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Apple as a Record Label?

Rumours are abounding that Jay-Z – now free of his obligations to Def Jam – is going to team up with Apple to start a record company.

Please no. My next door neighbour’s terriers are better yappers (sorry, rappers) than Jay-Z. And he like totally ruined Umbrella okay?

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The iPhone

Most of the world’s population is satisfied with ‘good enough’. Designers, manufacturers, service providers, customers and vendors are perfectly happy with providing and receiving ‘adequate’. Not because they strive but fail to improve upon this benchmark, but because they are unable to see or imagine beyond it. So, if you’re one of the people who has bought a Linksys Media Streamer from PC World this weekend [PC Pro Review], please look away now. This review is not for you.

I’ve read the reviews of the iPhone and I’ve read the many comments by those in the ‘good enough’ camp. They’re the ones complaining that it’s technically inferior, too expensive or is missing ‘obvious’ features. They’re also the ones who don’t recognise that design means everything.

It’s been a few weeks since I received my iPhone, which makes it about time to give my initial impressions. You may have read countless reviews each of which will have gone through the iPhone’s features, so I’m not going to repeat them here. Instead I’ll concentrate on how it works for me and why I think it is the best personal device ever created. It may even be the best anything ever created by man.

I’d never seen an iPhone in person prior to getting mine from the Apple online store and despite reading the specs I didn’t appreciate how small it is. It can easily fit in a trouser pocket and doesn’t feel bulky or oddly shaped. This makes it easy to carry and crucially something that you want to carry around.

The overall styling is sleek and unobtrusive. It doesn’t scream at you – most phones are garish, what with their colours, styles and nobbly keyboards. The iPhone has no markings bar the rounded rectangle on the home button and the Apple logo. Nor does it blink or display anything when it is sleeping, but it’s still functional and therefore able to receive mobile communications such as calls, texts and emails. This simplicity actually makes it trustworthy because it doesn’t demand my attention except on my terms.

Thoughts on the user-interface

The multi-touch display rightly renders physical keyboards and scrollers obsolete on such a device. The sheer range of interactivity and the ease of achieving tasks makes getting work done pleasurable. Pinching, scrolling and flipping through information is completely natural.

When it comes to the pop-up keyboard I guess some people get it and some don’t. After a couple of days I found it to be quicker to use than the marvellous Graffiti. The autocorrection is excellent and it learns both what you type and how you type it. This means non-dictionary words can be used. Just ‘use the force’ and much of what you type will turn out fine. The visual feedback is almost subliminal when typing quickly, making the lack of tactile feedback a non-issue. If you notice it predicting correctly whilst typing a word just press the spacebar and the word will be completed. This is excellent for long words. For other corrections and navigation the zoom loupe is innovative and very usable. I’m yet to be completely happy with using both thumbs to type. Instead I just use one finger or one thumb. That turns out to be plenty quick enough.

Thoughts on the applications

One important factor about the built-in applications is that you shouldn’t ‘feature compare’ with other mobile devices or desktop applications. The overriding aim of each application is to get something done as quickly as possible. Get in. Get out.

For example, unlike my Palm T3, the iPhone makes its own mind up about connecting to networks. I wake the iPhone from sleep and it’s still in GPRS or EDGE mode. Within a second or two it finds my wireless network and connects to it. No acknowledgements, no permission request. It just does it.

Mail seems to go against this, because it doesn’t support push e-mail. Instead you need to grab mail manually or set up an automatic schedule (starting at 15 minute intervals). I’d argue that push e-mail is a technology driven solution. A gimmick that solves no problem. Why? Because e-mail is an inherently inefficient way of communicating timely information. If you need to communicate with someone urgently, use SMS messages or actually speak to them. When was the last time you received an e-mail that needed to be responded to within 15 minutes of the author sending it to you?

A lot of thought has gone into how events are notified. Alarms occur only briefly and are not repeated. This is, after all, a device that you keep with you so you’ll probably always be near it when something happens. If you’re not then you’re not using the iPhone to its fullest extent. Audible interruptions subtly punch through anything you’re listening to then fade away again. I smiled the first time I received an e-mail whilst listening to music. If you receive an SMS whilst the iPhone is asleep, the text of the SMS is immediately displayed when you wake it up (i.e. on the Unlock page). The same applies to missed alarms. There is no ‘Today’ screen and this is actually a Very Good Thing because ‘Today’ screens clutter your mind and ignore context.

The iPhone renders a number of filetypes. The most useful of these are Microsoft Word, Excel or Adobe PDF formats. Whilst you cannot change such documents reading them is straightforward. Because you can’t modify these document types, there’s no extraneous user-interface to get in the way. For example, you’ll see a ‘Page x of y’ marker over the top of a PDF document whilst flipping through the pages, but it disappears shortly after you’ve finished scrolling, leaving just the document on view. This ‘less is more’ approach is a fundamental tenet of the iPhone.

A side effect of this is how Safari works. You can browse the full internet. Providing you don’t need Flash or Java you won’t notice any difference. The ability to double-tap to zoom in on a portion of a page allows you to focus on content without the noise of competing material such as advertisements. I’m a proponent of the view that the iPhone will re-invigorate and re-invent the internet: there are many websites which have a better user-interface on the iPhone than their desktop equivalent. Particularly Facebook, Google Reader and Remember The Milk.

But this has also applied to two other in-built applications: YouTube and the iTunes. YouTube was my first killer application on the iPhone: Get In, search or browse, view and/or bookmark, Get Out. iTunes is the same. I prefer buying music on iTunes on my iPhone than I do on my MacBook and because the iPhone knows how to handle iTunes music links, weekly alerts or website links to the store works seamlessly.

What about Notes and To Dos? Mac OS X Leopard is an unmitigated disaster in this area. Apple Mail 3 promised so much and in its first iteration delivered shambolic half-working unreliable Notes and To Dos. So much that I’ve almost abandoned them. The iPhone has its own little Notes application which works nicely. I even like the font it uses. There is no synchronisation and without third party applications such as iPhoneDrive, the only way you can get a Note out of the iPhone is to e-mail it. However because Notes are temporal fragments of thoughts, the rather simple nature of the application proves beneficial. I now use Notes as a direct replacement for my 3×3 sheets of paper.

To Dos are ignored, even those created in iCal. Even if support was provided, To Dos are non-repeatable. Instead, I use Remember The Milk, which has a custom iPhone version (this link only works correctly on the iPhone) and is currently the killer web application for the device.

Google Maps is a curious beast. In some respects it works wonderfully, especially when you need to find directions. The main problem with it is persuading it to find addresses. Part of this problem is that existing Contacts need to be formatted according to their country. Otherwise you’ll find Google Maps looking to the US for locations in the UK. Oh and sometimes Scotland turns up as a County. As part of my investigation into what works and what doesn’t I’ve found a useful side-effect. It’s easier to add a new Contact to your Address Book via Google Maps on the iPhone than any other means. Simply type in the postcode, or use Google Maps’ excellent search feature, then tweak the contact details as required.

You’ll have noticed I’ve not mentioned the Phone or Voicemail features. They don’t need to be mentioned. That’s a testament to their brilliance.

Conclusion

Until the iPhone appeared, there was only one other mobile device I wanted to carry with me wherever I went: the iPod. The iPhone has taken its place and allows me to do so much more when I’m away from my Mac. It goes everywhere with me. The upfront cost, the ongoing monthly cost and the 18 month contractual tie-in to O2 are irrelevant because of the benefit it provides to my life and my work. It’s about time I used the R-word: remarkable.

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iPhone First Impressions

At some point I’ll post some detailed thoughts and opinions of the iPhone, now that I have one, but here’s a few to be getting along with:

  1. The iPhone demonstrates so dramatically what’s wrong with user interaction on desktop and laptop computers, and that extends to applications, websites etc.. For the majority of its use, the mouse – a device pioneered by Xerox and then Apple – seems antiquated now that we have touch screens.
  2. I wrote before about the dawn of ubiquitous computing. The iPhone really does mark this event, but it does so in ways that I never imagined. What could be more personal than the Personal Computer? Even PDAs and the Apple Newton still feel like computers when compared to the iPhone. I’m not in a position to describe how it makes me feel, or indeed what my relationship will be – but it could be that the iPhone is the first truly personal digital assistant (if I may use such a vulgar term).
  3. YouTube is the killer application, because it’s more personable, quicker and easier to use than its web equivalent.
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iPhowned

6.04pm: Sitting in my lounge drinking some lovely Italian coffee and occasionally some 2005 Kangaroo Point is a far better way of purchasing an iPhone than visiting a mobile phone store and suffering primary colour techno-porn. Ugh.

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Them 2!

iphone-backsoon.jpg

No, I couldn’t be bothered to hang around a dark and dank Inverness. Carphone Warehouse did have half a dozen ‘Say hello to iPhone’ posters and I did see three O2 girls wandering around jumpered-up (but they could have simply been interested in the Christmas market).

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About the iPhone SDK

Was I surprised about the news? Yes. More for its timing rather than Steve Jobs’ actual admission that we’re going to get a development kit for the iPhone.

When the iPhone was released in June, and even prior to that, with its initial announcement, much was made of using Web 2.0 technology as a way of providing reliable, secure applications to run on the iPhone without compromising the integrity of its mobile features. I praised this change of direction signalling the move to ‘everything online’. It’s the future, trust me.

Now with the news of the SDK comes another thought: Apple planned this all along. By initially disappointing traditional software developers, the iPhone got more press. People talked about it more on blogs. Furthermore, it pleased web developers who saw it as a great opportunity to develop or re-imagine the burgeoning web application market. It was no accident: witness the development and release of Safari for Windows – a pre-requisite for testing such applications for those without an iPhone. This also served to emphasise the differences between Safari on the iPhone and other mobile web browsers.

Opening up the iPhone to developers now brings in (perhaps) the original target: Mac developers. There’s a third target too: developers of existing mobile phone applications. Members of this group aren’t necessarily Mac users or developers, thereby providing another excuse / reason to switch. The biggest hurdle to switching platforms is the cost of the SDK and the framework / API of the target architecture. In the case of Mac OS X, the SDK is free, bundled as part of every shipped version, and the framework is beautiful.

By not announcing the iPhone SDK at its launch Apple created another market and showed the rest of the mobile development community that there are plenty of other things to develop besides a zillion Today screens.

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Awards

TUAW notes that the iPhone is now winning a number of awards and reckons that it’ll win more as 2007 draws to a close. TUAW links this to the question ‘what else came out this year that came even close to moving gadget technology ahead?’

It’s not for this that the iPhone should be winning awards. But for two other game changers:

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If Apple did make it better, why didn’t they want to tell us?

The Unofficial Apple Weblog asks this question in regard to the fixes in the recent 1.0.2 software update for the new iPod Classic and Nano.

Apple rarely documents minor changes and improvements, or indeed cool stuff (like the new Apple Keyboard caps-lock behaviour). Instead it prefers to let the fans find out and blog about them. In some respects this is why Apple has never blogged, only occasionally and recently releasing ‘letters’ from Steve Jobs when certain important matters arise.

However, as the awareness of Apple products grows, and critically, the market share of Apple computers (particularly the MacBook lines and the iPhone), Apple needs to start thinking more traditionally. There are a lot of customers (and potential customers) who don’t read blogs or fan-sites. They’re the ones who need to be kept up to date with all things Apple, not just for their benefit, but for others too.

It’s time for the ‘cult’ of Apple to disappear.

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