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#1 |
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Kasper's Automated Slave
Join Date: Nov 1997
Posts: 6,171
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Multi-touch video iPods to arrive in August - report
Apple is preparing to launch a next-generation video iPod in August that features a touch-screen panel similar to the iPhone, according to DigiTimes.
Citing "sources at upstream suppliers," the Far Eastern rumor publication reports that Wintek will be supplying the touch panels for the players. "The Taiwan-based panel maker will begin shipping capacitive touch screen panels in the second half of 2007," DigiTimes said. "The company noted that its touch screen panels will be used with customers' own software and ICs." During a private meeting last month, Apple's traditionally tigh-lipped chief executive Steve Jobs all but broke the silence on the future of the video iPod. Speaking to employees at the Apple Town Hall, he said a division of the company was hard at work on next-generation iPods that, like iPhone, would run an embedded version of the Mac OS X operating system. Picking up on Jobs' comments were Wall Street analysts such as Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster, who in a report to clients earlier this week suggested that the current iteration of iPhone represents much of what Apple's flagship iPod line will soon be. "Specifically, we expect Apple to release high capacity iPods based on OS X sometime during or before Macworld '08 in January," he wrote. According to Munster, whose reports appear to be somewhat speculative, the new video iPod players would likely include touch-screen media features akin to the iPhone, but not include wireless phone capabilities or Internet features. The last significant update to Apple's video iPod family came almost two years ago, when the company used a media event to introduce 30GB and 60GB models with color screens and video playback capabilities. Although the video players were refreshed the following fall, the updates were modest at best -- they included game support, brighter displays, and 20GB of additional capacity on the high-end model. |
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#2 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Southern Paradise
Posts: 4,649
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Pray this time it is a world-wide release!
Teacher: "What state do you live in?"
Calvin: "Denial." |
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 250
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nice. i went to an apple store yesterday (after renewing my tmobile contract to lock myself out of covet mode) and checked out the iphone. that thing is so awesome, and ipod mode is really pretty cool. the plan became clear
1. iphone (the kids covet, but cant justify or afford 600 bones) 2. touch screen ipods so the kids can have some of that, covet the phone some more and train on how to use multitouch 3. cheaper iPhones and less-feature heavy version that millions of people will eat up in a second. |
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#4 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: In rehab for sex addiction
Posts: 9,481
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Has Digitimes ever gotten a rumor right?
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#5 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 653
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There are so many of the reports flying around, the law of averages tells you one of them is bound to get it right eventually!
We all know a full screen video iPod with touch controls is on its way, we have known that for well over a year now. It's just a matter of when. |
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#6 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 78
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#7 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 747
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The rumor sounds more than logical. With the iPhone establishing a new design standard anything less in a new iPod design would fall short - something Steve J doesn't like to see.
Two questions are on my mind - first, will it have a hard drive? I hope so, even if it may make the iPod just a little bit thicker. The second is will it basically be a stripped down iPhone? That design is so stunning that I find it hard to believe that Steve J will move too far from it. Hopefully they will come out with two models - the basic iPod and an iPod with the internet features - basically the iPhone without the phone. It might piss ATT off a little, but I think it would sell like crazy.
Ken
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#8 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 37
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August NO MacWorld Yes
I'd bet august is too soon but January would be likely.
Maybe November for the holiday sales season |
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#9 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Sunset Beach
Posts: 119
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Actually they've done very well lately. Especially with Leopard release when everybody AND APPLE denied reports that Leopard is delayed , digitimes stood by their reports and said October release.
Now i dont think August is the time to release new iPODs. I'm betting on October. |
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#10 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 719
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I think their time-frame is a little aggressive. October is more likely (even November). And I'm still not entirely convinced that the 6Gen iPod will have the touch screen. Apple may want to sit on the iPhone for a little longer to entice more people to go pick-up one as their contracts expire.
But there is no doubt that the iPod needs a re-fresh; and while I think that Nano could do with just a memory up-grade this year, the full-sized iPod is essentially unchanged in the past two years. It's a good machine, but like the iMac, it's time for something new to look at. Edit: Wally beat me to the punch... ![]() |
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#11 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 2
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Ideally: an ipod with all features of the iphone except the phone, but with mass storage. Give it a few PDA features (like the ability to check email) via a tethered phone or bluetooth link to the computer (WiFI would be nice too).
Another feature I'd like to see would be GPS. I have been wanting an all-in-one music/video/GPS system for some time. Garmin is getting close, but an apple version would rock. Especially if it were world capable. I would much rather have these above features and a small phone than the iPhone (especially since I can tether my computer to my phone, a deal breaker for me on the iPhone). |
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#12 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 719
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Quote:
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I will guess that if the 6Gen iPod has multi-touch, then it will look quite different than the iPhone -- think Macbook and MBP. They won't be entirely different, but there will be contrast to differentiate the two -- no one is going to wonder if your iPod is actually an iPhone! I doubt that there will be Wifi at this point. Perhaps that will make it into the 7Gen iPod. Apple won't even put a radio into their iPod. They believe in simplicity in their devices. The iPhone is a communication device, which is why it has internet access. The iPod is just a media player. |
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#13 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 719
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#14 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 222
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Quote:
Not to rain on anyone's parade here, but what part of Jobs saying that the next iPod will run OS X leads people to immediately assume touch screen? Or Wifi and PDA and Safari, etc.? I'm not saying we won't get there eventually, but I don't know how Apple could make an 80 GB touch screen iPod any cheaper than the $600 iPhone. And $600 is pretty steep just for an iPod at this point. I definitely think there will be some sort of new iPod lineup sometime this fall. Can't imagine Apple sitting on the current models for another holiday shopping season. But what that lineup will look like is another story. I just hate reading all the disappointment posts when Apple doesn't deliver pipe dreams that they never promised in the first place. If you want a solid clue as to what is coming next from Apple, listen to what Steve says, first and foremost. He offers precious little clues, but at least they are mostly reliable clues. What do we know for sure about the next iPod? It will run OS X. That's it. |
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#15 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 136
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Quote:
I'd just like a new multi-touch iPod to have calendar and contact editing - so I can replace a PDA. Maybe a notes type of functionality too. And sync with Mac OS X. Internet/wifi sounds like a pipe-dream. Too much like the iPhone. Just my opinion. Actually I want an iPhone without the phone. |
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#16 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 5,053
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Quote:
Vinea |
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#17 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: In rehab for sex addiction
Posts: 9,481
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#18 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 244
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all too much
i can't believe people think they'll get an iPod with email and gps for less than an iPhone.
here's what i see for the new iPod: take a look at the home screen on the iPhone - get rid of SMS text, youTube, Stocks, Maps and Weather widgets. good, now get rid of phone, mail and safari on the bottom. [basically anything that requires an internet connection] now switch the icons around - from the home screen it's an ipod, but with an OSX style hiding dock that has calendar, photos, camera, clock, calculator, notes and settings. i would hope there are 60 and 100 gig hard drives in these things, but i see Jobs going all SSD too soon, with 8 and 16 gig versions. possibly a 32, but i think that would put the price point too high.
--
16gb iPhone // 17" MBP core2duo, stock // 17" lampshade iMac G4 1Ghz -- |
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#19 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 144
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I don't think it will include internet access or GPS as Apple needs to sufficiently differentiate the iPhone and iPod. If there is too much overlap it will make the iPhone look less attractive given the additional network costs involved.
I suspect a format similiar to the iPhone with 60/120Gb hard drive versions to allow for the increased use of video. There may be two screen sizes. I suspect the main additional features will be increased PDA funtionality and more games. Judging by previous years it will appear Sept/Oct in time for the holiday buying season and hopefully it will be accompanied by a roll-out of movies and tv shows to iTunes stores outside the US. |
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#20 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 2
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Hmmm, I never said I wanted an iPod + email + GPS for less than the iPhone. I would gladly pay $999 for a souped up device like this with all these features. Look at the top end Garmin sitting at $1k. About the same thing but it isn't Apple technology or software, so it is definitely lacking in what it "could" be. Apple could start these with basic features for sub $300 for a 30Gb model and work up features and space (maybe 4/5 such models) with the top 2 being GPS capable (a US/Euro version and a combine US/Euro version at the very top end). They have google working with them now so the mapping software isn't an issue...just apply GPS.
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#21 |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,008
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What? Apple doesn't care about sales seasons. That's why they always time their updates to the consumer/education lines to be after all the schools have spent their money (still waiting for that new iMac, probably september). It seems like apple sees it as a gimick, or a sales 'incentive', to put out product in that time frame. They have this ideal their stuff doesn't need a 'reason' to buy it, you'll buy it regardless.
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#22 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 248
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Quote:
Also, it's really expected that the next generation iPod will have a larger screen. The touch wheel needs to take a lot of room. There were all kinds of mockups of virtual touch-screen wheels but that would be pathetic compared to the solution they came up with for the iPhone. Another point is that if it's going to have OS X, it doesn't make any sense to stick with the small screen. I mean why even bother? So, in my book, an OS X running iPod guarantees a large screen which also guarantees a touch interface. |
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#23 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 64
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Quote:
Give me a 32Gig memory card IPod with the interface of the iPhone and I'm there... even if it's a little pricey. You can keep all the WiFi stuff. Really the only thing that'd make it any nicer for me as an entertainment unit is a bluetooth headset. |
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#24 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: In rehab for sex addiction
Posts: 9,481
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#25 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Bushie'sland
Posts: 302
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I am looking foward to a very small full featured computer tablet and maybe a one a little bigger too.
Cubist
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#26 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Ireland
Posts: 8,565
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You don't even have to do that. Just take out the SIM card.
Collecting my SSD iMac Fry-die. :D
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#27 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 11
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Quote:
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There is NO POINT in running OS X if they're not going to be using a large screen. None. Zilch. Zippo. And as far as costs are concerned, we're talking about some pretty pricey hardware to be left out of an iPhone to create a great new iPod. iPhones are only costing Apple something like $270 to make anyway, so if we're dropping some of the more expensive features (cough-telphony-cough-Goggle Maps-cough) and replacing NAND with hard drives, how does anyone come to the conclusion that the price must stay high? That doesn't make any sense at all. |
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#28 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 562
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Quote:
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#29 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 366
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I'd say early September is more likely based on past experience... October might be too late - they don't want to release too close to the "holiday season" or they'll have massive stock shortages... September is a good compromise - it gives people enough time to buy them, wave them around to their friends and for their friends to get it on their wish lists
![]() I think Apple are going to have to come up with a product that is either - Much more like the existing iPods - we've seen some patents showing touch screen scroll wheels for example. - Completely different to the iPhone... They'd be foolish to produce an iPod that looked exactly like an iPhone - they need brand differentiation... |
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#30 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 664
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Quote:
![]() The Leopard delay was the only thing they "predicted" correctly. Apple then said IN RESPONSE to the DigiTimes report that it would not be delayed. A week or two later, they retracted that statement and officially announced the October roll-out date for Leopard. Why would Apple deny the delay if they were just going to confirm it two weeks later? That makes no sense and only makes them look stupid. If Apple had decided concretely that they were going to push back until October they would have said something to the effect of, "We always plan to hit our target dates but occasionally we take more time than previously thought to get our projects perfected. We'll keep you informed if we decide to do this regarding Leopard." They didn't though. They flat out denied it. That leads me to think that they had no concrete plans to delay. There was no "DigiTimes standing their ground." They may have heard a rumor, bit at it, like they always do, and this time they actually happened to be right. If you report every rumor you hear, eventually you will be right. -Clive |
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#31 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 23
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Quote:
First there's the addition of panel engineers outside of the iPhone team whose job it will be to work on larger multitouch surfaces. Then there's what appears to be the formation of a "Mobile Mac" business unit within Apple, and a Manager of Mobile Mac Architecture, which is decidedly aimed at developing a product line of portable computing/communications platforms. Also is the fact that Apple acquired Fingerworks, a company that developed multitouch interfaces... In order for Apple to justify this acquisition, it has got to be for more than a narrow purpose...e.g. iPhone product line only. In talking with a former Apple product engineer who was around at the time Jobs returned to Apple, he is very keen on the fact that the iPhone uses an ARM processor. ARM is a joint venture between Apple and other partners which makes designs for processors specifically for mobile communications platforms. The Newton/e-Mate used an ARM processor and was Apple's first, but poorly organized, attempt at getting into the mobile computing/communcations (e.g. PDA) market. My colleague also pointed out that Apple's product development typically involves the introduction of a "feeler" product (e.g. 1st gen iPod) with a small, focused set of features, designed to elicit feedback from the market on a given concept that Apple's been toying with. iPhone is just that... Multitouch is the concept and they're trying to gauge public reaction to it to help shape how they use it in future products. After 1st Gen iPod came Nano, and Shuffle, iPod Photo, iPod Video, etc. iPhone is more than likely not the flagship product... but the feeler product, after which both smaller and larger implementations of the multitouch technology will take hold. I think we're likely to see 3G/HSDPA or even 4G/WiMax-enabled ultra-portables with multitouch technology that lie somewhere between a PDA and a tablet computer in terms of size. Another suggestion regarding how far Apple wants to go with Multitouch is not only Microsoft's reaction, i.e. to announce their entry into the multitouch game, but also the fact that many of Leopard's design enhancements seem ideally suited for a multitouch input device rather than conventional mouse navigation. A great example of one feature in particular is Stacks... Stacks is really a resurrection of Piles, a project that began in the early 1990's which outlined the ability to expand stacks of documents to see their contents, be able to select documents in the expanded view, and then have them collapse back into a stack on mouse-off. Piles was specifically targeted at use in mobile computing, e.g. Newton/eMate. However, the Newton project was killed and then Piles laid dormant for more than ten years though patents existed off of which they are now capitalizing. Piles, Coverflow, Spaces, Time Machine, etc. look EXTREMELY suited for multitouch in which navigation through three dimensions/axes can be extraordinarily intuitive and far easier than with a mouse. Multitouch is, in my opinion, the mother of "killer apps"... bound to redefine the graphical user interface in the most significant way since the introduction of the Macintosh. Part of the challenge that drives the need for multitouch is the growth of the desktop... when you had maybe 5-6 personal folders, and maybe 100 files, conventional mouse and keyboard navigation were easy... but the mushrooming of this scenario to hundreds of folders and tens of thousands of files is exactly what prompted features like Spotlight. The current standard user interface is no longer doing the trick for quick and simple navigation through your mess of content. That is where Multitouch can fly... by putting you directly in contact with the content of your desktop, you can navigate through data in three dimensions very quickly, as intuitively as you would move around real objects in real space (thanks to some ingenious little "physics" quirks ... e.g. "rubberbanding", variable scroll momentum dictated by the force and speed of the gesture, etc.) and employ simpler "gesturing" that will execute multiple commands in one intuitive handstroke, instead of a series of clicks and keystrokes... thereby greatly reducing the time it takes you to find what you're looking for. Simpler commands executing more complex instructions = efficiency gain. Note that insiders say that iPhone's forthcoming file management system will be like Leopard's... with Coverflow and probably Stacks... and even now nowhere to be found is there a single traditional finder with nested folders, a command line prompt, or, most notably... not a single clunky series of nested dropdown menus. These design factors are not merely an "accident"... they're reworking the whole concept toward a better design. Furthermore, I think that AppleTV, that thing Steve Jobs calls a "hobby" is a project that while not quite ready for "prime time" is acting as a testbed for some later plans they have... Back when Jobs came on board, he started the concept of the "digital hub"... First there were applications that turned the computer not into the central focus of your lifestyle, but the digital hub to which other lifestyle devices would connect and find purpose... i.e. iPhoto, iTunes, iDVD, iMovie, etc. Then iPod was introduced... Apple takes the digital hub one step further by introducing one of the most significant appliances to be part of that ecosystem. Now iPhone and AppleTV are introducing degrees of technological convergence that take the digital hub concept to new dimensions... the LAN and WAN. AppleTV bridges your LAN with your home entertainment. iPhone bridges you with the world. And it's possible iPhone may even end up having the ability (through mere software updates) to act as a Coverflow Remote, giving you the ability to navigate and control AppleTV and its LAN constituents, and queue up selections for viewing on your home entertainment system via AppleTV. What is the next step in branching out the digital hub? LAN-WAN interconnectivity. Bridging your home network with you on the go in a more elegant manner than clunky VPN software or SSH, remote access, etc. and doing so without being tethered to 802.11 wi-fi or a landline. Imagine driving the kids to see Grandma and you forgot to load their favorite movie on our iPhone... no problem. The car's built-in navigation/entertainment console happens to be a Mobile Mac with 4G/WiMax and multiple multitouch interfaces in the dash and headrests... Kids punch up the user-friendly touchscreen in the headrest, it communicates over a wireless carrier to your LAN, talks to some AppleTV-like device on the network which locates the file on whichever computer it might be stored on, and streams the video back to the car. This is the kind of technological convergence that makes the "computing" part of computers so transparent... the kind of elegance Apple is shooting for... and if I can think of it it's not hard to imagine that their much more intelligent product people are probably already testing prototypes as we speak. Last edited by Snowdog74; 07-11-2007 at 01:46 PM.. |
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#32 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 562
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Drop a $5 phone chip plus maybe Apple is paying a few pennies/license for Google Maps. Replacing NAND with higher capacity hard drives is probably a break even. So, cutting $5.10 from the cost of the iPhone saves how much on the consumer end?
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#33 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 64
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Quote:
![]() Sir, I stand (sit) corrected. |
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#34 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 18
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New iPod
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#35 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Cleveland (Home) Chicago (School)
Posts: 158
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No way-
September is iPod month. Mark my words: the 11th the new lineup will arrive based on the previous two years' announcements. July 31st will see the new iMacs, and hopefully mac mini if there is a SE. Though I realize all of these analysts are saying no more mac mini, eliminating the iMac 17" and the mac mini at the same time would be a huge step, and I think a little too much. I think the mac mini would be fine if they just give it a substantial upgrade. Apple has enough money not to charge an incredible overhead on it; if they lower the price and make a smaller profit on them than they already do, the mac mini should see renewed interest. Anyway, no new iPods until September 11. -=|Mgkwho
17" MBP
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#36 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 78
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#37 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 23
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Quote:
"Pretty mediocre photographic fakery," Dr. Emmett Brown - Back to the Future |
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#38 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 23
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So there you are. |
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#39 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: CT
Posts: 1,538
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#40 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: san francisco/Miami
Posts: 46
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is apple a CE company or not?
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