Steve x3

So it seems Steve (Jobs) has a nice new product (iPad) and other Steve (Fry) met him talked a bit and seems to really like it. I’m not disagreeing with either. I’m sure it’s a great product at a great price, but this Steve isn’t sure where it fits in.

The iPhone and Macbook have their pluses and minuses. Whilst the iPhone is great, the web side can be a pain (mind you O2’s network doesn’t help). Other than that it fits the bill. The Macbook on the other hand is a superb bit of kit, but it’s heavy and less portable. So the iPad should fit in between these two devices. O.k. it’s not a phone, but the phone part of the iPhone is almost secondary to me. It’s used more as a non voice communications tool than a phone, it just happens to have a good phone built it. So it seems apart from the phone element the iPad is a clear winner. Maybe, maybe not. The other advantage of the iPhone is it’s pocket-able, which for me a major consideration.

So at this point it’s not winning.

Looking over at the Macbook it’s hard to see where the iPad wins, other than cost and weight. For me the Macbook is essential for working/input etc whereas the iPad isn’t an input tool. It has the ability to input, but really at this moment in time it’s not a viable solution for working.

A dead duck then?

Probably for me it is, it seems whilst the ability to create on iPad is not lost, it’s certainly no Laptop. It’s miles ahead for creativity compared to the iPhone, but still lacks multitasking that laptop users have relied on for years. Maybe the iPad/iPhone v.4 software will address this. If so then productivity would be increased on both devices.

It’s still missing something important from the MacBook: OS X. Underneath the iPad/iPhone is a mobile version of OS X, which is superb. Unfortunately it’s a closed system, you can’t change it too much and the freedom to buy applications off the shelf isn’t there. Apple don’t want to go down the netbook route, which I can understand. Netbooks are pretty much just a small laptop, not much cheaper than a normal laptop but with a smaller screen and low spec CPU/Ram combination. For portable mobile computing Apple have the MacBook Air, which does come with a very large price tag (which in turn isn’t too far away from the pricing of Dell/HP etc and their MBA style laptops).

So the real reason for the iPad: Content

Apple haven’t hid away from this, in fact it’s probably the biggest win for the device. As a pure content delivery device I don’t think there’s anything to match it for style, price and usability.

Problem I have is I’m not a content person. I do use the iPhone on the bus/train for music, but that’s it. Trying to use an iPhone for the web on the 17 bus is a nightmare, it’s not an easy task (really the roads were bad before the winter and the potholes). Maybe with the iPad it’ll be easier. I suppose it would, after all it’s a bigger device so navigation may be less problematic.

With regards to video content my Bus/Train journeys are too short for anything but a 30 minute video, so nothing again for me here. Maybe the eBooks will be a winner, again not for me as I don’t read (sadly, never got the bug – wouldn’t know where to start now – probably try War and Peace or some other mammoth tome – just to clarify I can read, but don’t read apart from Technical manuals).

Video treat: Stephen Fry unboxes an iPad and accessories

So to conclude:

It’s a great product, but it probably doesn’t fit me.

As I posted before I’ll probably end up with one.

And the next IT related fail is……….

………yes another External Hard Disk Drive.

After the woe that was Western Digital and the My Book Studio annoyanceware it’s the turn of Freecom.

Now I’m a fan of Freecom drive, they’re well build, look nice (sort of fit in to an Apple look being Aluminium) and of course have lovely firewire built in. So after an Epic with Amazon it eventually arrived.

First task, Format: works o.k.
Second task, Copy Data from RAID drive: worked fine
Third task, Copy Data from other volumes: Fail

And fail it did, it reintroduced me to the Apple Black Screen of Death. Or Kernel mode death. It managed to induce that state of deathness connected via Firewire and USB.

His Latest Fail

Shame as I’ve been looking at this device for a while, it also seems to be in very short supply as well so the chances of getting another are fairly slim. One annoyance is the fact that my data has been on it and I cannot delete it securely. Though it’s currently hooked up to the MacBook (via FW400) to zero out the disk. Currently will take 13 Hours.

I feel the need to swear, but I’ll hold back.

Another day, another IT fail……

……this time the fail belongs to Western Digital.

I’ve been after an external hdd for while now, my options are limited due to me wanting Firewire 800. So as I should be getting some expenses paid back soon I decided to hit Barclaycard.

The latest fail is the WD My Book Studio (Mac Edition – though it seems the fail isn’t just confined to the Mac version of this drive). So is it a bag of crap?, no the drive is quite a nice neat small drive. Seems to be fairly quiet. But the problem is with the software. WD have installed some software called WD Smartware. It offers a Time Machine type backup (pointless on the Mac as we have erm Time Machine), it also mounts a Virtual CD every time you boot it. The latter is my big issue, I don’t want that virtual crap appearing every time.

I don’t want WD Smartware installed, but I can delete this quite easily. However the Virtual CD keeps coming back every reboot. Apparently it’s the herpes of software, you just can’t get rid of it. Well you can get shot of it quite easily. Tomorrow (once the HDD is formatted – using the 7 Pass secure erase) it’ll be going back to the Apple Store. I have 14 days to return it, which I will do.

One day I will find an IT related purchase* that doesn’t need to be returned.

* excludes the ‘used’ Magic Mouse I got from John Lewis (£45) as is appears to work fine. Anyway it’s a mouse, it does mouse things well, that said it was returned by someone so maybe they found a fault. Though after a few hours the battery life has dipped from 72% to 62%, so maybe that’s another purchase to go back.

/update: Seems the application has knackered Appleshare on my Mac (means I can no longer connect to my MacMini webserver via afp://)

/update2: After tonights apple security update my Mini no longer boots. Not entirely sure who is blame, but it’s coincidental that after using the woe that was WD Smartware things started to go wrong. After all I’m currently using my MacBook which also had the same system update applied, but crucially didn’t have WD Woeware installed.

iFail

So the iMac is on the verge of being returned. A few minor, but annoying issues:

  • Dead Pixel – not a lot that can be done about this, but annoying though.
  • Dust on the LED backlight screen
  • Dust on the inside of the glass panel
  • High pitch squeak
  • Occasional flicker (after a number of hours)

So just a few issues then.  Apparantly I have 28 days to return it to John Lewis,  providing it’s in a sellable condition.  Which of course it will be when I return it.  I’ll leave it up to John Lewis to morally decide if they can resell it.  Most of the issues listed appear to be general faults with the new iMac so maybe they can resell it.  Others probably aren’t as fussy as me.

Still a bit sad as I like the product.  Back to the old MacMini then.  I’ll miss the magic mouse and the touch of a new keyboard.  Have just reinstalled Leopard and Snow Leopard back on to the mini, restored the data from my iMac.  Now in the process of zeroing data on the iMac HDD.

Look out for the iMac reboxing video soon (mainly to counter the unboxing videos)

/edit. Took it back and got the refund. Well the refund was issued, but because of UK Banking being the worlds slowest I should get it back around Wednesday.

More Shiney Apples

Readers of the Unibody Macbook rant will be familiar with the content of this post.

Now, I don’t care about the iMac but I did look forward to the MacMini update today. Just so you get the idea, here’s the spec of the old kit.

Core 2 Duo 1.83ghz, 1gb, 80gb hdd, Intel 950 Graphics, Combo (DVD-R/CW-RW) £390
Core 2 Duo 2.0ghz, 1gb, 120gb hdd, Intel 950 Graphics, Superdrive £488

Now new spec is better…….

2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo 1GB memory 120GB hard drive 8x double-layer SuperDrive NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics £499

2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo 2GB memory 320GB hard drive 8x double-layer SuperDrive
NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics – £649

….but the price. Christ on a bike.

I did expect a price bump, as the pound is weak against the dollar. So price wise it’s close to parity with the USD. But once the pound gets better (and it will), I can be assured the price will not go down.

So, what does £100 extra buy?

A Superdrive, 40gb more HDD, better Chipset (inc DDR3 memory, faster bus and NVIDIA Graphics), FireWire800 and 5 USB ports. In this respect it’s probably worth £100.

Also the update sports two display connectors, MiniDVI (Mini DVI to DVI converter included) and the new Mini DisplayPort – which is the new Apple video connection (Steve Jobs said it would appear on all new Apple computer products). So look as if we can at last dual screen on a MacMini. I won’t hold my breath for a cheap Apple monitor though.

The top end costs another £150 on top, and that is for an extra 1gb of memory and 200gb of HDD. I really can’t see the justification for that price. For £13 (Crucial) I can get another 1gb of memory and a 300gb hdd is around £50.

You can customise the Mini on Apple’s store, main option is a speed bump on the processor, but to be honest it’s not worth it. I just hope that John Lewis stock the entry level Mini as I like the 2 year guarantee.

/edit: John Lewis are stocking the useless more expensive model(MB464) instead of the better value version(MB463). I still hope it turns up a little later as the Mini appeared in the store much later than the iMac.