Your browser (Internet Explorer 6) is out of date. It has known security flaws and may not display all features of this and other websites. Learn how to update your browser.
X
Post

iPhone 4S Announced Today

My friend and I used a Google Hangout to chat while we watched all the feeds from the Apple announcement today. It was quite a long proceeding, and it took a while for the good stuff to be revealed. But here it is. The iPhone 4:

  • Much faster. It uses the dual core A5 processor for 2 times the CPU performance and 7 times the graphics performance.
  • New 8 megapixel camera with stabilization and better performance in low light conditions.
  • World phone. This thing will work on all carriers, including Sprint, who will be carrying the iPhone for the first time.
  • Better antennas and better download speeds.
  • Siri assistant is only on the iPhone 4S.
  • 16GB, 32GB, and 64GB models for $200, $300, and $400.
  • 1080p video recording.
  • Slightly better battery performance.
  • AirPlay mirroring

I remember upgrading from the 3G to the 3GS, and the difference was huge. I assume that the upgrade from the iPhone 4 to iPhone 4S will be similar. But I’m not so sure I can make myself pay the money for this phone. I think I’ll stick with the iPhone 4 that I have now, unless my boss pays for a 4S.

Oh, and the iPhone 4S and iOS 5 are shipping October 14. iOS 4 pre-orders begin October 7th.

Post

Okay Apple, Time to Spill the Beans

All indications are the the iPhone 5 will launch in October. It is now September 14th. Rumour sites are going hog wild with reports of Sprint employees being denied holidays, the big marketing push the China Telecom plans, Sprint’s pricing plans, and more. Isn’t it about time Apple put us all at ease and finally announced the iPhone 5?

It’s been too long since the iPhone 4, Apple. Time to spill the beans.

Post

iPhone 5 Befuddles Me

The iPhone 5 befuddles me. Historically, Apple has released a new iPhone on a yearly schedule. If rumours are to be believed, the iPhone 5 will be released soon, taking about an extra six months to develop compared to the previous three iPhone designs. Even the iPhone 4, which was a radical design departure, came out on schedule.

So what is it about the iPhone 5 that is taking so long to develop? Insiders and pundits suggest that the iPhone 5 will have the A5 processor that’s also in the iPad 2, so the core CPU is a known quantity. Are they having trouble with heat dissipation perhaps? I’m just guessing. Rumour sites also suggest that the iPhone 5 will have a larger display, but then we also read that the iPhone 5 will not have a larger display. Who to believe? Mixed messages are all we’re getting on this front, but even a larger display doesn’t tell us why we’re getting a six month delay. Especially since the display will probably have the same resolution as the iPhone 4′s Retina display.

The latest rumours are that the iPhone 5 won’t even ship with iOS 5 installed. Developers who have the latest beta are saying that iOS 5 is awesome but isn’t ready for prime time. So put those things together, and you can’t blame iOS 5 for the iPhone 5′s extra development time.

What other features could Apple possibly be adding to this phone? NFC? Hardly rocket science. Frankly I’m flummoxed. Does Apple have another market-shifting product in the works? Something we can’t imagine until it happens? Will the iPhone 5 be one of those products that’ll make Samsung, HTC, and RIM moan in despair?

All I can say is, it better be worth it!

Links

Firefox Imagines a Tablet Version

Firefox put out some concept images of what their Firefox browser for tablets could look like. Interesting.

Post

Tweet Marker – Not so Much

I was excited when I read that Tweetbot would be integrating Tweet Marker support. Tweet Marker is a service that keeps you in sync between different Twitter clients, so you don’t miss any tweets in your timeline. I didn’t have a Twitter client for the Mac. Up until now I’ve never bothered, precisely because which tweets I’ve read couldn’t be kept in sync. But now they could, so I needed to find a client for the Mac.

I found that Twitterrific was the only Mac client that supported Tweet Marker, which was fine. Especially because it was on sale for just five bucks. So I bought and installed it on my Mac.

I can now report that Tweet Marker doesn’t work very well. The Twitterrific folks replied to my complaining tweets about this by saying that it works for them. Great for them. But no help to me. They pointed out that I have to exit the apps for optimal performance, but that didn’t seem to help much. (It did help a little.) Sometimes it worked going from Twitterrific to Tweetbot. But not if Tweetbot had to load so many tweets that it had to skip some – even if the marker was on a tweet that was not skipped. Going from Tweetbot to Twitterrific was even worse. It just wasn’t reliable.

So now I’m back to a one-client Twitter universe. Back to Tweetbot. I hope the Tweet Marker, Tweetbot, and Twitterrific folks can get this stuff working, because I’d really love to use it.

[Update: Now that I've read this post, I almost want to give Tweet Marker another chance. I'll tell you what happens if I do.]

Post

Mobile Monday Ottawa

A week and a half ago I went to my first Mobile Monday Ottawa event.

I’m not the most social of people, I’m not a type A, and I am definitely an introvert. But recently I decided to branch out a bit and go to some social events here in Ottawa. It started at Startup Drinks Ottawa (@OTTStartupoDrink on Twitter), where I met a few people. I didn’t really move from table to table (we only made one such move when the table we were at was getting too crowded), but luckily lots of people wanted to drop by our table. I met some new people and added them to my Twitter stream.

Next up was CocoaHeads Ottawa. They had two very interesting presentations, but there wasn’t a lot of socializing. Maybe that happened at the bar afterwards, but from what I saw, not a lot of people went to that (I didn’t).

Last was Mobile Monday, and it was a great event. One of the organizers was Macadamian, an old employer of mine. I couldn’t believe they’re up to about 170 people now! When I was there, the company was about 25 people in size.

There were several headhunters at the Mobile Monday event, looking for mobile developers. That made me feel good because, you know, I’m a mobile developer.

Much to my chagrin I had to miss the last Startup Drinks Ottawa, but I’ll definitely try to make the next one. There are a lot of interesting people to talk to, even if I’m doing a lot more listening than talking.

Post

RIM Cutting 2000 Jobs

I grew up in Waterloo and have a relative who works for RIM in Waterloo. I moved to Ottawa, and have two friends that work for RIM in Ottawa. I was once headhunted by a RIM headhunter, and had their timing been better, I could be working at RIM today. If that had happened, I might have been out of a job soon.

RIM recently announced the cutting of 2000 jobs. This is weird on the one hand because RIM is still profitable, and wouldn’t they want those people to help them regain their leadership position? It’s understandable on the other hand because RIM isn’t doing so well anymore, and they want to prevent actual losses in the upcoming quarters.

As a Canadian, I’m sad that this has happened to RIM. I want our darling high tech company to succeed and to give those yanks a walloping! As a cell phone user, I much prefer the iPhone and just wish the BlackBerry would go away already so that the company I work for doesn’t have to worry about it. On a personal level, I’m really hoping that those I know with RIM jobs don’t lose theirs before they find something new. And I hope they’re wise enough to be looking.

Post

Apple’s Cash Hoard

Matt Richman wrote a great aricle discussing Apple’s huge hoard of cash. Here’s a small excerpt:

And therein lies the secret to Apple’s incredible success in the stock market. The reason AAPL has done so well over the last 10 years is precisely because Apple hasn’t focused on its share price — and instead focused on making “beautifully designed products that are user centric and work how they are supposed to work.” As Fortune magazine put it: “Most companies view the P&L [Profit and Loss statement] as the ultimate proof of a manager’s accountability; Apple turns that dictum on its head by labeling P&L a distraction only the finance chief needs to consider.”

Check out the full article here:

Post

Apple Now Largest Smartphone Vendor

Apple has now beat Nokia as the world’s leading vendor of smartphones. Nokia’s smartphone shipments declined to 16.7 million units in the last quarter. During the same period, Apple shipped 20.3 million iPhones, a dramatic improvement.

Apple is now sitting on the smartphone throne with the likes of RIM, HTC, Samsung, and now Nokia at its feet. The Android platform as a whole, though, still outships Apple in smartphone numbers. But that has been leveling out of late. Are we reaching a stable state? Only time will tell.

Post

Remove Tab Bar When Controller Pushed

Sometimes it’s the little tips that prove really useful, and as such, I present one today. This would have helped me out greatly about three months ago. If you have a UITabBarController, and you’re pushing a new controller in a UINavigationController which is one of the tabs, typically the tab bar across the bottom stays in place. But you can remove it quite easily with this line of code:

controller.hidesBottomBarWhenPushed = YES; // yay! this hides the tab bar!
[self.navigationController pushViewController:controller animated:YES];

I just discovered this recently, and have already made use of it. Good luck.