The iPad, the future of the PC and the demise of open platforms
It's been almost a week since the iPad has been announced and the internet has flooded with posts about it. Who are we to stay silent on such an event. So here's what I think of the revolutionary tablet.
Not the best internet browsing device
for a number of reasons. Well the main one has to be it's lack of support for Flash. Packing a 1GHz processor, it now gives Apple no excuse. The iPad could run the Flash player easily but it doesn't for many reasons which have been mentioned by many others. And if the reasons should not concern the end users, the result must! How can they promote it as the best web experience when it can't render millions of websites (including some very interesting ones), many great online games and of course most of the video on the web. According to Adobe's CTO, Kevin Lynch, "75 percent of video on the Web currently is shown in a Flash player" [link]. And that is actually the first Flash Player penetration statistic I've heard that I believe. I actually believe it is an understatement. I would say more than 90% of useful video (think what kind of video you watch every day) on the web is shown in Flash Player. Even if we exclude YouTube from this, since it's supported on Apple devices, that's still almost all the video on the web that you can't watch in the "best internet browsing device".
Second is the lack of camera - for now. Well that certainly adds to the whole "web experience". Video conferencing in Skype, is part of my every day computer life and I would need it on the iPad, especially since the device does not encourage a lot of typing.
Last but not least, is its inability to multitask. It made me sad and maybe angry during the presentation when I realized that the device everyone had been talking about is not a computer. Its just a 10'' iPod Touch with all of its limitations except for processing power. How can I convince myself to buy something that has the power to be a computer but for some dark reasons chooses not to? For me personally, this is the second most serious drawback for the iPad, along with the fact that, like the iPhone, it's a closed and controlled platform. More on that last part later.
"Apple - iPad - The best way to experience the web, email, and photos" - At least I agree with the "photos" part.
It is amazing
overall. Tablets are not a new concept, but they where never something different. With the iPad, the whole tablet category finally makes sense. A tablet that is useful and different than any other computer. You can have it in portrait mode to read the news online, then you can flip it to landscape to watch a movie and do that for 10 hours according to Steve Jobs. You can interact with it in ways that we can't imagine yet. The multi-touch interface on such a large screen will possibly bring a completely new way of human-computer interaction (even more than what the iPhone did). Not to mention the possibilities for new types of games or entertainment apps in general.
Moreover, I really believe this is the best device to show photos to others. The display looks amazing and the interface is so natural. Enjoying my photo collection and sharing it with others is probably one of the main reasons for me to buy an iPad.
Even though this first incarnation of the iPad might not seem too appealing to most people, I believe that its next generations (possibly with a larger screen) will redefine how most people use their computers.
But it is quite scary
to be honest. I really left the iPad's greatest disadvantage for last - the fact that it is a closed platform. You buy a device that has the capabilities of a regular computer, but you are not allowed to use it as a computer. You are not given access to the file system, you can't install apps without Apple's approval, you can't even plug a USB stick in it and transfer a file! You can only do things that are in Apple's best interest.
Looking at this as an experienced user, I find it annoying and of course scary. At some level, I can't understand how Apple can actually get away with doing something like this. On the iPhone it made sense. It's a mobile device with limited capabilities and had to make best use of its limited resources. But how can Apple justify rejecting, say a Firefox app for the iPad? I just don't think they will be allowed to do it. This is a computer with a 1GHz CPU we are talking about here and Apple should not be allowed to impose such limitations to the platform, as much as Microsoft is not allowed to prohibit its users from installing Firefox or Safari in their Windows computers.
Now, from a developer's point of view, I just can't see how people will want to develop for a platform where Apple alone gets to decide what is approved and what not. Where you have to conform to their rules and change your business strategy and your software itself just because it conflicts with their interests. The truth is, the iPhone and iPad platform is very interesting to develop for - they are amazing, evolving, location-aware devices with cool features like multi-touch and accelerometer. In many cases, it is also very rewarding too. But as a developer, how much do I want to invest in something the future of which depends completely on the policies of a single company?
The verdict
is that in my eyes, this version of the iPad is just and oversized iPod Touch. The limitations are unjustifiable and I only hope they will be lifted in the future generations of the device. I see great potential in such a device, so I hope that some other company will invest what it takes to create a product based on an open platform (Chrome for a multi-touch tablet?) that can provide me with an experience that, so far, only Apple products provide. With the help of some healthy competition, I hope the iPad will evolve to what it's really made for - change the way we use PCs.
In your face, stupid!
TUAW had a post today about the new iTunes update. The biggest new feature of the update is that you can now save your password and purchase stuff with only one click. And the people over at TUAW rush to advise us fools to enable that feature asap and grace Apple with more downloads. I have highlighted these 2 sentences of amazing journalism below.
"You are stupid. Thank you for reading."
It's amazing when a big site like this shows its readers what it really thinks of them and what purposes it actually serves.
Τί πληρώνουμε για το internet
Τί πληρώνουμε για το internet και τι πληρώνουν οι πιο πολιτισμένοι:
Lego iPhone Docks
A lovely day at the office... Kanish's and Sergio's hard work finally paid off. We managed to make Engadget look like noobs
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Wikipedia’s Easter Eggs
While trying to find out how beautiful Dubrovnik is, i stumbled upon this picture of it's main street on Wikipedia.
Taking a closer look, one can see that it's not only beautiful, it's fun too! I only wonder how long this will remain on Wikipedia's page for Dubrovnik, Croatia.
Let me highlight the point of interest:

Image courtesy of László Szalai
All rights released (Public domain)
Is Google Search stupid? Is Secretary.dk legit?
A few days ago, i saw an interesting link to www.secretary.dk in my own Google Ads. I followed it (out of curiosity and greed
) and found something that appears to be a very interesting (and free) Flash CMS.
Wait. I said very interesting and free. And since this was hard to swallow, i decided to search google for that thing (seeing that the developer didn't bother to write anything about it on kirupa or actionscript.org).
Now, what i didn't know about google, is that it indexes it's own ads! Yes! If you are listed here the day googlebot checks locus-delicti.com, then congratulations! Your pagerank has gone up! And the users trying to find information about you will see this post and scratch their heads...
So, anyway, back to Secretary. In the video demo it looks really interesting. And the download is free. But since no one knows (blogs) about it and since it has PHP that i am lazy to check and precompiled SWFs that i'm lazy to decompile, i decided not to try what i could to do my server, if it were malicious.
Also, searching google for it, i found it in several comments on blog posts about Flash CMSs. All posts made by a man called Frederik. In some, saying he is the dev (which he is), in others, saying he stumbled upon it...
Also on the site's forum, there is not one post...
Suspicious things, so i think i will wait to see what others will say.
iPhone 2.2 MobileNotes Problem
Yesterday i updated my iPhone to the newest firmware version 2.2.
As i usually do, to avoid restoring from a backup, i take the sms.db, the notes.db and other files from the private\var\mobile\Library folder, keep them safe somewhere and after the firmware update (or rather restore) is performed, i put them back inside using SSH. Now this 2.2 upgrade seemed to work fine until i noticed something.
All my previous notes where there when i opened the Mobile Notes app. And whenever i added something it seemed like it was added fine. But after i closed the app and opened it again no changes whatsoever were made to the notes. At first i thought "set permissions to 777" but it wasn't that easy. At least not for me...
Setting them to 777 obviously did not work. I tried a dozed other techniques, got a fresh copy of the MobileNotes.app to install, googled for a long while etc. but nothing could change. Thankfully i found the solution just before i start the restore process once again.
I don't know how it hit me, but the solution was as easy as changing the "Notes" folder permissions too. I didn't see anyone mentioning that even though some people have blogged about this problem before.
So if you have the problem remember: change FILE + FOLDER permissions!


