Can Siri Find Anything in Singapore?

According to Apple, Siri “finds answers for you from the web through sources like Yelp and WolframAlpha.”

Yelp is a site established in 1994 to help find great businesses like dentists, hair stylists and mechanics. Yelp boasts over 21 million user submitted reviews of local businesses – very impressive because they aim to connect you to businesses around you.

This is all great except for one catch.

It doesn’t look like Yelp has a Singapore database. Look closely at their press site and you’ll see a whole list of countries but our little red dot isn’t on it. So unless you live in US, Canada, UK, Ireland, France, Germany, Austria, The Netherlands, Spain, Italy or Switzerland, it could mean that Siri would be severely handicapped.

We have asked Apple for a unit to test drive prior to the launch on 28th October, just so we can verify this and also how Siri will understand our accent, but we got the following response:
“Products will not be made available until they are a shipping product in country. We will be in touch when we have further details regarding iPhone 4S review unit availability.”
So how will Siri fare in Singapore? Right now, we’re not entirely certain that Singapore’s units will have the full functionality we had seen in the videos.

Thank you and good bye, Steve

No one wants to die. Even people who want to go to heaven don’t want to die to get there. And yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life’s change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new. Right now the new is you, but someday not too long from now, you will gradually become the old and be cleared away. Sorry to be so dramatic, but it is quite true.

I have stared at this screen for hours and couldn’t really find the words to describe the emotions when I learnt about his passing.

And I realised that it wouldn’t be what he want us to feel.

The best way to pay tribute to the life and work of Steve Jobs, is that if you own a Mac, or an iPhone or iPad, make full use of it. We don’t need to create something that will change the world like he did, but do something.

Type your next masterpiece, or simply clear up that long awaited To-Do list. Call up a friend or email a photo to your family.

He had spent his life creating tools for us to improve our lives so make full use of them.

Thank you and good bye, Steve.

Why I am waiting for the next generation iPad

On Sunday night, I walked out of an Apple reseller empty handed, even though they had stock for the 16Gb 3G + Wifi model.

You see, my biggest gripe about the iPad is that I really don’t need one.

(We can discuss all we can about the differences between needs and wants but that’s for another blog altogether)

I have my iPhone so when I’m mobile, I have the ability to check my tweets, reply emails and do most of what the iPad can.

I seldom carry a bag so my iPad would stay indoors most of the time.

I have my Macbook Pro at home so if I need to surf the web or stalk people on facebook, I have a tool to do that anywhere in the house.

I read but right now, physical books offer a much greater selection of titles compared to what you can find on iTunes SG store.

So yes, I’ll be waiting for the next generation iPad because as it is, the hardware specs are already slightly behind the new iPhone 4, which has double the memory of the iPad at 512MB. The iPad has a 1024×768 pixels resolution across a 9.7 inch screen while an iPhone 4 sports a 960×640 pixels resolution screen across a 3.5 inch screen. That’s about 132 pixels per inch for iPad vs 326 pixels per inch for iPhone 4.

The specs is one thing but pricing is another. Maybe it’s just me, but I can’t really justify it’s price tag for something I don’t need. which ranges from S$728 to $1,228 depending on which model you pick up. And as with all Apple products, every generation tends to get slightly cheaper. So if my crystal ball (recently renamed as Paul) is accurate, we should see the next generation iPad to be slightly cheaper and with better hardware specs. While I’m wishing, I might as well wish that it’ll have a thinner bezel around the screen and perhaps, a camera + Facetime app and a reduction in weight.

But having said that, I know there’s many of you who have bought an iPad. Did it live up to your expectations? Tell us what you think in the comments below.

iPhone 4 … lost/stolen/dropped…or whatever

Everyone knows that Apple will be releasing iPhone 4 in the summer. Like all Apple fans, we are intrigued and always anticipate what Apple will release with not just baited breath, but like eager puppies waiting for our next meal.

So when certain tech news blogs start putting up images and videos of what they claimed (and now we all know is true) was the next iPhone, we were seriously excited. Unlike previous times when all you got were blurry images or mock ups, this time we got the real deal (or at least in development mule case). There are close-up photos, and nicely panned videos of the product. Everything that a rabid Apple fan is craving for.

However, we are not going to post any of these nicely shot pictures here, after we found out how the iPhone was obtained.

In a nutshell, an Apple employee was out in a pub for a drink. He happened to be working on the new iPhone and was carrying it with him. Why he was allowed to do that will probably be something Steve Jobs will be questioning. Unfortunately for the fella, he left the phone in the pub and it was subsequently picked up by some guy, who, instead of returning it, somehow got richer by selling it for US$5,000. And that is how those photos and videos came about. So far so good. What irked me about this whole thing was how the website who purchased the phone decided to post the name/photo of the Apple employee and lay him out for the whole wide world to know – “hey that’s the guy who got drunk and basically gifted the prototype to us – whoopee – SCOOP!”.

That essentially screwed up that poor dude’s career in the technology industry! If they had kept it anonymous and put the story up, it may or may not have saved his career in Apple but at least it meant that his next employer might not know.

Besides that, we have also not touch on the legality of obtaining the iPhone and its complication to the person who picked and sold it, and the company that bought and post pictures of it. These are legal issues beyond our shores and best explain by others.

That said, as much as we would like to share those shiny photos and videos, we won’t be covering that. Just look around the Internet and you will find them there.

iWhocares-but-iWillBuy

We now know that there will be something happening on Jan 27 10am (2am Jan 28 SG) at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Theater in San Francisco. The headline of the invite says “Come see our latest creation” which is not surprising since almost everyone expects an announcement for a new Tablet-like product from Apple.

From the multitude of rumors mixed among news, a few things about the new product might have leaked:

Continue Reading →

2010 Predictions

2010 could be a very exciting year for Apple. Towards the end of last year, Jimmy and I were discussing what would be the top 10 things we’d like to see from Apple this year and here it is. Some of these we know will happen, some others will be like praying for rain in the middle of the desert. Who knows, miracles might happen right?

Just how much is 2 billion?

Let’s put things into perspective. If you sat down and counted from 1 to 1 billion, you would take about 95 years to complete. And if you were to find a fishbowl big enough to fit 1 billion goldfishes, you would need a stadium to fit them all. Now double that.

Apple announced last Monday that the app store has surpassed 2 billion downloads from 50 million iPhone and iPod Touch users worldwide. That’s an average of 40 apps per device and according to Steve Jobs, half a billion was downloaded in this quarter alone. The calculators here in iHeartApple don’t have enough room to display enough zeros, so while we buy new ones, AppleInsider has kindly done all the maths for us. In the last 80 days alone, 6.3 million apps were downloaded per day, up from 4.1 million per day in the first 365 days of the app store launch.

iphone-appsThat’s a staggering amount considering Singapore’s population barely tipped 4.99 million, as of June 2009.

What does this all mean for us? Well, I think a mobile device is only as useful as what it can do for you. With 85,000 apps to choose from, your iPhone and iPod Touch will give you far better mileage than other mobile devices currently in the market, all packed in a sleek and intuitive user interface Apple is famous for.

This 2 billion downloads is only the beginning. With numbers like this, Apple’s app store is by far the best solution for developers who are looking for a robust distribution infrastructure and this only means we will soon see more and more apps come through as software makers choose this app store over others.

So if you already own an iPhone or iPod Touch, I think we’re on the right boat with this one. If not, you can pick up a new iPod Touch from Apple SG Store and an iPhone from SingTel.

Microsoft’s Laptop Hunter misdirect but still works?

On the latest Laptop Hunter ad, the “consumer”, Lauren, looks around for a laptop that has “speed, portability and battery life” that costs below US$1700 and eventually settled for a Dell Studio XPS 13 on sale for $899, which when all things considered, is pretty good a deal.

However, its the way the ad mislead viewers about the costs of Macs that makes me question the validity of their claims.

laptophunter

As seen in the screenshot above (around 20s into the ad), it clearly shows a MacBook (see MacBook as compared to the MacBook Pro – note the extra space besides the keyboard on the MBP for the speakers) but yet Lauren talked about the price of the MacBook Pro, which costs US$1999, putting it above the US$1700 budget.

Given that “Lauren” is to become a law student, it is highly unlikely that she would missed out on the MacBooks, which costs US$1299 (unibody) or US$999 for a slower white MacBook, which more than meets her budget. Conscious Misdirection indeed!

On a related note according to AppleInsider, those Laptop Hunters ads might have swayed consumers’ value perception – the belief that a given brand gives more value for money.

Quoting from a survey of 5,000 people, the result showed a marked increase (from almost 0 to 46.2) in the value perception of Microsoft where as Apple’s value dropped from around 70 to 12.4 at this period (on a scale of -100 to 100 (a score of zero means that people are giving equal amounts of positive and negative feedback about a brand – AdAge.com).

Analysts believed these changes in perception is a result of the success of Microsoft’s latest series of ads. To read more, do pop over to AppleInsider and AdAge for the details.

All I can say is, if spending more than US$300 million on ad campaigns, it better changed some perceptions – even if those “consumers” are ignorant like Lauren and not able to see beyond the added values of getting a Mac besides cost savings (for example – like having software suit iLife included for free with every new purchase).

Just for the fun of it – here’s Jennie, another Laptop Hunter (slightly NSFW)

The next iPhone will be nuclear-powered

Ever since the iPhone was launched, there are many features that people wants to see on the phone, for it to be justify its tag as the Jesus Phone.

With the recent preview of iPhone 3.0, some of these much wanted features will be added to the phone come this summer. Cut-n-Paste, MMS, SMS-forwarding, Bluetooth Stereo support etc.

However, there are still many features that people wanted that were not announced. Video capturing and streaming, Flash, background apps, just to name a few.

I can’t claim to have any inside knowledge nor technical know-how to say whether these features could be done at this current juncture. But looking at what Apple have done for the Macs, it definitely is not beyond their abilities to put them in. The iPhone OS and the Mac OS X share much of the same platform which theoretically, means what you can do on the Mac, you probably can do on the iPhone.

But yet, we don’t. Of course there are million and one reasons they are not there. Steve Jobs don’t like how it looks on the iPhone? Marketing wants to keep feature XXX to be for the next version, so that consumers are “trapped”? AT&T can’t afford to have that feature XXX because it will kill their cell network? Too many but one, that is some simple, might just be the simplest reason why we don’t see all these in there.

Batteries. A look around all major phones now show that battery life per charge go between 5-8 hours talk time. Note that is just an estimate based on just talking.

So what happens when you add videos, Flash, music etc. Plus most of the newer phones have bigger and brighter screens. Will you still get that 5-8 hours?

The hardware and software for phones out in the market are getting better and better. Besides the iPhone, there are still the Nokias, the Sony Ericssons, the Palms and add to that you have the Google Android phones. Their interface are getting better, screens look brighter and sharper, their OS gets smarter and apps do more than just calculate tips.

BUT it seems battery technology isn’t matching the rest of the advances. Yes it is much better than phones years ago. But it isn’t outpacing or at least, match the needs of consumers.

Yes we would want our phones to not just be able to call our family and friends, we want to be able to do video conferencing, on bigger screens, take photos and mail it to everyone on my twitter network, and at the same time IM my colleagues back at work, while downloading the last album from iTunes Music Store. We want to do EVERYTHING with our phone. But based on current battery capacity, our phone will probably lasts 5 minutes before we need to charge it.

Which brings me to why I think we won’t see everything we want now on our iPhone. The operating system or the hardware might support it, but the battery won’t. Not until there is a break through in technology which can give us at least twice or more of current capacity after one charge cycle.

Or they make it nuclear powered. What do you think?

iPhone in-App ads grows big time

Some app developers support their development by having small ads spanning a small area of the app (usually at the bottom area of the screen above the app’s buttons) which is non-intrusive and yet helps the developer.

But recently, American apparel maker Dockers paired up with some iPhone app developers to allow the company to place in their apps, full screen interactive ads that make use of iPhone’s accelerometer feature to animate the motion-sensitive ad, according to this report in Advertising Age.

iphone-dockers

The ad, which stars Dufon (aka Orb/Orbit/Orbitron), an urban street dancer from the Seattle dance group “Circle of Fire,” will appear in the iPhone games “iBasketball,” “iGolf” and “iBowl” and the lifestyle application iTV. Between the various levels of game play, users will be prompted to shake the iPhone to spur the Dockers-donning Dufon to perform his moves.

I feel that although it is an innovative method to bring the brand to its target audience, having it popped up full-screen in between game levels, is highly intrusive for consumers. On our computers, we have been arming ourselves with ad-busting plugins just so we don’t see them filling up our screen in our browsers. But with no such options on the iPhone platform, consumers might be turn-off by it and stopped getting those games with such ads.

Would you like such ads appearing in the midst of your games or other apps?

A Stealthy Phoenix is just a tad flawed

Granted the premise of Phoenix from local company Bak2U is one we like, there are some issues we faced when we were doing the review of the app that we felt made us hold back slightly in our recommendation for it after spending more time.

One major gripe I had is the lack of uninstaller for Phoenix. As most Mac users know by now, the beauty of most of the popular apps we love is the ease in which they are installed, and also uninstalled should the need arises. None of those Registry BS on some other Operating System where you don’t know what was installed and where they were. Most of Mac apps can be easily dragged into Trash and be done with it. That is not so true with the Phoenix.

The success of the app requires certain background running processes that will monitor and trigger the transmission of the notifications should an illegal use is detected. The files that do that are not in your usual Application folders as that will defeat its purpose. They are so well hidden that when you do a search in Spotlight, you will not find a trace of it. So, how do one go about removing those hidden files should you want to remove the application?

As there weren’t any uninstaller nor instructions given for the review, we had to contact the developers for the instructions, which was swiftly relayed to us. However, they were a set of Terminal commands that only someone with at least basic knowledge of Unix operating system will understand and at least one, required root access before it can be deleted. Unless you know your sudo from your judo, removing Phoenix from your Mac will be a herculean task.

The last thing we want is a bogged down Mac with hidden processes running in the background eating up the Mac’s resources. One app that is comparable in its purpose is Little Snitch by Objective Development which stays in the background sniffing network traffic which required it to put files in various locations. What stands out for Little Snitch is that the installer comes with an uninstaller that is activated in the same screen as the installer. One click and the app is easily uninstalled and associated files are removed.

littlesnitch-installer.jpg

I would like to think that part of the onus of keeping our Macs clean and safe, belongs to developers whom we trust to give us full value for their applications, be it using it or when we choose not to. Saving us from the guess work and hassle of running Terminal to remove files will be greatly welcome and I’m sure those guys behind Phoenix will improve on the app soon.

Tweet of wisdom from Guy Kawasaki

RT from @guykawasaki – If you have money and power, you choose Macintosh If you’re oppressed, you use Windows.