I was able to order a silver 64 GB iPhone 5s for my brother who has courageously served this country. He deserved it. And after that, I was happy. I also got one for myself. If there's anything I don't cut back in, it's my mobile devices.
And even now, you can still get iPhone 5s (iPhone 5c models as well if that's your color) with a 7-10 day ship time if you go with a carrier. The unlocked T-mobile models, ones that I bought, will take a bit longer.
All in all, it was a wonderful ordering experience not seen in previous years. Getting the iPhone 4s was an ordeal and I don't even want to talk about the iPhone 5.
I still have a mind to see if I can get to an Apple store to get one and cancel my online order if there are still stock left this even or sometimes this weekend.
Friday, September 20, 2013
iPhone 5s Still Very Much Available For Shipping In The Next 10 Day Time Frame
I was able to order a silver 64 GB iPhone 5s for my brother who has courageously served this country. He deserved it. And after that, I was happy. I also got one for myself. If there's anything I don't cut back in, it's my mobile devices.
And even now, you can still get iPhone 5s (iPhone 5c models as well if that's your color) with a 7-10 day ship time if you go with a carrier. The unlocked T-mobile models, ones that I bought, will take a bit longer.
All in all, it was a wonderful ordering experience not seen in previous years. Getting the iPhone 4s was an ordeal and I don't even want to talk about the iPhone 5.
I still have a mind to see if I can get to an Apple store to get one and cancel my online order if there are still stock left this even or sometimes this weekend.
And even now, you can still get iPhone 5s (iPhone 5c models as well if that's your color) with a 7-10 day ship time if you go with a carrier. The unlocked T-mobile models, ones that I bought, will take a bit longer.
All in all, it was a wonderful ordering experience not seen in previous years. Getting the iPhone 4s was an ordeal and I don't even want to talk about the iPhone 5.
I still have a mind to see if I can get to an Apple store to get one and cancel my online order if there are still stock left this even or sometimes this weekend.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
How Fast Is iOS 7 Adoption? Fast. Very Fast.
Thanks to Dave the Mobile Sage, he sent this website (mixpanel) that tracked iOS adoption. Specifically, iOS 7 is what we're interested in. In less than 24 hours, it's already at 1/3 of the iOS market.
That's fast. Can you imagine this kind of adoption for any other platform. Certainly not Android and, even with closed ones like Blackberry, Web OS, or Windows Phone, you can't get this kind of adoption rate.
It's good for the platform. Great for the end users. And all around high-fives for developers.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Mobile: Binge Watching Of Shows Through Online Video Services On the Rise - Duh? It's The Only Way To Watch Shows
This CNET post about binge watching of TV shows seems to suggest that its a Netflix only phenomenon but it's not. It's happening on other online video services as well.
This should not come as a surprise. Folks are watching shows on Netflix, Hulu, and others through their phones and tablets. Maybe on their TV too. And the ability to watch these shows anywhere, at home, on the go, or even at work makes this new video watching behavior easier.
But while mobile is important, what's more important is that online services makes the whole season of a show available at the same time. With all two seasons of Scandal on Netflix, I would not have been able to binge watch it since Sunday night.
(Nielsen Chart)
This should not come as a surprise. Folks are watching shows on Netflix, Hulu, and others through their phones and tablets. Maybe on their TV too. And the ability to watch these shows anywhere, at home, on the go, or even at work makes this new video watching behavior easier.
But while mobile is important, what's more important is that online services makes the whole season of a show available at the same time. With all two seasons of Scandal on Netflix, I would not have been able to binge watch it since Sunday night.
Should Windows Phone Go Open Source? To Buy Time But Still Need Something More To Turn Things Around - It's Own iPod Moment
Source: Wired.
Here is an interesting Wired post about what Microsoft should do about its mobile situation, which is bad, and maybe to turn things around, it should open up Windows.
The post has a thing or two to say about past attempts at open source. It's likely, in my opinion, Steve Balmer, current and outgoing CEO, didn't go for it. Just like he didn't go for projects that could have put Microsoft ahead and put the iconic software company in a stronger position.
It's why the post believes a new CEO could utlimately do what Balmer was too afraid to do. It's unlikely. I'm tell you that now. But even if somehow, the new CEO was brave enough to try, it would only be the first step. It may slow the bleeding but won't stop it.
Microsoft will still need something new that convinces hardware makers, software developers, and, more importantly, businesses and consumers that it has something new and innovative. The new CEO will need its iPod moment. It's the only way to turn Microsoft around in the eyes of the media and public.
It can't not compete with Android and iOS head-on. It's losing big time and will continue to. And the wearable computing device revolution on the horizon is a good place to start.
When Steve Jobs came back to Apple, it didn't try to hit back at the PC market. Apple first stopped the bleed and found that it could be a big player in the rising MP3 player market. And it used that to launch an innovative device to get the company back into the public's mind set.
Sure, Microsoft would have to continue to release new phones and Surface tablets. New Xbox devices will need to be released and updated. But it's this new product or service that is needed to get Microsoft back on the path.
Why is this important to Apple and Google fans? Well, word is that Blackberry is looking to sell itself off and may be looking to lay off 40% of its workforce, we can no longer count on the former smartphone champ to put up a fight in the mobile market anymore. Only Microsoft remains with the muscles and, yes, smarts, to do it.
We want more competition. Not less.
Here is an interesting Wired post about what Microsoft should do about its mobile situation, which is bad, and maybe to turn things around, it should open up Windows.
The post has a thing or two to say about past attempts at open source. It's likely, in my opinion, Steve Balmer, current and outgoing CEO, didn't go for it. Just like he didn't go for projects that could have put Microsoft ahead and put the iconic software company in a stronger position.
It's why the post believes a new CEO could utlimately do what Balmer was too afraid to do. It's unlikely. I'm tell you that now. But even if somehow, the new CEO was brave enough to try, it would only be the first step. It may slow the bleeding but won't stop it.
Microsoft will still need something new that convinces hardware makers, software developers, and, more importantly, businesses and consumers that it has something new and innovative. The new CEO will need its iPod moment. It's the only way to turn Microsoft around in the eyes of the media and public.
It can't not compete with Android and iOS head-on. It's losing big time and will continue to. And the wearable computing device revolution on the horizon is a good place to start.
When Steve Jobs came back to Apple, it didn't try to hit back at the PC market. Apple first stopped the bleed and found that it could be a big player in the rising MP3 player market. And it used that to launch an innovative device to get the company back into the public's mind set.
Sure, Microsoft would have to continue to release new phones and Surface tablets. New Xbox devices will need to be released and updated. But it's this new product or service that is needed to get Microsoft back on the path.
Why is this important to Apple and Google fans? Well, word is that Blackberry is looking to sell itself off and may be looking to lay off 40% of its workforce, we can no longer count on the former smartphone champ to put up a fight in the mobile market anymore. Only Microsoft remains with the muscles and, yes, smarts, to do it.
We want more competition. Not less.
With iTunes Radio, We Could Be Moving Towards A Free-To-Listen Model For All
Starting today, anyone with an iOS device that can install the brand new iOS 7 will also get a special new treat and feature: iTunes Radio. I'm assuming that Apple will release the iPad version of iOS 7 as well.
Essentially, iTunes Radio is Apple's new modern answer to give users the ability to stream music that they like and, hopefully, discover new ones. There's word that Apple is also hiring special human curators for this new feature.
Did I also mention that it's free? This is significant because this will really hit some music streaming services hard. Today's music streaming services like Pandora, often used as the service most likely to be hurt by Apple's entry into the radio streaming biz, offer limited free services and rely on paid services in order to generate revenue.
And even if Spotify doesn't directly compete with Apple's iTunes Radio because Apple doesn't let users picks specific songs to stream like Spotify, free is going to be a big deal no matter what.
But I don't think services will go away because of this. If anything, they'll need to evolve, innovate and provide users with features that Apple does not offer and deemed worthy of paying for.
Essentially, iTunes Radio is Apple's new modern answer to give users the ability to stream music that they like and, hopefully, discover new ones. There's word that Apple is also hiring special human curators for this new feature.
Did I also mention that it's free? This is significant because this will really hit some music streaming services hard. Today's music streaming services like Pandora, often used as the service most likely to be hurt by Apple's entry into the radio streaming biz, offer limited free services and rely on paid services in order to generate revenue.
And even if Spotify doesn't directly compete with Apple's iTunes Radio because Apple doesn't let users picks specific songs to stream like Spotify, free is going to be a big deal no matter what.
But I don't think services will go away because of this. If anything, they'll need to evolve, innovate and provide users with features that Apple does not offer and deemed worthy of paying for.
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