Second-cup-of-coffee

29Jan/100

Random thoughts on the iPad

First, I didn’t think of female hygiene products when I heard the name. I thought pad of paper. I am kind of surprised that so many people mentioned that. I remember people decrying the naming of the Nintendo Wii and saying that it would not succeed solely on how terrible the name was. I don’t think many people even remember the hubbub about the Wii’s name now that it is such a huge success and so commonplace. I think the same thing is true of the iPad – if it is an attractive device that people want at an affordable price, then it will sell regardless of the name.

That said, I am really impressed with the price point. Seeing all of the discussion leading up to the announcement, I figured it would be in the $800 - $1,000 range. $499 for the low-end model seems like a great value… especially if you’re looking at, say, a Kindle DX. And, obviously, the iPad will have a lot of additional uses beyond being used as an eReader and, so, to me would seem like a better choice if you’re looking into that price range.

I understand why they went with the iPhone OS but I am still disappointed for a couple of reasons. First, most of the apps for the iPhone (which I do own) are not very robust. They are generally quite gimmicky. They are definitely not as full-featured as Macintosh applications. That said, the iPhone interface is obviously geared to the iPad’s multi-touch interface. I mean, it is essentially a big iphone, after all, and it isn’t clear how easy the full-fledged Mac OS X could be moved to a multitouch interface. But, I still would have liked to see it based on Mac OS X. I fear that Apple is losing focus of their full-fledged computers and are risking becoming much more of a gadget maker.

Another reason the iPod OS approach is disappointing to me is that you’ll have Apple as a gatekeeper to all applications (unless it is jailbroken or something similar). I understand why Apple would want to do this… think of all the revenue this generates as they get a cut of every paid application sold. Indeed, this may well be one reason that the hardware price is so low. Much like razors, they can make money on the blades (or the apps). But, having a gatekeeper in place is very limiting for developers. Will Apple refuse to release applications like Firefox that would compete with their built-in apps? If the iPhone’s history is any indication then, yes, they will limit applications and stifle competing products.

And, speaking of competing products, iPad will not support Flash. Perhaps there will be a workaround in the future but the iPhone still does not have Flash support. I have to wonder if Flash and Silverlight would be blocked to lock users out of all of the alternatives to the iTunes Store. The iPad would be much more attractive if I could watch Netflix movies or Hulu content right from it. Of course, having these options available would really limit the appeal of paying for content from the iTunes Store.

In the end, I think that I am not the target audience for one of these devices. That said, I do think that Apple will sell a tons of iPads. They are a really cool and neat toy… I would just not be willing to pay that much for something which, in my mind, offers so few advantages to having a smartphone and a laptop.

Filed under: Computing, General No Comments
15Jan/100

Photos from our Hawaiian vacation

Filed under: General No Comments
14Jan/100

Using Windows 7’s Snap feature on dual monitors

One new feature in Windows 7 that I really dig is the “Snap” feature where, if you drag a window to the side of the screen, it will be resized to take up half the screen size. I was lucky enough to get a new monitor at work so that I could have a dual display with my laptop and it is great but it was not immediately apparent to me how to use Snap with a dual monitor setup. When I would drag a window to the edge of the screen, it would move that window onto the other monitor. I figured out that if you use the key combinations to invoke Snap, instead of the mouse, you can use Snap on either monitor. Simply make the window active that you want to snap and use one of the following combinations:

  1. Windows – Left Arrow snaps to the left.
  2. Windows – Right Arrow snaps to the right.
  3. Windows – Up Arrow maximizes the window.

The Snap feature will use the monitor that the window is currently on.

Filed under: Computing No Comments
12Jan/100

Windows 7 woes

I have been, more or less, happily running Windows 7 on my MacBook Pro for a few weeks now. I wound up formatting the drive during the Mac OS X install and then installing only Windows 7 on the drive and using the OS X disc to install the Windows driver. I went a while with no crashes and digging the interface improvements. However, lately I experienced two crashes. A bummer, to be sure, but even more disconcerting was that all my open files seemed to be corrupted after reboot. Dreamweaver couldn’t start up because of a corrupted preference file and all of the files I had been editing were corrupt. The file size seemed fine but the files were blank in any text editor. Grrrrr…

One other thing this file loss caused me to realize is that Restore Previous Versions on Windows 7 is no substitute for Time Machine. I had thought that Windows 7 would save versions of changed files in between the daily incremental backups that were running. Apparently, though, previous versions are saved during the incremental backup and during System Restore points which can be triggered by software installs, for example.

Time Machine, in comparison, backs up changed files every hour. And it can be used to easily do a software restore or migrate information to another machine. I have been looking for a substitute for Windows 7 but, so far, cannot find anything close to being as smooth, seamless and as slick as Time Machine.

Filed under: Computing No Comments