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Posts tagged Steve Jobs
Global Geek News Podcast #51
Jan 5th
Here are the shownotes for episode #51 for the Global Geek News Podcast.
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Stories:
- Seesmic acquires Ping.fm
- Avatar makes $1 billion in 17 days
- 2016 bug hits text messages, payment processing
- IE loses more marketshare as Chrome passes Safari
- Middle aged people unimpressed with modern technology
- Steve Jobs declared Person of the Decade
- The tyranny of government and our duty of confidentiality as bloggers
- China arrests thousands in internet porn crackdown
- Fugitive tracked down through WoW, arrested
- EA closing multiplayer servers for 20 games
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Host: Jeremy Bray & Wesley Faulkner
For more news, check out the Global Geek News Blog
Global Geek News Podcast #37
Sep 15th
Here are the shownotes for episode #37 for the Global Geek News Podcast.
Help support us with a $5/mo subscription!

Stories:
- Vermont teen sentenced to prison in sexting case
- Can a domain name be deformation?
- iPod Touch doesn’t have a camera because its a great gaming device
- Monopoly goes global with Google Maps
- Pentagon keeps watch on troop’s blogs
- DRM take II – Digital Personal Property
- All your tweets are belong to you
- 2010 could be the last year for IPv4 as we know it
- 802.11n is finally final
- Microsoft teaches Best Buy to trash Linux
Host: Jeremy Bray & Wesley Faulkner
Apple's 9-9-09 event thoughts…nap time!
Sep 10th
Greetings readers!
Now that I have woken up from the sleep that Apple put me in, I figure I should comment on the very underwhelming event where Apple launched a couple of new iPods, changes some prices and launched iTunes 9.
Lets start off with the big news, Steve Jobs is back! It is great to see that Jobs is back and acknowledging his liver transplant which apparently came from an organ donor that was killed in a car accident. That said, either his shirt is really large or his is skin and bones with saggy man boobs which you can see in the picture below from gdgt. I would say he really needs to gain some weight. Less vegan food and a few more Big Macs would do him good. Anyway, he gave us some impressive numbers about 30 million iPhones being sold, 20 million iPod touches, and 1.8 billion apps have been downloaded.
On to iTunes! It seems Apple is jumping on the ringtone movement that died out long ago by selling over 30,000 ringtones for $1.29. Nice job at keeping up with current trends Apple! Next time, I recommend jumping on the bandwagon before the wagon has been abandoned in a field with only one wheel left. That said, I do like the look of the new iTunes as it has more of a Zune Marketplace kind of feel in some areas. The ability to manage apps directly from iTunes looks to be a great feature as well as bringing the Genius technology used to bring you the music you like to apps to help you find apps you might like. Finally, the iTunes LP stuff looks pretty impressive, especially if you are a music fan who likes pictures. Now onto the iPod news!
The first part of the iPod news talking about how it is a great gaming platform and such was real snooze of the show. While I do enjoy a couple of the games on my iPod Touch, they are trying to make it sounds far superior in nearly every way to the Nintendo DS and the Sony PSP. IT IS NOT! I will admit it has potential as a gaming device, but a touch screen will never beat the controls you will find on any handheld gaming device going all the way back to the Gameboy. Actually, I feel like ranting on this more, so that will be the focus of my next post, but I will let it go for now so we can focus on other iPod related news. Apparently Apple thinks that at the low price of $200, people will want to get an 8GB iPod Touch. 8GB Isn’t enough to take most people’s music collections, rather less video and apps. This was done purely to undercut the Zune HD who’s 16GB version (the smallest size) is $220. Personally, I would prefer the far better audio experience and double the size for the extra $20. Apple can play the price war all it wants, but value speaks volumes. Speaking of the iPod Touch, the new 64GB version sounds nice but it needs more features, like maybe the camera everybody was expecting which came in the iPod Nano.
Before I talk about the Nano, the iPod classic has been upped to 160GB which I think is a bit too big. Not too big for a large music collection but who really needs to carry around 400,000 songs with them? I would call that overkill. Anyway, back to the Nano. It seems the Nano is getting the rumored camera that everybody figured the iPod Touch would get too. They didn’t say much about the camera other than it could do video and had a mic. I would say its certainly a good update and a good play against the Flip camcorder but I wanted to see it on the iPod Touch as well since it is far more capable than the nano and would have some real uses for it. Oh, and both the nano and the shuffle have a bunch of new colors for those that care about about fashion. I have always found the many colors idea of gadgets kind of pointless but I guess I am not the average person. I am a proud owner of a poop brown Zune, so clearly I have no fashion taste. The only other noteworthy thing in relation to the Nano is the fact that it is getting an FM radio. For my opinion on that, scroll back up to the bandwagon comment since the Zune had this from day one as well as a good number of other portable media devices. If they really wanted to impress me, they would put in an AM radio.
That was pretty much the event. No Beatles, no camera in the iPod Touch, no Rolling Stones and no Mac tablet. The event was pretty much a big snooze and I am amazed that the stock didn’t drop more than a whole 1% considering it usually plunges on even good release events like this. There is one image that they showed that I think speaks volumes about the idea of an Apple netbook. They talked about how the iPod Touch/iPhone are basically portable computers and showed an image (seen below) of some body trying to shove a Dell netbook into their back pocket. I think this is a good indication that a netbook isn’t coming and that the closest thing you are going to get to one is and iPod Touch.
What did you think of the event? Exciting? Boring? Did Steve Jobs look healthy to you? Share your thoughts in the comments!
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Apple's Keynote Disappoints Yet Again, Secrecy to Blame
Jan 7th
Greetings Readers!
Much like everybody else, I was glued to my laptop yesterday for yesterday’s Macworld keynote from Apple (I even live blogged the event), only to be disappointed. While there were a few decent announcements (DRM-free music on iTunes and new prices), the event was almost entirely a snooze-fest.
There are many reasons that could be used for why the event was so boring, everything from the lack of Steve Jobs to the fact that most of the rumored items that people had been hoping for didn’t show up, but I believe the main reason is Apple’s constant secrecy surrounding all of its events.
Apple has a history of being secretive about everything until the moment it is announced. Sure, there is the occasional leak, but on the whole, nobody really knows anything for sure until its announced. This can certainly give Apple the shock factor when something big is announced, but ultimately, I believe they are shooting themselves in the foot with this strategy.
The secrecy that surrounds the events leads to two things, over-hype and rumors. These are the two largest causes for disappointment at any Apple event. The rumor mill usually starts working overtime around a month or so before an announcement, spinning off every wild idea from the retirement of Steve Jobs to an iPhone Nano (which I still believe is an idea that is beyond stupid) only to end up leaving people with higher expectations than they should have. No company can make everything and hit a home run with every press event, but thanks to the rumor mill, it is expected of Apple. If Apple would reveal what its events were about before hand, it would largely kill the over-hype caused by expectations created from the wild internet rumors. Opening up about the events would allow the hype to be adjusted down to a reasonable level.
The over-hype is really a big problem. Thanks to the rumors and crazed Apple fans, Apple events become over-hyped which leads to a feeling of under-delivery. Asking people, mainly journalists, to come from around the world to cover your products when you tell them nothing about what you are going to talk about is a bit much. If people knew beforehand what is going to be discussed, they would determine if their presence is required and ultimately the expectations and hype around the event that bring people from around the globe would be at a more manageable level.
While any coverage is good coverage for most companies, if Apple expects to have happy customers and stock holders, they need to kill the rumors and over-hype by being less secretive. Apple’s stock tends to swing quite a bit around announcements and I think that if Apple wasn’t so secretive, these huge swings would not exist. Secrecy might be warrented in some cases, but unless there is a major shift in company strategy, being open and letting people know what they are in for is the best way to control reactions from events such as this.
-Jeremy “pcnerd37″ Bray
Apple Announces it is Leaving MacWorld, Shoots Itself in the Foot
Dec 16th
Greetings Readers!
After feeding the animals at work I came back to my computer moments ago to discover, thanks to Twitter, that Apple is no longer going to be at MacWorld after this year. Not only that, but Steve Jobs isn’t even going to give the keynote for this years MacWord.
To say that this movement is shocking is an understatement. I never thought I would see an announcement like this. It has been clear for a while now that Jobs seems to be trying to get out of the spotlight, but to have Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing, give the speech is rather surprising. Having somebody other than Steve Jobs give the keynote is a huge hit to Apple fanboys everywhere (or at least the ones on Twitter who are crying about it). A move like this really makes you wonder why Apple is doing this. Is a product launching that Jobs doesn’t like? Are there no major products to be announced? Is Steve sick? Is he quitting the company? I expect this speculation and many other rumors to run wild over the next month after this announcement.
Apple has been scaling back on trade shows for quite a while, but to leave their last major trade show has me asking myself one simple question, why? If the press release is any indication, Apple seems to think that it is too big to be at trade shows. With Apple successfully launching products at its own events, I don’t think that it believes it needs to be at trade shows anymore. Whether they believe they have become too big for trade shows (keep in mind that even Microsoft does trade shows) or they just don’t want to share the attention with other vendors when they make announcements, such an elitist attitude can easily lead to their downfall.
Before this announcement, I thought Apple’s future was rather bright. Now, I am wondering if this is the beginning of the end. One thing is for sure, with an announcement like this, the stock is certain to plunge tomorrow. I also hate to see what this does for the other companies that are at MacWorld now that the spotlight won’t be on the event like it has in the past. This is only the beginning of this story and I believe it will get uglier before it gets better. I will post again as this situation develops and my opinions change.
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-Jeremy “pcnerd37″ Bray


