iOS vs. Android Installed Base fragmentation.
As we bid farewell to Zune, it behooves us to take a moment and remember where it all began. And as far as I’m concerned it all began with this video of Andrew Ross Sorkin introducing the Zune on CNN back in 2006.
As I said at the time: this segment couldn’t have gone any better for the iPod if Apple had sent a script and a basket of hundred dollar bills to CNN.
The real gems are at the end when the co-host pulls out her iPod Shuffle.
Remember how Ballmer referred to the WiFi song sharing feature as “squirting?”
And how it came in brown?
Yup.
AirPlay changes everything.
Check out this great list of AirPlay-enabled apps here.
(Source: macdailynews.com)
What phone was in your pocket 5 years ago?
Related:
Apple Reinvents the Phone with iPhone
MACWORLD SAN FRANCISCO—January 9, 2007—Apple® today introduced iPhone, combining three products—a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod® with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device with desktop-class email, web browsing, searching and maps—into one small and lightweight handheld device. iPhone introduces an entirely new user interface based on a large multi-touch display and pioneering new software, letting users control iPhone with just their fingers. iPhone also ushers in an era of software power and sophistication never before seen in a mobile device, which completely redefines what users can do on their mobile phones.
“iPhone is a revolutionary and magical product that is literally five years ahead of any other mobile phone,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We are all born with the ultimate pointing device—our fingers—and iPhone uses them to create the most revolutionary user interface since the mouse.”
More from Gram:
At Thanksgiving, my Grandmother was tasked with bringing a pie and Jello Mold (That only she eats. Because it’s Jello Mold).
Side note: The Lady made Paula Deen’s Pumpkin Pie [recipe], which was delicious. She actually made two, but we couldn’t find a box to carry both…so, we’ve been enjoying that second Pumpkin Pie between us. Good thing generic Lipitor® is on its way to the local Rite Aid.
My Grandmother has lived in a retirement community in South Jersey for over 20 years now. She still laments the lackluster food and shopping options in her area compared to the retail paradise she left behind in Paramus, NJ all those years ago.
It’s always:
“There’s no good [xyz cuisine] restaurant down here.”
or
“That place is shit.”
and most often
“Not like [that place in Paramus she used to go to 20 years ago].”
I don’t disagree — I always say the only part of Jersey that matters is north of Route 80 and east of Route 23 — and it’s still funny every time she says it. One could easily mistake the area around her development for parts of Tennessee. Still a good amount of farmland. Big chain strip malls. Nice, but not a ton going on. And, apparently, according to Gram, no place to get a decent pie.
After dinner, we resettle at the table for dessert. I sample a little of everything. Gram does the same, starting with a slice of the pie she brought. She went to a new bakery this time, “a German one,” she felt compelled to add. She takes a bite, dejectedly puts down her fork, and then asks me what I think of it.
Me: “It’s not bad!”
Grandma: [Defensively] “Ahh — what do you know about pie?!?”
Me: [Falls out of chair laughing].
I love her.
I love how defensive older people get about things from their history. And not the high-level things like “My [immigrant population] had it harder than [another immigrant population] when they first came to this country!” but mostly inconsequential things like “You don’t know what good dry cleaning is unless you’ve been to Cornwall’s on Cherry Street in Hackensack!”
And, I say older people, but we all do this, no? Older folks are perhaps just more steadfast and unfiltered in their opinions and more eager to express them outwardly. The way we’ll claim that place around the corner has the “best sandwich!” or “the best pizza!” compared to every. other. place in the world. The Lady calls me out all the time for this, saying I was “born a 75 year-old man.”
As much as I laugh, I really do appreciate not only the nostalgia, but the simple yearning for “something better.” The notion that “Pretty good is, in fact, pretty bad.” Perhaps the only thing my Grandmother is guilty of having and instilling in me is exquisite taste. In this regard, she would have gotten along famously with Steve Jobs. While some may say having such high standards for even the smallest details in life could become tedious, on the other hand, why settle? In life, especially as we grow older, may we all get a slice of the really good pie more often than not.
Thanks, Gram.
Related:
A comment I made in response to this post regarding digital magazines a while back:
From the Letters section of Outside Magazine:
“Foreign Aid:
I’ve purchase many Outside issues throughout my travels, but the drawback has been that those issues in Sweden, where I live, cost around $12. Earlier this year, the perfect solution presented itself: an iPad.”
RE: An iPad/iTunes Newsstand + reasonable per-issue pricing —
Big opportunity to expand distribution to a global audience.
Sleeper benefit to the iPad Newsstand.
“Print” may not be dead, after all.
“Siri, am I a MILF?” The second Siri parody I did. Also check out the first one— “Siri, am I a narcissist?”.
Written with @arjunbasu @rachyfabs @kristicasey @kathy_L @meetingboy @flyoverjoel @ripslich
Voices include @rachyfabs @kristicasey @kathy_L @meetingboy @flyoverjoel @ripslich, Gary Ricke, @Miss_Cook, @AnjeanetteC, @KickAssJenn, @ha_ti .
Music by @ripslich.
When The Lady got her new iPhone 4S recently, she asked Siri (jokingly!!!) “Should I dump my boyfriend?”
Siri responded with directions to three local garbage dumps.
Bitch. (Siri, not The Lady).
Improve Battery Life and Performance on iOS 5 on iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad
Add:
Turn down the Brightness of your screen to about the 25% level if you can handle it.