If you live in the UK, you must have by now heard about the Coventry woman who dumped a cat in a wheelie bin (BBC News). The cat spent 15 unhappy hours in the bin until found by its owners, and the cat-dumper, Mary Bale, was, unluckily for her, caught on CCTV. The RSPCA’s now considering bringing charges, and crowds of people with nothing better to do won’t leave the woman alone. (Note: I find Bale’s actions distasteful and I do hope the RSPCA charges her with a cruelty offence, but going mob-handed to her home and chanting ‘I love pussy’ isn’t going to help anyone.)
In a ray of light on the entire incident, we at least get to see how an old person leapt to the defence of the cat-binner, who may now be about to lose her job as a bank teller. According to the Daily Mail (and, let’s face it, this is the Daily Mail, so this might just be made-up, but, hey, it’s funny anyway), 78-year-old Jean Thompson said: “The only explanation I can think of is that she was worried that the cat might get run over on the road and wanted to keep it safe in the bin.”
To be fair, roads are dangerous to cats, but I’d suggest starving to death in a sealed, thick plastic cage that you’re dropped into by a stranger is a bigger threat.
August 27, 2010. Read more in: News, Opinions
Samsung’s decided the best way to get one over the iPad is to go all sci-fi. “Create a clone,” said the directors. “The iPad will be caught unawares. Then, when it least expects, we can kick it repeatedly in the knackers until it begs for mercy—but we don’t have any of that. MWAHAHAHAHA!”
OK, so that’s perhaps a bit far-fetched. It’s probably more likely that some higher-up at Samsung got an iPad, went “oooh, shiny”, shoved it in front of the company’s design team and said: “One of those please, but in Android flavour”.
And if you think I’m exaggerating, take a look at Matt Gemmell’s Samsung Galaxy Tab comparison with iOS. Mid-1990s Microsoft has nothing on these guys.
August 25, 2010. Read more in: Apple, Design, News, Opinions, Technology
The Wall Street Journal reports on LG’s vice president of marketing saying LG is readying an iPad ‘killer’. Again, the claims are pretty much copied and pasted from the How To Get Tech Journos Excited About Your iPad Killer That Doesn’t Actually Exist fact sheet: Android device; better than iPad for [SUB: INSERT REASONS HERE]; “our device will totally rock”.
What’s most surprising, though, is Chang Ma’s slightly odd decision to smack the iPad with the same kind of bullshit that lazy tech journos use. Ma is quoted as saying the iPad is a great device, but that he doesn’t do much work on it, inferring that Apple’s device is for displaying content, not creating it:
[LG’s] tablet will include content focused on creation such as writing documents, editing video and creating programs. It will also have “high-end features and new benefits,” many of which will focus on productivity, Mr. Ma said. “It’s going to be surprisingly productive,” he said.
Man, if only the iPad had some kind of App Store, with hundreds of great apps for boosting productivity and creating work, such as SketchBook Pro, OmniFocus for iPad, Pages and Numbers, Bento for iPad, iMockups for iPad, OmniGraffle, Markup for iPad, and ReelDirector, we wouldn’t be stuck waiting for LG to magic a ‘productive’ tablet into existence, along with the dozens of unicorn-dust-sprinkled apps that will also suddenly be available to make said tablet productive.
August 24, 2010. Read more in: Apple, Design, News, Opinions
If you’ve not read it yet, go and check out Marco Arment’s A smartphone retrospective. His post from last week shows a bunch of 2007 smartphones, noting that they were cool but flawed, then says the iPhone happened. Despite all the protests about the iPhone’s lack of hardware keyboard, removable battery and expansion, pretty much all rival kit now apes Apple’s. Arment ends by showcasing a number of early 2010 netbooks, then says the iPad happened, and asks where the inexpensive computer space will be in a year.
Well, we’ve already seen various rumours and renders, and now, if Notebookitalia is to be believed, Toshiba’s about to enter the fray. There is, however, another aspect to the hardware shifts that Arment didn’t mention: the specs pissing contest. Most of Apple’s rivals aim to beat it in terms of specs rather than usability. They generally don’t aim for something that’s better for the general user, instead churning out hardware that offers more ‘stuff’.
If this really is to be Toshiba’s iPad ‘killer’, it’s certainly true to form. It’ll supposedly run Android (tick), look a bit like it was designed by Apple on an off day (tick), have more hardware buttons than really necessary (tick), and include a ton of ports, including USB and HDMI (tick). Judging by the images on Notebookitalia, this comes at a big price: form factor. It’s clear if this device makes it to market that it’ll be thicker than the iPad, but the edge with the ports also appears much thicker than its opposite side. This means Toshiba’s pad will have a natural landscape-only orientation, and will be horribly awkward in portrait mode. By contrast, the iPad generally doesn’t care which way up it is and apps encourage the user to turn the device to find a set-up that best suits them.
Still, if Toshiba’s model is released, I’m sure tech journos will claim it’s an iPad killer, because, once again, they’ll read the spec sheet, get terribly excited about things most users don’t care about, and forget that people—normal people—just want to get on and do stuff. Apple’s industrial design and usability will again be dismissed as gloss, right up until the moment its rivals catch up, whereupon those things will somehow become both exciting and essential.
August 24, 2010. Read more in: Apple, Design, News, Opinions
Android Central reports that the RIAA’s trying to make it so all cell phones include an FM radio receiver. Now, we already know the music industry is bonkers. The RIAA’s thought in the past that it’s a good idea to sue kids for downloading a few songs online, and U2 manager Paul McGuinness offered the full extent of his crazy in a GQ interview, expertly torn to pieces on No Rock and Roll Fun. But seriously, an FM radio, in every cell phone, PDA and portable device, just because record labels are ‘missing out’ on money they might otherwise get?
I look forward to the proposal of forcing an entire local theatre to be glued to every flat-screen TV.
(Hat tip: Ian Betteridge.)
August 19, 2010. Read more in: News, Opinions, Technology