William Goodall's Blog Occasional mutterings

December 22, 2009

Will developers be the next battleground in smartphones?

Filed under: Apple,iOS,IT,Microsoft — William_T_Goodall @ 15:11

A couple of weeks ago, Gartner issued a market report indicating that Microsoft’s share of the smartphone market had fallen to less than 8 percent in the last year, while Apple and RIM both made significant gains. Microsoft is at risk of falling into last place in mobile phones if it doesn’t do something about it. So what’s the one strength Microsoft can bring to the table? [From Will developers be the next battleground in smartphones?]

Commercial developers follow the money, and there’s little money in Microsoft mobile compared to iPhone. FOSS developers develop for Android first and Microsoft last.

December 21, 2009

Steve Jobs named world’s best CEO

Filed under: Apple,iOS,IT,Microsoft — William_T_Goodall @ 22:16

Redmond’s Steve? Not so much The prestigious Harvard Business Review has published a ranking of the world’s best-performing CEOs, and we’ll give you one guess as to who is El Numero Uno.…Offloading malware protection to the cloud [From Steve Jobs named world’s best CEO]

And Steve Ballmer isn’t in the top 100.

December 18, 2009

Canon MP270

Filed under: Apple,IT,Unboxing — William_T_Goodall @ 19:37

Arrived yesterday at 11:09.

IMG_5000.JPG IMG_5001.JPG IMG_5002.JPG IMG_5003.JPG

Had the old USB cable so I didn’t need to get one. Downloaded the newest software from Canon and up and running. The envelope printing is much easier than the old printer and the OCR works better too, not that I ever find much need for that. Used up the sample photo-paper and thought the results were very good. I’ll probably never buy any more.

Cheap, prints quickly and well, works with OS X 10.6.2. Ink looks dear but I don’t print very much.

iPhone Claims 46% of Japanese Smartphone Market

Filed under: Apple,iOS,IT — William_T_Goodall @ 16:16

MobileCrunch details a research report [Google translation] released last week by Japanese market research firm Impress R&D showing that the iPhone commands 46.1% of the smartphone market there.For this year, Impress sees the 3G comm… [From iPhone Claims 46% of Japanese Smartphone Market]

So much for those ‘iPhone fails to catch on in Japan’ stories that were going around.

December 16, 2009

“Apple has a two or three-year lead” in mobile internet domination

Filed under: Apple,iOS,IT,Microsoft,Nokia — William_T_Goodall @ 15:46

Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Internet, Apple, iPhone, iPod touch

Philip Elmer-DeWitt has an excellent article over at Fortune’s Apple 2.0 blog on Morgan Stanley’s The Mobile Internet seminar. The article is full of juicy tidbits, but here is the main course:

Based on past performance, according to Morgan Stanley, Apple is in the “pole position” in the race to dominate mobile Internet computing, which is supposed to be for the 2000s what desktop Internet computing was for the 1990s, personal computing for the 1980s, mini computing for the 1970s, and mainframe computing for the 1960s.

“Apple has a two or three-year lead” according to Katy Huberty, thanks to an installed base of 57 million handsets, 100,000 apps and 200 million iTunes subscribers with credit card numbers on file.
Another interesting tidbit that DeWitt spotlights is a diagram that compares Facebook’s 350,000 apps and 137% year-over-year growth with the iPhone’s 100,000 apps and 163% growth. As DeWitt points out, “The place where Mark Zuckerberg’s 430 million users overlap with Steve Jobs’ 57 million is the sweet spot of the mobile Internet. It’s here, according to Morgan Stanley, where we find the future of computing.”

Be sure to check out DeWitt’s article, as it’s a great read, but if you want to delve deeper, you can check out the 92 slides of the Morgan Stanley presentation, the 659-slide “key themes” presentation, and the massive 424-page Mobile Internet Report, all in PDF format.TUAW”Apple has a two or three-year lead” in mobile internet domination originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments [From “Apple has a two or three-year lead” in mobile internet domination]

Nokia’s response to the iPhone may work or not. Microsoft doesn’t seem to have one yet, and is pressed on the other side by Android.

Printer

Filed under: Apple,IT — William_T_Goodall @ 15:23

My old (seven years next January) hp psc 2110 started the death rattle again today. After dismantling, cleaning and reassembling it I managed to print one postage paid envelope before it started rattling again. So I hied off to Amazon to find a cheap all-in-one with support for OS X 10.6 eventually settling on a Canon PIXMA MP270 with Prime next day delivery, and driver support for print and scan according to Apple. I only got through about two sets of ink on the old printer so I’m not worried about running costs.


December 12, 2009

Is Apple Buying VoIP Provider iCall? [Apple]

Filed under: Apple,iOS,IT — William_T_Goodall @ 10:28

Is Apple Buying VoIP Provider iCall? [Apple]: “Apple is flush with cash, and as it looks like we’re coming out of the recession (fingers crossed!), it’s in prime position to make some acquisitions. Last week, Apple purchased music startup Lala, for example, and it was sniffing around mobile ad network AdMob before Google acquired it. So what will Apple buy next? One reader just sent us a message that Apple is in talks to acquire VoIP company iCall in a $50 million to $60 million deal. Is this true? iCall co-founder and CEO Arlo Gilbert, reached by phone, would not confirm or deny any talks, but that’s the response he’s supposed to give us. We have not yet heard back from Apple. (Anyway, everyone talks to everyone, so it’s worth discussing.) So, should Apple buy a VoiP company — the way Google, increasingly a rival — has acquired two? (GrandCentral, now Google Voice; and recently Gizmo5.) For its long-term strategy, it makes sense for Apple to at least have a VoIP product available — even if only for defensive purposes, even if it never launches. In the short term, it would probably piss off Apple’s carrier partners, which sell the majority of Apple’s iPhones, and currently make the vast majority of their revenue by selling voice phone service. But for Apple’s longer term strategy, it is a good idea. Why? It’s obvious to everyone but wireless carriers that wireless carriers are increasingly becoming dumb pipes. People are sick of carriers’ ridiculous fees and policies, and just want a good device that can connect to the Internet and make calls. As data networks evolve, it will be possible to make calls as well over the Internet as by using a voice network, and cheaper. (It’s already getting there.) And that’s when Apple may seek to increase its control over iPhone owners — and recurring revenue from them — by becoming a VoIP service provider. Moreover, as that becomes a bigger industry, Apple should not give that business to Skype, Google, or anyone else. So for that long-term interest, Apple may already be hiring (or acq-hiring) today. iCall has more than 100,000 iPhone users, its CEO tells us, so it already knows the business pretty well. It also owns the trademark to ‘iCall,’ which Apple may or may not want to own. And perhaps it has executives and/or technology that Apple could want. So whether true or not, it would not be too surprising.

(Via Gizmodo.)

This rumour makes too much sense to be true.

December 11, 2009

Apple Countersues Nokia [Apple]

Filed under: Apple,iOS,IT,Nokia — William_T_Goodall @ 16:40

Last October, Nokia sued Apple for a 10-patent infringement. Today, Apple has sued back while snubbing Nokia with this awesomely catty one-liner: “Other companies must compete with us by inventing their own technologies, not just by stealing ours.”

That was the only official Apple statement we’ve yet seen on the matter, by Bruce Sewell, Apple’s General Counsel and senior vice president. Apple is countersuing Nokia for 13 infringing patents.That’s three more than Nokia. And it’s hard to imagine Nokia coming back at Apple with any less than 18 at this point.

Apple Countersues Nokia CUPERTINO, California-December 11, 2009-Responding to a lawsuit brought against the company by Nokia, Apple® today filed a countersuit claiming that Nokia is infringing 13 Apple patents. “Other companies must compete with us by inventing their own technologies, not just by stealing ours,” said Bruce Sewell, Apple’s General Counsel and senior vice president.

Apple ignited the personal computer revolution in the 1970s with the Apple II and reinvented the personal computer in the 1980s with the Macintosh. Today, Apple continues to lead the industry in innovation with its award-winning computers, OS X operating system and iLife and professional applications. Apple is also spearheading the digital media revolution with its iPod portable music and video players and iTunes online store, and has entered the mobile phone market with its revolutionary iPhone.[From Apple Countersues Nokia [Apple]]

This should be amusing.

December 5, 2009

Apple Has Acquired Lala

Filed under: Apple,IT — William_T_Goodall @ 15:22

Earlier today we covered rumors that Apple was in talks to acquire streaming music service Lala. Now New York Times tech reporter Brad Stone has tweeted that it’s a done deal. He writes, “Apple has acquired digital music startup Lala. Now updating our story”. You can find the NYT story here. This could be bad news for Lala users. It’s unlikely that the innovative deals negotiated by Lala will survive through the acquisition. For over a year, Lala users have been purchasing the rights to stream their music an unlimited number of times for ten cents per song. If the deals with the music labels go up in smoke, Lala may lose the right to stream those songs. In other words, all the money users have been spending on web songs may go down the drain. If the deals are nullified, hopefully Apple will renegotiate them to at least cover existing purchases until it releases its own streaming music service. We’ve reached out to Lala but have yet to hear back. Likewise, this may well affect the Lala music gifts that have been recently offered by Facebook, and it could also harm the Music OneBox service Google recently launched (though Google can still rely on MySpace/iLike for its song streams). Stone writes that Apple is interested in Lala because of its engineering talent and technology, and that it was Lala that initiated the discussions. From the Times: One person with knowledge of the deal, but who was not authorized to discuss it, said that the negotiations originated when Lala executives concluded that their prospects for turning a profit in the short term were dim and initiated discussions with Eddy Cue, Apple’s vice president in charge of iTunes. This person said Apple would primarily be buying Lala’s engineers, including its energetic co-founder Bill Nguyen, and their experience with cloud-based music services. The deal makes sense. It seems inevitable that Apple will eventually launch its own cloud-based streaming music service. And that’s exactly what Lala is — an iTunes in the cloud, with some interesting pricing mechanics. A few other interesting things to note. This acquisition comes a little more than a month after Lala was integrated into Google’s OneBox and Facebook’s gift store. Lala may well have been viewing these launches as last-chance efforts to find a path to profitability. Given these reports that Lala’s “prospects for turning a profit in the short term were dim”, it looks like those launches may not have gone as well as Lala hoped. Crunch Network: CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors [From Apple Has Acquired Lala]

Apple really doesn’t stand still and let the competition catch up.

December 2, 2009

Top 5 Assclowns Laughing at the iPhone Back in 2007 [Retromodo]

Filed under: Apple,iOS,IT,Microsoft,Nokia — William_T_Goodall @ 17:37

Top 5 Assclowns Laughing at the iPhone Back in 2007 [Retromodo]: “I wonder how many times Steve Ballmer laughed about the iPhone after pooping all over it in this 2007 interview. My guess: Not many. Don’t worry Steve, here’s the rest of the top 5 assclowns who dug their own grave: gawkerGallery(5416781,6,’Top 5 iPhone Assclowns’);

(Via Gizmodo.)

Nothing like lame punditry to raise a laugh.

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