Upcoming on from the front end
Posts have been few and far between recently but don’t worry I haven’t been sitting on my hands and have plenty to report. Just in the process of moving to a new server at the moment so want to complete that before making much new content.
Coming up:
Reviews:
- Gelaskins for iPhone and PSP - http://www.gelaskins.com
- Best Apps for jailbroken iPhones and which are likely to make it as an official app in future
- Best web hosts for developers/design studios with multiple clients
Features:
- Best new site or redesigns of 2008
- My recent projects including
- why http://www.k9ulf.com ate up over 10gigs of bandwidth in it’s first month and looks to be increasing
- On location photoshoots with clients at http://www.beecleanlondon.co.uk
- How a re-design can help increase traffic, improve customer support (plus breaking out from frames) - http://www.woodside-security.co.uk
- How a rush job doesn’t have to look ordinary - http://www.littledesignplanet.co.uk
Expect transfers and fixing links etc will take another few days and then I’m back in business. I will eventually be intergrating the blog into little design planet when that gets re-built this summer.
Filed under Newsflash | Comment (0)iPhone is Child’s Play
My 16 month year old is turning out to be quiet the technology wizz. Changing TV channels was one thing but taking photos on my wife’s phone and sending them as a picture message to me was quiet another. Today she showed me that she is perfectly capable of unlocking and using my iPhone. Apparently she has been doing this for months but this time it was caught on film. Can’t wait to see what she does when I get her an Eee PC next year.
Filed under Newsflash, Tech news | Comments (2)Have Apple got it wrong with the iPhone?
At this year’s dconstruct conference Peter Merholz explained how just packing more features is not a good way of evolving a design and how the iPod and Wii are examples of that. Not the most technically advanced or feature packed compared to rivals but got the user experience part right and is a success as a result. ( here his lecture in the dconstruct podcast here)
The idea of not feature stuffing a phone seemed to be a great idea then. Especially when you consider 80% of people only use 20% of the features of their phones. However, at the price point Apple have launched with you would have to say the that it likely only the 20% elite/pro users that would pony up the record-breakingly expensive fee and contract combination.(see prices here)
Surely early figures will show great sales but hype and a shiny interface will only get you so far. Users that had basic handsets before will love the iPhone as it does the basics incredibly well. But if you have a top-end pocket-PC or symbian phone you’ll be hugely under-whelmed and may see you’re upgrade as a bit of a downgrade.
I’ve been using the iPhone since it launch in the UK a few days ago and the novelty has already begun to where off and I sorely miss my
XDA exec. It’s not just the big features like video calling, 3G Internet, and picture messaging - it’s even little things like being able to select text/numbers on a webpage and paste them into a word doc/email or being able to delete music/video/app without a computer. Also the camera seems to be such an after thought. The quality is so low - not just resolution but sharpness too. There are also no settings to adjust, or support for recording video.
These issues may cause iPhone sales in europe to reach critical mass sooner than Apple may have planned for. Once the mac fans that would buy a brick with the apple logo on and then those that are caught up in the hype/fashion statement of owning one have all purchased the price will have to drop to sub £50 for the real target audience - the 80% that like to use the basics - will start to lap it up. By then I am sure the novelty will have worn off for the serious phone users that like their features and so many will be looking to get out and buy a more feature rich phone. Perhaps by then the Apple iPhone 2 will be out - but will it be too late. Will the pro users be once bitten twice shy? Will Google Andriod be a serious rival by then? Will the next generation of windows mobile have surpassed the iPhone interface?
With all these questions hanging over the iPhone I wouldn’t put money on the long term success of Apple in the mobile market as readily as some who seem to think they will take it by storm like the iPod has with the portable music industry.
The current kings of mobiles remain symbian and windows mobile based smartphones - watch out for the new 8GB Nokia N95 (black) and the XDA Exec if O2 still let you buy them now that they do the iPhone.
Filed under Browsers, Newsflash, Tech news | Comments (6)












