Nice chart, Samsung.
Year: 2012
A Few Minutes With the New iPad →
Jim Dalrymple:
It’s impossible to put into words just how good the Retina display is on the iPad. It’s not just images that look sharper, it’s text too. Reading a Web site or an iBook on the iPad’s display is incredible. Even the home screen on the iPad is crisper and sharper than I expected.
iPhoto for iOS →
Now on the iTunes App Store.
New Lock Screen Camera UI in iOS 5.1 →
It was nice before when you could double-tap the Home button and then tap the Camera icon. But I prefer this new way even more. The Camera icon is always there (even when single-tapping the Home button) and you just grab the Camera icon and slide the Lock screen up to go straight to the Camera app.
It’s not just quicker it’s also a little bit more fun.
Video of Apple Special Event →
Today’s iPad event video is now available for streaming from Apple.com (Hat tip to MacStories.)
Resolutionary →
The new iPad is all about the Retina display.
The iPad 3 Liveblogs
These are the three I’ll be tracking with this morning:
- Macworld: Jason Snell and Dan Moren make a dynamic duo and I prefer to read what they say. But the Macworld liveblogs are usually semi-skimpy on photos.
-
The Verge: Lots of photos, quick updates, etc.
-
Engadget: The custom liveblog website technology (is that a thing?) they’re using is pretty stellar — I liked it a lot at the New York educational event when Apple introduced the new iBooks stuff.
-
GDGT: Ryan Block is doing great, too. More photo updates than even The Verge.
And I’ll probably post a few comments on my personal Twitter account.
Kottke’s Mostly Dead Liveblog of Apple’s Event →
Jason Kottke:
I will be blogging the liveblogs blogging the announcement. Blog, bloggy, blog, blogggggggggggggg. Bla. Guh.
The thing starts at 1pm ET, so come back then for the only mostly dead Apple liveblog set in Hoefler & Frere-Jones’ lovely Whitney ScreenSmart typeface.
Electrostatic Haptic Feedback? →
Matthew Panzarino:
Haptics is a tactile feedback technology which uses forces — normally vibrations in mobile devices — to provide feedback through your sense of touch. Most Android phones have some sort of haptic feedback at play and you can feel them at work when you touch the keyboard and get that bzt of a vibration in return. Apple has even filed patents for advanced forms of vibrating haptics. The only problem is that vibrating haptic systems, for the most part, kind of suck.
Something that I simultaneously do and don’t like about Android phones is the vibrate-on-touch haptic feedback — the way the phone will vibrate when you tap on a button. In does help with typing, but at the same time it can be a bit overwhelming to have the entire phone buzz in your hand every time you tap a letter.
This rumor that Matthew Panzarino brings up about an electrostatic-based haptic feedback technology has been circulating for at least a week or more, and I’ve been thinking about it a bit. I am having a hard time imagining just how great or not-great it would be in real life, but, what struck me today is that if anything, I bet this new type of feedback could greatly improve the ability to type on the iPad.
Here’s a CNET video with Dave Rice demoing the technology, and Panzarino’s article has an embedded video as well demoing the tech.
With this electrostatic-based haptic feedback, the whole device doesn’t buzz when you touch a feedback area, only the tip of your finger senses the “friction” that’s transmitted through the screen:
It has a system that uses varying electrostatic fields that can be pushed right through a pane of glass to give a user the feeling of various levels of friction, simulating surfaces. You can see the technology demonstrated back in 2010 on an iPhone here.
I have no personal experience trying this type of technology and so it’s hard to imagine what it’s like. If this does get announced in an hour from now it would make a lot of sense as to why the “And touch.” was part of the invite.
You can only understand the pizazz of a Retina display by looking at one in real life. And it’s likely that you can only truly understand the pizazz of this new touch-feedback technology by touching it in real life.
Sponsor: Denso →
My thanks to Denso for sponsoring the RSS feed this week.
Denso is a video app for people who don’t know what to watch.
Create personalized video channels by connecting your Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook and Google Reader accounts.
Connect your Instapaper, Readability and Evernote accounts to Denso so you can bookmark videos from around the web to Watch Later.
Browse from our carefully curated list of channels which have an eclectic mix of interesting videos.
See what all the fuss is about. It’s Free on the App Store and the Android Market.
Membership Drive and Giveaway
Welcome to the 2012, PBS-Style Membership Drive and Giveaway for shawnblanc.net.
Yesterday I kicked off this years Membership Drive by introducing a new members-only perk (The Members Journal) and a new subscription level (the Executive Membership), and recording a new video.
For all the new members who signed up in the past 24 hours: thank you. To all the current members who have kept their membership going or who have upgraded to an Executive Membership: thank you. And to those who are about to join: thank you, too.
Members contribute nearly 50-percent of this site’s income. Needless to say there is no way I could be writing here as my full-time gig without the generous support of the members. It means the world to me that readers are directly supporting the work I do here.
Ideally, you are signing up to become a member because the value and enjoyment you get from shawnblanc.net is worth it to you, and the members-only perks are a nice bonus of course. But my job is to try and sweeten the deal as much as possible. And so, I’ve arranged for some things to be won if you sign up to become a member.
For those of you who have not yet signed up to be a member, there is, as they say, no time like the present.
The 2012 Membership Drive and Giveaway
Anyone who signs up for a membership before midnight CST on March 25 will be entered to win one of the prizes listed below. Current members who have signed up over the past year are also entered to win, so long as their membership is active.
There are a metric ton of top-notch prizes, all donated by friends of the site, with an aggregate value in excess of $4,200.
The List of Prizes
-
Jorge Quinteros photography: Two 20×30 prints (winner picks which prints).
-
Joel Zimmer photography: Two 11×14 prints (winner picks which prints).
-
Idea Cafe: An Espresso Bundle and a Cappuccino Bundle.
-
Smile Software: 5 licenses each of TextExpander and PDFpen for Mac.
-
Fantastical: 7 licenses.
-
Haystack Software: 5 licenses of Arq
-
Reeder: 10 license each of the Mac app, the iPhone app, and the iPad app.
-
Alarms App: 10 licenses.
-
Red Sweater: A license each of MarsEdit, FastScripts, and Black Ink.
-
Omni Group: A license of OmniFocus for Mac and a license of OmniGraffle Pro.
-
Studio Neat: 5 Glif+ kits and 5 Cosmonauts.
-
Typekit: 5 Portfolio Accounts (one year long).
-
JetPens: A Portable Writing Kit, including: Field Notes Color Cover Memo Book, Red Blooded 3 Pack; Uni-ball Signo (DX) UM-151 Gel Ink Pen – 0.38 mm – Black; and Uni Kuru Toga Roulette Model Auto Lead Rotation Mechanical Pencil – 0.5 mm, Gun Metallic Body.
-
Flickr: 5 subscriptions to Flickr Pro (one year long).
-
Summermoon Wood Fired Coffee: 1 bag Velvet Blaze, 1 bag Inferno, and 1 bag Tri Roast. (Courtesy of Seth Goldberg.)
-
Cuvée Coffee: 1 bag Las Trancas, 1 bag Dead Fingers Espresso Roast, 1 bag Espresso Medici. (Courtesy of Seth Goldberg.)
-
1 bag David Lynch Signature Cup Organic House Blend. (Courtesy of Seth Goldberg.)
-
AgileBits: 10 licenses of 1Password from the Mac App Store (Windows license also available).
-
Enough: 2 signed copies of Patrick Rhone’s upcoming new book.
-
Day One: 5 sets of Mac and iOS app codes.
-
Fusion Ads: A one-week “Burst” campaign spot. (Winner must have a relevant product / service to promote on the Fusion Ad network.)
-
Symbolicons: 5 licenses for these icon bundles.
-
Writing Kit for iPad and iPhone: 10 licenses.
How to Win, Etc.
-
Anyone who signs up for a membership before midnight CST on Sunday, March 25 will automatically be in the runnings to win something.
-
If you are already a member with a current membership, you are eligible to win.
-
You do not have to live in the United States to win — international members are most welcome and most eligible (though some prizes are not available outside the US).
-
The drive ends at midnight CST on March 25, and the drawing will be held sometime around last week in March. It will be random and I will email the winners at their PayPal email address.
-
If there is a certain prize in particular that you’d like to win over another, please fill out this form. I will check it once the winners are drawn to try and get people a prize they prefer. You do not have to fill out the form to win, only to request a particular prize.
Version Distribution: iOS vs. Android →
Chris Sauve:
iOS devices have, on average, reached 10% version share 300 times faster than Android versions, 30% share 19 times faster, and 50% share 7 times faster.
It will be fascinating to see how these numbers change now that iOS features wireless updating.
Also:
In a way, I think that iOS buyers are paying to be on the cutting edge of software. Android OEMs have been one-upping each other on the hardware front (the Android spec race has reached almost ridiculous proportions), but this is a shallow, easily-duplicated strategy. An ecosystem that has been developed instead with a software focus affords many advantages that are not easily mimicked: ease of development, users being able to learn about apps and the OS from friends without the frustration of fragmented device capabilities, and more.
A Couple Things Apple Could Do Better →
Mark Willis pitches some interesting solutions to common problems. The hiccup in signal continuity for when the iPhone decides to transition from a dwindling wi-fi signal to 3G drives me nuts as well. I don’t think Apple would ever go with Mark’s idea of having a setting pane that allowed the user to tell the iPhone that if wi-fi signal is less than, say, 75% strong to drop it and switch to 3G instead. But I do like the concept.
Mike Rohde is Writing a Book on Sketchnoting →
Awesome. Mike practically wrote the book on sketchnoting. Now we’ll be able to say he literally did.