Nicely done, Apple

Tuesday, 9 January 2007 09:45 pm
da: A smiling human with short hair, head tilted a bit to the right. It's black and white with a neutral background. You can't tell if the white in the hair is due to lighting, or maybe it's white hair! (Default)
[personal profile] da
This article from Time has a hands-on description from a reporter, and makes it look that much more appealing. If you're interested in such things, and are willing to shell out the money, that is. I bet lots of people are.

"To Jobs's perfectionist eyes, phones are broken. Jobs likes things that are broken. It means he can make something that isn't and sell it to you for a premium price."

That seems about right. As an example: apparently, they've borrowed the multi-touch gestures that I first saw last autumn where pinching your fingers together on the screen zooms out and drawing your fingers apart zooms in.

I wonder whether the revisions they required Cingular to make so all their network features would work, will filter down to other cellphone companies as well. And I like that this "phone" is actually a sneaky reimplementation of the ideas behind the Newton. Apple has 200 patents for this little device. I'm looking forward to seeing a writeup of the more interesting ones.

But personally, unless I can see one hands-on and decide it's going to change my life in a real way, I can think of better things to do with $500 US.

Incidentally, lost in the news from Cupartino, is news of a real full-size Macbook Tablet, made by Axiotron. (Yeah, who?) Oh well. It's got GPS built in. (I wonder if I can get that as a PCMCIA card for my Mac Book Pro yet?)

Date: Wednesday, 10 January 2007 04:12 am (UTC)
ckd: small blue foam shark (Default)
From: [personal profile] ckd
The MacBook Pro doesn't have a PCMCIA slot; it has an ExpressCard/34 slot.

Perhaps a Bluetooth GPS would be a better choice?

Date: Wednesday, 10 January 2007 05:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dcseain.livejournal.com
Yep. You could get an excellent one for 1/3 the price of the mac tablet.

Date: Wednesday, 10 January 2007 06:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thingo.livejournal.com
The video you point to is a live recording of a video that's already available directly here. I've played with Jeff Han's system, and I can say without reservation that it's the single coolest thing ever. Apparently, it's not even too hard to build one, a project that's on my long-term todo list.

Also apparently, Apple licensed this technology from Han. It would be really neat if this were the sensing technology in the phone, though it's not clear from my understanding of FTIR-based sensing how they would have managed it.

Date: Wednesday, 10 January 2007 01:49 pm (UTC)
chezmax: (Default)
From: [personal profile] chezmax
It look pretty cool. :)

And if this means data features will become cheaper, then I'm all for it :)

Date: Wednesday, 10 January 2007 06:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] epi-lj.livejournal.com
You could buy a GPS receiver as a PCMCIA card for your MacBook Pro if your MacBook Pro had a PCMCIA card slot. Unfortunately, it has an ExpressCard/34 slot (which I guess is technically a PCMCIA standard). As far as I know, there are no GPS modules for ExpressCard/34. There are hardly any ExpressCard/34 modules at all.

Date: Wednesday, 10 January 2007 06:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] epi-lj.livejournal.com
Sorry, I saw the other ExpressCard/34 response after I posted mine. :) The best use for the slot that I've seen is a dual eSATA adapter, which, when hooked up to an appropriate two-disk eSATA RAID enclosure, provided disk speeds something like 6x as fast as the internal drive in the machine. Outside of that, and admittedly it's not really that portable, I've pondered getting a multi-format ExpressCard/34 memory card reader so that I could pop memory cards into my MBP whenever.

Date: Wednesday, 10 January 2007 06:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] epi-lj.livejournal.com
If you can afford it, you can get EVDO ExpressCard/34 cards.

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