Link: Apple’s Product Placement in Mass Media →

So glad Gruber linked to this, as it was something I’d always wondered about:

Apple has spent decades strengthening its subtle but powerful grip over Hollywood, and unlike many companies, says it never pays for its products to appear on television or in movies. The company’s gadgets were discussed or shown 891 times on TV in 2011, up from 613 in 2009, according to researcher Nielsen (NLSN). In the same year, iDevices appeared in more than 40 percent of the movies that topped the weekly box office, according to Brandchannel, which tracks product appearances. That’s nearly twice the penetration of the next most common brands in Hollywood—Dell (DELL), Chevy (GM), and Ford (F).

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Link: Yahoo! Pushes Thompson Out the Door →

Kara Swisher points out a few other key mistakes Thompson has made during his tenure, but a false résumé shouldn’t have been the thing that pushes the company over the edge. In any case, it is a welcome sight to see a digital media expert taking the wheel of the company.

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Link: New Maps in iOS 6 →

9 to 5 Mac with the scoop.

This is one area that Apple has been dependent on a third-party for, and using in-house software/development will seal the deal in terms of having complete control over the OS.

I don’t really think I would use the 3D mode though, if bandwidth is still at 3G/HSPDA+.

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Link: Yahoo CEO says he never provided a resume →

Normal job application rules don’t apply in high level position hunting — especially when headhunters were looking for someone to run a company..

 

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Link: The Alternative →

John Gruber:

My advice to Microsoft would be to go after Android, hard. Make Windows Phone the carriers’ best friend. Target your advertising on BlackBerry holdouts and dissatisfied Android users. Position Windows Phone as the alternative to the iPhone.

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Link: Lumia 900 Strong in US →

I saw a brick and mortar Nokia store today in a high end mall in Singapore. The store had 2-3 onlookers, but nothing to sway customers to make a purchase on the spot. They don’t have the 900 on sale just yet, and the 800 costs about $500 USD. Subsidies are unavailable, which can cause a huge impact in sales.

Another note: the iPhone has a strong presence in Singapore, but so do several other brands, like HTC and Samsung. Both companies also have dedicated stores the their brands in the country. What really struck me was the tablet usage: the iPad represented roughly 90% of the tablets I saw in the 5 or so train rides I’ve been on thus far.

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Link: The Crowded Mobile Payments Space →

I love Dieter Bohn’s articles. They are great bits of reporting. This one outlines the increasingly crowded mobile payment space — one where there is no dominating figure.

When I read this, I can’t help but wondering why Paypal, the biggest online wallet, is losing here. Everything I buy online is through Paypal, and it couldn’t be easier to make the handshake.

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Link: Facebook “App Center” →

I wonder how paid apps will work. Knowing the relationship between Facebook and Apple, I doubt this will be an issue. Right?

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Link: EA: Digital Investments Key to Future Revenue →

Interesting turn of events for a primarily console-based company.

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Link: Ads You Draw, By Zynga →

Gruber quips:

Draw your own ads, how fun!

I’d rather have to draw Doritos and make it a game then have to see an annoying banner ad. Even this is better than an iAd.

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Link: Windows 8 Makes DVD playback a Paid Add-On →

People in the comments point out that this is no big deal and there are alternatives. While this is true, it really doesn’t make sense to drop this for the mom and pop consumer. I wonder how much the end consumer saves with this move.

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Link: iPad Keyboard Prototype →

This is a slick solution to a really big problem with using the iPad as a production device. Typing is really great, but editing could be way better.

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Link: Apple iPad takes 95% of all tablet web traffic →

I especially love the graph at the bottom of this piece. At first, the chart seems normal… until you read the title.

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Hiatus

The podcast is going to take a small break this May. This is because both hosts, Tarun and Chris, are AFK for the entire month. We will return to our normal schedule beginning in June.

In the meantime, we will still be linking and thinking. Thanks for following us.

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Link: Microsoft announces Windows Phone Developer Summit →

WPDS = the next big conference? I am really excited to see Microsoft bringing the big guns on this one.

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Link: Facebook encouraging organ donations →

This is the power of data aggregation:

The Facebook tool works like this: Users go to their timelines, where under Life Event they will see a health and wellness section. Zuckerberg said: “You put in, ‘I decided to be an organ donor’ and your state or country you live in and you can add a story about how you decided to be an organ donor.”

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Link: The (Potential) End of An Era →

This morning RIM had its keynote at the annual BlackBerry World and unveiled a touch screen keyboard. For years now the company has sworn off touch, especially when it comes to the keyboard.

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Link: Different Strokes, or Living in the Past? →

Nintendo has suffered through poor quarter, and Zynga has had another booming one. This article from AllThingsD quotes Michael Pachter, an analyst, speaking on the current state of the gaming industry and consoles:

Nintendo is living in the past, repeating what got them to where they are, and hoping that the recent downturn is a fad. They aren’t adapting to the times, and it’s hurting them.

The last line is common with many companies in the Old Boy’s Club: Microsoft, Nokia, RIM, Yahoo! to name a few. It is easy to say that companies who have been around and suffering a recent decline are simply not riding the wave of change. I have been critical of Nintendo, especially with the iOS boom and how Apple has changed gaming. But I think this article has one key paragraph that offers perspective:

Nintendo sells proprietary portable and home gaming units as well as the games that work on top of them. Meanwhile, Zynga gives away its games for free and lets them work across most computers and mobile phones. It makes money on advertising and microtransactions.

Nintendo sells an experience that requires a living room, and Zynga sells one that is both social and mobile. The two experiences require different strategies and lead to different results. Nintendo is also a brand that people have traditionally identified with, whereas Zynga is a platform that no one really thinks twice about. Instead, people focus on the flagship game they produce: Farmville. Farmville itself can make the bacon, but it doesn’t come close to Nintendo’s margins.

I am glad this perspective was brought to light. Nintendo continues to get a bad rap for being dissociated from the social gaming space, but there is a big reason for that: they don’t have core competencies in it. There focus will continue to be at selling games that people will continue to come back to, and exploring new types of interactions that are far from a mobile screen.

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Link: Bill Proposed to Ban Employer Facebook Snooping →

It’s a pretty insane practice as it is. If an employer wants your password, you probably shouldn’t work for them.

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Link: Google Drive →

For those of you keeping score:

  • DropBox announced a small update to their services allowing users to share any file within the service, even if it isn’t specifically made public.
  • Microsoft augmented SkyDrive to integrate with Mac OS X finder, announced space plans, and improvements to its Windows Phone app.

Today in the business local news Google announces Drive which integrates with the entire Docs suite and offers 5GB of storage, below SkyDrive’s free offering of 25GB (if you activate it today) and above Dropbox’s offering of 2GB. Out of the box, Google also has thrown in Finder integration as well, making it a solid offering for those disenchanted by the Microsoft alternative.

When a business has a large or growing number of digital files, it should use Google Drive. Without a dedicated storage system, managing a library of files in its entirety becomes challenging. As a result, you should only use Drive when you notice that your data storage requirements are increasing. Additionally, it is an excellent alternative for businesses looking to move away from on-site physical storage. For more business online tools we recommend to visit https://www.thepaystubs.com/w9-form-generator.

I’ve been a long time user of Dropbox, and had enjoyed the simplicity of integration with all my devices, up until my recent move to the WP ecosystem. I happened to move over to SkyDrive at the right time, since they just announced the changes above right upon me switching over. Google Drive would be a nice offering, but Microsoft thus far seems to undercut them when you consider space alone. Google’s advantage is the tight integration with the Docs suite, which should be nice for people who already use the service.

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From iOS to Windows Phone: Act 3 (The Verdict)

Note: This is a continuation of a series on the Windows Phone. See Part 1 for the motivation for this review, and Part 2 for an overview of the Windows Phone experience.

Act 3: The Verdict

There was a time when switching phones was no big deal. We would go from candy bar to flip phone with little regard to features. As long as the phone was built well, had a good connection, and had cool ringtones, migrating was no problem.

I am in awe of how far we have come. Switching OSs is a leap of faith. There is nothing really broken with the current state of affairs — the phone has all of your apps, contacts and music stored and makes a good phone call or two. Coupled with the increased phone prices, heavy contract penalties and loss of data, switching seems like a useless gesture. In a sense, the OS you start with is likely the OS you stick with.

If you are in that group — stuck with your status quo — then pretty much everything you have read will go in one ear and out the other. I could argue that the Windows Phone 7 experience is incredible, but you would still cling to what you have because it is familiar. There isn’t anything wrong with an iPhone or an Android phone, so what is the big deal?

The big deal is the perpetuation of this status quo. We live in an exciting time of innovation. Companies are daring to be different, products are challenging previous conceptions of interaction, and people are beginning to care about technology at an intimate level. All of this becomes ignored if there is no heed to what is new. The Windows Phone and every other competitor to come is dead on arrival because people have their blinders on to anything that could be the next big thing.

So, my message in this final act is to convince you to always take that second look. Be bold. Critically engage the technology you use, and demand something better. The Windows Phone isn’t the perfect answer to everything the iPhone or Android platform lacks, but there are elements done so well that they should be considered when new iterations are to come.

An Uphill Battle

That best describes what the Windows Phone, and every other potential competing OS/platform, has to face today. People have invested time, money and mental energy in the current platform they use everyday.  When it comes to financial planning, investing in an ira is a must, providing a strategic and tax-advantaged approach to building wealth and securing a stable financial future. I had spent over $500 in applications on top of a $300 phone. With those numbers as a lens, it is really challenging to take a look at the other smart phones. Furthermore, the experience of an iPhone was familiar to me in so many ways. Apps were available when I wanted them, my Mac synced well with iCloud, and developer support is still amazing. You’d be hard pressed to find someone who isn’t in the same boat as I was prior to moving over.

For its part, Microsoft has done a phenomenal job in recognizing the issue of needing to win over the hearts and minds of users from other platforms. As soon as you launch the device, you are invited to connect to all of the other platforms that you use everyday: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google, WordPress, and more. From the box, migration becomes cake if you have everything already setup elsewhere. Curation of content could not be easier. After everything is linked up, the phone features everything else that is familiar to a smart phone user: music, maps, messaging, mail, calendar… all of which require a sync to whatever service it requires to get going.

There is still many other ways Microsoft could fill the “OS gap” that occurs when switching over. The lack of third-party iCloud sync can make it a tough sell for those who don’t want to move over to Google calendar instead, but Microsoft could do its part by partnering with Google to help migrate people over in a quick fashion. I spent about 2 hours doing this with my contacts and calendar, so having a bit of time saved wouldn’t hurt. Another glaring omission is a Dropbox application, but the ball is in Dropbox’s court to add that to the Marketplace. Though the Microsoft Phone Connector Mac application does a good job in syncing music and videos to the device, the ringtone support is pretty annoying — apparently you can only have ringtones that are in the iTunes main library (songs less than 30 seconds in duration are ringtones), and tones actually in the “ringtones” section are not synced.

Head-Scratchers

There are some things about the Windows Phone that I couldn’t help but ask “Why?” when I use the device:

Left-Right Swiping

It’s not that I hate the idea, but the idea is poorly executed. My large thumbs always end up tapping one side of the screen when I slide them up and down the screen to scroll through content. I always get flustered when I want to read my Twitter timeline or a news story because I end up moving to a different content stream or feed because I accidentally move my finger too far right or left. This is probably the exact reason why many iOS apps don’t employ this and instead use buttons on the bottom of the apps instead. The exception to this rule is Flipboard, and even they don’t use the left to right swipe.

Scroll to Top

I am sorely missing a shortcut to jump to the top of a page or content stream. The primary example of this is Twitter, when I have to scroll up through 200 new tweets before reaching the top. The other example is the contact list, which can become very large thanks to the integration features mentioned earlier.

Search Fragmentation

There is a dedicated search button at the bottom left of every Windows Phone device, but it only goes to one place: Bing. While having consistency is great, it also cripples the feature when considering the potential of how it could be better employed. There is no search feature in the music application, which is incredibly annoying when you have over 1000 songs to navigate through. Almost every other application has a search icon on the bottom, which is different than the search button at the bottom of the device. Why? It makes sense that I would hit the search button to search within the app, not globally at random. It is proven that many people go to apps for the information they care about, not straight to the internet. The search button should contextualize to the app that you are in and should not remain static.

Pseudo Multi-Tasking

Here’s how multi-tasking works in iOS world:

  1. Enter Twitter in iOS for the first time. You begin to type a Tweet about your day, but never send it because…
  2. … You get a phone call and start talking to someone.
  3. In the middle of your phone call, you hear something insane. You are forced to fact check it, so you hit the home button and open Safari.
  4. In Safari, you Google the fact, check Wikipedia, and confirm your suspicion. You remark to your friend how silly he is and hang up.
  5. To gloat, you click on the Twitter icon. You are brought right back to the Tweet you were in the middle of composing. But, you instead delete what you said and brag about your present conversation.

You can do all of the above on the Windows Phone, except at number 5, where things get weird. If you click on the Twitter icon a second time, the app is reinitialized and whatever previous screen state you are on is ignored. The only way to go back is to literally hit the back button. Something that an iOS user is unfamiliar with. Rather than having a learning curve, a better solution would be to simulate the back button press when an app is reinitialized. I’m sure there is some software/hardware limitation on the Lumia/OS that makes this difficult, but winning hearts isn’t easy.

Missing apps

Microsoft decided to not include the following applications that are standard on the iPhone:

  • Weather
  • Timer/Countdown applications
  • Reminders/To-dos
  • A native PDF reader
  • Skydrive

There is zero reasonable justification for this. Particularly the last app, which would make sense to be automatically bundled with the OS, rather than as a separate download.

Breakdown

Here’s where I attempt to provide vague scales of opinion on several arbitrary categories:

Multi-touch gesturing: 7/10
Smartphone users will feel right at home with many gestures, but there is a learning curve for understanding the left-right gesture that is heavily employed in many apps on the OS.

User Interface: 8/10
Looking for something refreshing? Get this phone. The tiles are beautiful, playful, and meaningful without being annoying. The OS looks alive, and it is incredible refreshing coming from an iPhone.

Email: 6/10
Email is the only application with high-contrast white instead of the elegant black background. This supposedly makes the text easier to read, but it becomes annoying when everything else sits on a black background. It is quite easy to type a quick message. Syncing lags between the desktop and mobile.

Calendar: 8/10
The home screen shows your next agenda item — a nice touch to quickly get a glimpse of what comes next in the day. The agenda tab is clearly the element that shines through in the calendar, making good use of the colors assigned in Google/Exchange. Month view is pointless since the text is impossible to read. I still can’t find week view.

Messaging: 10/10
Coupled with the people integration, messaging is the most elegant, well-executed experience on the phone. Threaded messages between Facebook and SMS just makes sense.

Social: 9/10
Every service, all in one place. Having all my contacts linked up with their social service counterparts is a great touch. The phone feels like a phone that connects me to other people, not just apps from a store.

Multitasking: 5/10
It does the basics, but lacks the elegance found in iOS. I find that it isn’t a deal breaker though, unless I was playing a game.

Marketplace: 7/10
Most every app you would want is on the marketplace. Developers have heavily discounted premium apps to get exposure. This isn’t a sustainable formula, however, and it will be up to Microsoft/Nokia to continue to evangelize the development for the devices on the OS moving forward.

Maps/Local Scout: 8/10
Local Scout is a really cool feature, but only if it is actually used by people. Reviews and ratings are Windows user specific — not crowd sourced from Yelp or other services.

Search: 6/10
Though it is nice to have a dedicated search option, it is difficult to understand why Microsoft didn’t think of contextualizing the button to the app you are in.

Internet/Browsing: 6/10
It feels clunky to look at webpages, mostly due to a lack of retina resolution. Text can be difficult to read. Thankfully, most multi-touch gestures from iOS are present on WP7.

Overall: 7/10

WP7 makes leaps in areas that previous OS platforms have not. Live tiles are a unique, fun experience on a phone. Focusing the experience on connect you with others shines through, and the out-of-the-box integration really makes for a compelling case as to why they did so. But, other elements of the WP experience don’t pick up where the great UI slacks. As a result, there are times where I find myself stepping back and thinking about my actions on the phone, rather than doing them with little effort. In the end, Microsoft has a battle of winning the hearts and minds of the masses. Little mistakes here and there add up and result in intense scrutiny, even though it may not be necessarily warranted.

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Link: Gabe Newell Says Valve-Apple Meeting Didn’t Happen →

Kotaku reveals in an interview with Gabe Newell, co-founder of Valve, that Tim Cook did not actually visit the company after all:

No one here was meeting with Tim Cook or with anybody at Apple that day. I wish we were! We have a long list of things we’d love to see Apple do to support games and gaming better. But no, we didn’t meet with Tim Cook. He seems like a smart guy, but I’ve never actually met him.

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Link: Berners-Lee: Demand your data from Internet companies →

Tim Berners-Lee:

We’re moving towards a world in which people agree not to use information for particular purposes. It’s not whether you can get my information, it’s when you’ve got it, what you promise not to do with it.

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Link: The F-Word →

A comment by Ed Oswald on the Windows Phone OS and increased fragmentation:

Microsoft has chosen Android’s fragmented path against any good sense. While I understand this likely has to do with the drastic code changes under the hood, it still does not make sense why older legacy devices cannot be factored into the equation. Windows Phone developers must now contend with the fact that a sizable portion of the market will never be able to upgrade. Apps written for the lowest common denominator win again.

It isn’t nearly as bad as Android, but the recent decisions regarding the Apollo release are disheartening for both developers and users. There is some relief in knowing that display resolution is something that Microsoft is taking seriously. The problem is that they create lack-luster devices like the 900 that show awful scaling with resolution as an emphasis.

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Weekly Download #36: Nokia’s Abysmal Quarter, More on Instagram, Sony, Nest, Apple & Gaming, Patents

In this episode, Chris and Tarun discuss Nokia and what “restructuring” means, more on the Instagram+FB deal; Sony’s downfall story and how it relates to similar Apple competitors; Nest vs. Honeywell; Apple and a potential partnership with Valve; our favorite topic — patents. Hope you enjoy the show!

Play
Posted in Android, Apple, Business, Design, Facebook, Games, Google, iOS, Microsoft, Mobile, Mountain Lion, Podcast, Politics, Social Networking, Twitter | Tagged , , | Permalink | Comments Off on Weekly Download #36: Nokia’s Abysmal Quarter, More on Instagram, Sony, Nest, Apple & Gaming, Patents