Archive for category gadgets

First music videos shot entirely with iPhone 3GS start rolling

Some of these might have to haggle over who was truly “first,” but the interesting point is it took so little time for them to appear after the launch of the video camera-capable iPhone 3GS. Those who hate on the relative lack of “image quality” including haters of the Flip Mino series really miss the point here — it’s about convenience, ease of use and the empowerment of a new breed of digital creatives. Much like the falling cost of recording equipment spawned a surge in bedroom production from talented (and untalented…) unknowns and amateurs in the realm of music, so too will we continue to see an uptick in compelling and relevant video productions from unexpected places. We’re lucky to be witnessing the era of read write culture kicking off.

Below is a track by Kenny Mosher set to video produced by Showdown Productions. After the break is “Love, Love, Love” by Reyna Perez.

Music Video Shot on iPhone from Kenny Mosher on Vimeo.

Read the rest of this entry »

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iPhone 3G S pricing kerfuffle shows phone subsidy not widely understood

Current iPhone 3G users are up in arms about not getting the same discounted iPhone 3G S price as new customers would. Their argument is that AT&T should be “rewarding them” for being loyal customers. Man, I sure wish the world worked that way. I’ve been a “loyal customer” of Time Warner High-Speed Internet for over 6 years and my monthly plan keeps going up, not down, even as infrastructure upgrade costs fall. I’ve been a loyal customer of Apple for years too, and don’t get any special discount on my next MacBook Pro simply because I’ve bought one before. And phones don’t work that way either.

I wonder if the current spate of anger relates to two things: 1) a conflation of the general hatred being levied towards AT&T right now over their completely craptastic reception and service, and 2) a new market of iPhone 3G owners who have never previously purchased a smartphone, and thus don’t have much direct experience with how cell phone subsidies work in the U.S. and on carriers around the world. The actual cost of a smartphone device as sophisicated as an iPhone or G1 or Nokia N97 et al is many hundreds of dollars — I tend to think of it like “car trouble” price: whenever something goes wrong, I steel myself to be out $500-600 no matter what the heck it is. Some phones climb as high as a cool $1k for an unlocked GSM handset. The only reason smartphones can be had cheaper is because the carrier subsidizes them: you agree to be locked in to this 2-year contract and the carrier is guaranteed to extract $XXXX from you over that period, in exchange for which they discount the price of your phone because they’re guaranteed to make that money back from you (unless you cancel early, which people seem loathe to do even though a $150 early termination fee (or less, depending on how much of the contract has elapsed) is far less than you’d pay to stay stuck in the contract… maybe it’s the principle of the thing).

Thus, if you want to pick up a new phone before you’ve completed that 2-year contract you signed, you’re just plain SOL. There is no special deal for you, and if there were the whole phone subsidy house of cards would fall apart. What would stop me from popping in every month to pick up the latest hot smartphone on deep discount, and what incentive would carriers have to support that?

What these folks are really angry about is the underlying racket of the phone subsidy. It’s spurious to blame Apple or AT&T for “allowing” this pricing scheme — this pricing scheme is typical for the mobile market. Still, neither Apple nor AT&T have done much in the way of educating a First Time Smartphone Buyer market about how this works, and they could have softened some of the blow if they had. Nevertheless, it’s a rude but entirely fair wakeup call to phone buyers about how the subsidy system works.

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Kindle for iPhone app: Amazon and Apple both win

This is a great example of companies “getting it” — the Kindle for iPhone app (see Obsessable’s review) is a taste of a more premium experience one can get with the full Kindle reader. The text-to-speech functionality could have been the same thing to audiobooks if the Author’s Guild hadn’t freaked out — and still could be to those publishers and authors smart enough not to opt out.

Baker believes Amazon.com got more than it gave. “The iPhone becomes a seeding platform for e-book distribution,” he said, and an upsell opportunity for Amazon.com. “At a minimum, I think a lot of people with iPhones are going to try [the Kindle reader]. When they do, some will say, ‘I’d like to download directly, and I want a bigger screen, so maybe I should buy a Kindle.’ “

via Analyst: Apple turns its back on e-book market.

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Ballmer: we need to get faster with Windows Mobile

ya think?

I think with Windows Mobile 6.5, there will be phones in market this year. We still don’t get some of the things that people want on the highest-end phones. Those will come on Windows Mobile 7 next year. Certainly I’m not, um — there’s opportunities for us to accelerate our execution in this area, and we’ve done a lot of work to really make sure we have a team that’s going to be able to accelerate.

via Ballmer: Microsoft needs to make faster Windows Mobile advances – TechFlash: Seattle’s Technology News Source.

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Republic Project: creative “digital box set” business model

The Republic Project reinvents the special edition music box set for the digital age. Users who pre-order albums on the service will get access to exclusive behind the scenes video shot by the band while recording the new album, access to artist blogs, as well as additional ‘fan only’ content like live chats and access to rare tracks. The albums on the Republic Project will be available as DRM-free MP3s.

This is a really smart approach that makes use of the 80/20 rule — those top 20% of your fans/users/readers will pay more to get more of your brand/services/content if you give them a reasonable way to do so. Also cool: makes use of the Flip Mino HD handheld camcorder. What other business models does cheap handheld HD make possible? Can’t wait to find out.

[via Republic Project: Reinventing the Box Set for the Digital Age - ReadWriteWeb]

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38 Cute Animals, 1 Cool Screen, 8 Different Uses

YouTube – 38 Cute Animals, 1 Cool Screen, 8 Different Uses.

Among the more brilliant bits of marketing I’ve seen. Hilarious re-imagination of uses for a cell phone on the scale of a cute baby animal universe. The handset is the Samsung UltraTouch recently announced at Mobile World Congress 2009.

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iMafia: a social iPhone game

“If there was any doubt in your mind that the iPhone is the next disruptive viral platform, it is.”

iMafia’s Charles Ju: How We Launched a Social Game on the iPhone.

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Tempted by the fruit of another

BlackBerry Storm vs. Apple iPhone comparator on Obsessable
Head to head BlackBerry Storm vs. Apple iPhone 3G comparator on Obsessable

So it’s official — I’m seriously sweating the BlackBerry Storm. This is made only slightly troubling by the fact that I have about 10 months left on my iPhone contract with AT&T. Having owned multiple phones on different carriers before there are pluses and minuses to consider:

Plus:

  • You are almost never without service
  • Take advantage of free in-network calling on multiple carriers
  • Have extra voice minutes on one phone or another almost all the time
  • If you forget to charge one phone you probably have the other one available in the meantime
  • Get to play with two gadgets! You can take advantage of the best features of each and use each one for what it does best.

Minus:

  • Starting with the most obvious: two phone bills every month
  • Either deal with the hassle of carrying both phones around at all times, or deal with the inevitability of people calling you on the phone you don’t happen to have with you just then
  • Deal with syncing 2 phones and keeping track of media in two places
  • Packing 2 chargers and miscellaneous accessories while travelling
  • The weaknesses of one device aren’t always complemented by the strengths of the other

Overall it depends on your needs but for me, I tend to miss having the benefits of two phones more than I get annoyed by the hassles of maintaining them. I recently ended a second Verizon plan with the Treo 700p and already miss having a second device enough to be seriously contemplating the Storm. My other big and convenient excuse is my AT&T service at my country home is so close to non-existent that it’s not always practical to use the iPhone as my only cell phone. I’ve been using a zBoost cell repeater for the past 18 months to great effect but either something’s changed in the signal or the device such that it’s been less effective for the past couple of months. I’ve made up for that with Skype Out but the thought of having no mission critical emergency communication when the internet or power is out is troubling. All of which is a lot of practical excuse to justify picking up the sexy Storm on Friday but, you know, lots of people have unusual hobbies…

Also having a bit of gadget lust over the Flip Mino HD CK just reviewed, although I’d like to check out the quality of the video recording on the Storm because I don’t really need HD quality — I just want something easily portable that can capture video on the fly at unexpected moments at a quality level high enough to not look totally embarassingly pixelated on YouTube. If such a thing can happen inside the phone I already cart around, more the better.

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