'Apple'

Friday, July 6th, 2007

The iPhone

iPhone I had a lot of reasons for getting the new iPhone. The largest could have been that my iPod Nano had recently suffered an accident which left its screen destroyed or that I was still walking around with a 1st generation RAZR (which had cost me $500 at the time) whose battery barely held a charge. But the fact is, I wanted it. It just looked so great.

So, I restrained myself until the Monday after launch when I figured the lines would have died down. Then I went to the Soho Apple Store on my way in to work since I figured that the 5th avenue store was too close to all those morning shows. I walked right in, had 4 people in line before me, bought it, and walked out… Happy.

The best part is, though, that I’m still happy. I love this damn thing! Despite fears to the contrary, I can type quite quickly on the keyboard. The wifi is key, because AT&T’s Edge makes me feel like I’m on a 56k modem. The screen is gorgeous. And just top to bottom the device really delivers on all the hype.

OK, now to the single most annoying aspect of the new iPhone.

One of my many reasons for purchasing the thing was my dream of riding the train with big, cushy, over-ear, wireless, bluetooth headphones. My dreams of not snagging on other passengers was dashed when I learned that the iPhone didn’t support stereo bluetooth headphones. This really pissed me off. Oh well, at least I could still use my big old cans, right? Wrong. Apple did one of those things that just make you hate electronics companies (that’s you Sony!). They took a perfectly good standard connector and made it non-standard. They recessed the headphone jack effectively making the iPhone incompatible with every pair of headphones in the world. This is really unacceptable and I know they can’t fix it now, but they better help some third party vendors get some great headphones out there because I hate Apple headphones with a passion.

Of course, there are other things Apple should fix like custom ringtones, being able to edit what shows up on your home screen (I don’t need notes and stocks, damnit), having access to the landscape keyboard more often, IM, Flash support, games, and more… but I gotta remember that this is a 1st generation product that’s guaranteed to only get better! Get those software updates rolling, Apple!

Posted in Apple, Hardware, Software, Technology |

Wednesday, June 14th, 2006

Sweet iPod skins

Although I don’t have a 5G Apple iPod video super-deal, I may have to buy one before making that ever impending (but never arriving) trip to Japan if only so I can rock this iPod skin.

Don’t forget the other skins available at the Gelaskins site that would be just great for running around NYC.

Posted in Apple, Hardware, Japanese |

Tuesday, June 13th, 2006

Apple Mac mini

Apple Mac mini Back on February 28th, Steve Jobs unveiled the new Intel powered Mac mini at a small event. At the time, the announcement garnered both positive and negative reviews of the machine. Regardless of the reviews, this was the perfect machine I had been waiting for Apple to come out with.

Everywhere the old mini fell short (power, longevity, etc.) this new mini excelled. The one drawback was the integrated video chip which meant that it would never be a great gaming machine… but that wasn’t what I wanted it for.

I bought the thing that very day, and just a couple days later it arrived with a wireless keyboard and mouse. Once I got it home, it took all of a couple seconds to plug the thing into my Samsung LCD TV using a DVI to HDMI cable (not included, BTW) and there it was: OS X on my TV without having to juggle laptops.

Previously, I had been plugging my 15″ Aluminum Powerbook into the TV to watch movies and downloaded content. This was a terrible setup for a number of reasons. One, I had to plug it in each time and unplug when done. Also, I had to store all my media on the laptop which was quickly running out of space. On top of that, the Powerbook didn’t have an optical audio out port, which meant that the sound had to go through the headphone jack which picked up an awful lot of the Powerbook’s internal noise (harddrive spinning, etc). This made the audio quality pretty bad.

The Mac mini solved all those problems with the addition of a 500 Gig external harddrive while adding Apple’s decent Front Row application and remote. Placing DVD’s on the external harddrive even allowed instant access to my entire library from the remote just like iTunes had already done for my CD collection.

Yeah, some things didn’t perform flawlessly. Front Row, for instance, feels very young. There’s lots that it just doesn’t do well, although a fairly recent update shows that it’d being improved by Apple and could grow into a very nice piece of software.

In the end, though, I highly recommend this configuration and should you have cable TV (which I don’t) you can easily extend it using the great EyeTV products.

Posted in Apple, Hardware, Software, Television |

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