Jul. 15th, 2007
Welcome to the collective.
Jul. 15th, 2007 09:11 amWhose idea was it to put pockets in swim trunks?
On my vacation last week, I slipped my cellphone into the pocket of my swim trunks, headed down to the motel pool and ended up buying a new Motorola RAZR V3xx. (The old phone was BEYOND wet.)Now, I had been wanting a RAZR since they first came out, but I like to be "low-maintenance". I just don't need any of that fancy stuff like browsers and cameras and MP3 players. Just a plain ol' basic phone would do quite nicely, thank you.
Well, I've been re-evaluating that position. Try holding a cellphone up to your ear for more than a few minutes and you end up playing "hot potato" for the length of the call. First, you have it up to the right ear. Then, it's over to the left, back to the right, over again to the left...
It's also not easy to chat on the cellphone when you're driving the a pick-up with manual steering and a manual transmission. You need about three hands. One to steer, one to shift, and one to hold the phone.
A headset would be an answer, except the wired variety tends to get hopeless tangled in the seatbelt and shoulder harness. A wireless headset wouldn't have those problems, and by wireless, we mean Bluetooth.
We are the bearg.
As the guy at the at&t store said, "Resistance is futile." If you want a Bluetooth headset, you're going to have to get the added features: the browser, the calendar, the still camera, the video camera, the downloadable ring tones, the downloadable graphics, the games, the MP3 player, the... STOP!"Welcome to the collective."
It's déjà vu all over again.
Jul. 15th, 2007 07:47 pmWhile on vacation, I got a chance to check out
truckerbear's new iPhone. And, I was impressed. It is a very slick device.
Those familiar with computer history may see parallels between the 1984 introduction of the Apple Macintosh and the 2007 introduction of the Apple iPhone.
A new device with a graphical user interface enters a market filled with text-based menu-driven interfaces.
Just as the Macintosh introduced the mouse to manipulate on-screen objects, the iPhone uses fingertips to do the same thing. Both then and now, Apple's competitors use(d) keyboards and cursor keys to make selections from a menu.
The parallels are amazing.
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Those familiar with computer history may see parallels between the 1984 introduction of the Apple Macintosh and the 2007 introduction of the Apple iPhone.
A new device with a graphical user interface enters a market filled with text-based menu-driven interfaces.
Just as the Macintosh introduced the mouse to manipulate on-screen objects, the iPhone uses fingertips to do the same thing. Both then and now, Apple's competitors use(d) keyboards and cursor keys to make selections from a menu.
The parallels are amazing.