I’m not sure how long Siri has been doing this, but I just noticed it the other day. I have a tendency to talk to Siri like she’s a real person, and I often say things like, tell my wife that I’ll be home in 10 minutes.

A request like that used to produce a text message like this: “That I’ll be home in 10 minutes”. But no longer.

Now I’m wondering how long it will be until a request like this:

“tell my wife that I’ll be home in 10 minutes and ask her if there anywhere she needs me to stop”

get’s turned into:

“I’ll be home in 10 minutes, is there anywhere you need me to stop?”

Siri Drops The “That”

My thanks to muvichip for sponsoring the RSS feed this week.

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Watching a movie in the post-DVD world is a mess. Blu-Ray startup times are measured in dozens of minutes. Digital is faster, but good luck finding your movie. If you find it, you’d better not get interrupted because you’ve got 24 hours to watch it!

There has to be a better way.

muvichip is the first global, solid-state, movie distribution media that can be used anywhere and on any device that has a USB port, and, when paired up with the muvifi or muvifi+ streaming device, you can watch a movie on ANY device. Studios are excited to distribute their movies on muvichip, and national stores want to stock it.

But we need your help.

We’re running a funding campaign on IndieGoGo to get our first batch out the door. You can be the first to order the muvifi and your favorite movies on the muvichip by helping to fund us on IndieGoGo. You’ll only be charged if we hit our funding goal.

Help us make the future of movie distribution that combines the ease of use of digital with the quality and catalog of DVD/Blu-Ray.

Sponsorship by The Syndicate

Sponsor: muvichip

I’ve been a member of the Read & Trust crew since the beginning. It’s just a fun little network of folks that read and recommend one another’s work. There used to be a weekly email newsletter that you could sign up for, and proceeds of the newsletter went to support the writers on the R&T network.

Well, the newsletter is now a monthly magazine. It’s well designed, ships as a PDF, and costs $5/month for a subscription or you can buy individual issues for 6 bucks a pop.

You can snag a free version of the magazine that was built using last May’s emailed articles centered around staying creative, and which features a piece by yours truly.

The Read and Trust Magazine

Dan Frommer:

Imagine, for instance, an Amazon phone with no monthly voice-plan requirement, fair pricing on data plans and unlimited text messaging. It could conceivably cost half what an iPhone does per month, running on the same AT&T LTE network. And this would help Amazon win with its customers and turn gadgets into services.

If — if — Amazon shipped a phone, maybe it would be more akin to Amazon’s version of an iPod touch but with a cellular data connection. 250MB of data per month may seem like little for a tablet, but that’s a decent amount for a phone (I use just around that on my iPhone). Imagine a data plan for your mobile phone that was $50/year? Wowzers.

What The Kindle Fire Says About Amazon’s Whispered Phone

MG Siegler:

So it’s possible that Amazon is passing the entire $130 from consumers over to AT&T to secure their good-looking deal. But if that’s the case, why not either tack-on or eat the remaining $50?

Maybe Bezos really wanted to offer a tablet that was the same price as the iPad?

Having a same-priced product is one way to tell potential customers that you are on an equal playing field when compared to “other tablets”.

Because pretty much every educated consumer who is in the market for a tablet knows that the iPad is unequivocally great. But that doesn’t mean the iPad is a no-brainer for everyone in the market for a tablet. And so Amazon is competing by saying that for the price of an entry-level iPad you could instead get a 4G Fire with a super-cheap data plan. Too bad it comes with ads that supposedly you won’t be able to disable.

Doing The Kindle Fire HD with 4G LTE Math

For episode 75 of The B&B Podcast Ben and I announce a new format and schedule to the show. You can listen for the details, but the gist of it is that we’re aiming for a 30-minute show and are moving away from talking about current events each week and will instead be focusing on more “timeless” topics. Of course, this week, the Amazon press event was happening live as we were recording and so naturally we talked about the just-announced Kindles. We also did some follow-up to last week’s discussion of App.net, and I talked about why my 23-inch Apple Cinema Display is about to get replaced by a grey market IPS display from Korea.

If you’ve got a product, service, job, or business you’d like to promote to our live audience and our weekly listeners, please send an email to Ben. With the new show format sponsors will get two mentions: once at the very beginning, and once again at the close. Also, you get a link right here each week when Ben and I link to the episode from our sites.

B&B 2.0

Yamaha and Amazon

Ever notice how diverse Yamaha’s product line is?

They make pianos, drums, keyboards, bass guitars, recording gear, headphones, guitar amps, mixing boards, motorcycles, ATVs, generators, outboard motors, snowmobiles, jet skis, and even boats. Equally impressive is that pretty much everything Yamaha makes is absolutely great.

Ever notice how diverse Amazon’s product line is?

They have an online retail store for physical goods, they sell digital goods, they publish books, they make tablets with a customized tablet software, they make e-readers, they have cloud storage, and web services, video streaming, device syncing, and more. And, impressively, pretty much all their products and services are absolutely great as well.

Yamaha and Amazon

The new Paperwhite Kindle looks to be better than the old model in just about every way. I just ordered the Wi-Fi version.

Last year I bought a Kindle touch, and it was my first Kindle. I love it. But I mostly only use it on weekends and vacations because a good chunk of the book reading I do on a daily basis is at night before going to bed. And so I use my iPad a lot simply because I have to if I want to read in the dark. I’m definitely looking forward to using this new Kindle instead. Not only is the light going to be great, but the new Paperwhite display and the higher DPI makes it an overall more superior device than my current Kindle Touch.

If you’re also ordering a Paperwhite Kindle — or one of the new Kindle Fire HDs — then use these links and I’ll get a small kickback from Amazon. Thanks.

The New Kindle Paperwhite