. I think only a wider range system could work here.
Still, it's good to get folks thinking and maybe this will get someone to innovate and figure out something even better than what we already have.
Gene Munster, Apple Analyst: In the Business of Being Wrong and Rewarded For It
Through I love reading credible rumors, I don't like to talk about them here. However, from time to time, I make exception on rumors to make a point or look at it from a speculative point of view. Now, I'm gonna make a point.
See, Apple analysts have been in the business of writing reports to drive up or down Apple's stock price. And they get rewarded handsomely for it whether they're right or wrong. See, there is one Gene Munster of Piper Jaffray who is so wrong that it's incredible that Apple blog sites even bring him up at all. It's like he's an one-man DigiTimes.
The latest out of him is that an upcoming low-end iPhones will not support Siri. Are you kidding me?!
The lowest of the low iOS devices, the iPod touch, has Siri and dictation support. How can a critical device like the rumored iPhone Color, a device to propel Apple's mobile dominance onto higher level not have Siri?
Maybe Munster isn't aware of this because he's got his head stuck up the you-know-what about Apple releasing its own HDTV that he doesn't realize what a critical future Siri has in Apple's mobile and computing plans.
I love rumors and speculations but this one, like those spread by Digitimes, just are plainly not worth posting. For Digitimes, I get that its click-baits. For analyst reports, it's about fiance. Apple bloggers should stop posting these nonsense and stick with true juicy rumors.
NOW, why does Munster think Siri will not be in the iPhone Color? Well, it's because it wasn't available on the iPhone 3GS and 4, two devices that were released prior to Siri and the iPhone 4S. And because the 3GS and 4 were low-end devices, he concluded the iPhone Color, being a low-end device will not have Siri.
Seriously, do these guys not even try to think just a little?
Monday, August 12, 2013
Founder of Telsa and SpaceX Reveals HyperLoop - As Smooth As Riding Space Mountain
A press conference will be held soon to provide more details but we already know what Elon Musk, on his way to becoming this generation's Edison or Jobs with SpaceX and Tesla, now he wants to revolutionize long-distance travel with HyperLoop.
"It'll be a smooth as riding the Space Mountain at Disneyland" is the quote but I'm not sure it was all that smooth to begin with. But we all get what he's trying to say.
So far, we know that it'll go up to 800 miles per hour on the ground through a series of tubes (according to one Alaskan senator, "series of tubes") and be sped up much like a railgun that we see in science fiction shows and books.
More details to follow. I'm very excited about this.
My only problem with this, a major one, is logistics and find the space for this to be built. Musk said the optimal range for this is between cities that are around 900 miles apart. That's great and all except that in the US, I can see such an endeavor run into series of roadblocks - political, environmental, etc.
And yet, as Musk pointed out, there is now already an over-budget and very late high-speed train system in California, home to Musk and myself, that cannot come close to the HyperLoop. I imagine this is where he came up with the idea of promoting it.
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Apple Event: "Nope", Promotion Periods, and September 10th
Is that time of the year when we expect Apple to put on its annual media event introduce its fall lineup to get again crush the Christmas sales. So that means guess games. Rumors will fly and people will try to guess and second guess one another.
Typically, the first ones you'll hear about are going to be false. Just like this September 6th date that was immediately debunked by Jim Dalrymple of The Loop Insight, Apple fan legend (I know that's probably not the right description).
I could have "nope" that myself. Seriously, when has Apple ever launch a device on a Friday!?
Then last night, All Things D posted that the fall event should take place on September 10. So far, no one seems to be disputing that. It also falls on a Tuesday so this make sense though it's far from confirmed. Still, it does appear legitimate at this time.
However, this does not mean that Apple will beginning selling and shipping the next iphone, iPad, or whatever new product they'll be introducing right away. For that, let's look at the promotions that Applies currently running at this time.
For the first time ever, Apple has included in its back-to-school promotion the iPhone. Also included are the Macs and the iPads. The promotion ends on, you guessed it, September 6th, the likely source of the wrong Apple event date.
The 10th falls on the immediate Tuesday after the end of the promotion.
Given the enormous pressure Apple has been under to demonstrate that its capable of innovating without Steve Jobs, I am sure Apple is eager prove its naysayers wrong and full of crap.
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