Weblog
Monday, 13 August 2007
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Being no. 1 is not as pure and fulfilling as being the best
Sony is one of us. Where I am Apple, I am Sony too.
And it hurts me to see such a great team of people working for such a great leadership, seeing their efforts going down in flames just because of some bad sheep/s among them.
I don't want Sony to be a loser. The Zionists want that and as you know, I won't give up.
I have been reading about Sony for some time now and badly wanted to know what was it that was hurting it. I always thought that Sony was involved in too many things and needed to trim its size down to what I personally thought Sony was best at, personal computers, displays, cameras, phones, games and movies.
Then I read that Howard Stringer who became the CEO of Sony in 2005, had a dual nationality.
American and British.
May be for you it might be a common thing or might be a not that much of a weird thing. But for me who personally wants to fuck a bamboo up each Zionist's ass, including Prince Charles', it was nothing less than something that would start ringing a warning bell. Both USA and UK are the strongholds of the Zionists.
So I searched the net using a simple query, 'CEO stringer is not good for Sony'. I wanted to see if anyone has ever seen it a bad thing that Sony made Mr. Howard Stringer the CEO, except for the out going Sony CEO who was Japanese and wanted some young Japanese blood to take the control or the father of Playstation 3, Mr. Ken Kutagari. No one did. But I did got 50 results and I just read all that I thought was important.
And here is what I think.
The dog Howard Stringer is a pig who works his ass off to make his Zionists masters feel more secure and for which he was knighted in 1999 as Sir Howard Stringer. But I might be wrong.
Sony came into the gaming world with their Playstation console and later Playstation Portable. PS2 was a great success and still is. Sony who has been a pioneer in many technologies, once again set its foot in the new lands to show the world what technology can do for us. It brought out PS3. Now at the time it's rivals, Nintendo and Microsoft, were creating gaming consoles that could simply play games. Sony on the other hand created ART. PS3 is undeniably the thing what Nintendo and Microsoft consoles will be in two to three years time.
And if you create ART, only ART lovers buy it. So if you see from my point of view, Mr. Ken Kutagari and Sony were right on the track with PS. Take a look at Apple. Expensive but productive. As far as sales go of the gaming consoles, Nintendo is on the top and that is only because of two things. Type/number of games and their accelerometer-pointer controller which picks up and transfers your hand and arm movement directly to the screen.
And thats where I think Sony should work. More games, different types, a new experience of game playing and may be a less cheaper version of PS3 rather than reducing PS3 itself to make it cheaper. I also think that Sony should not worry too much about crackers playing with PS and should promote Linux and open source.
PS3 is way ahead of Nintendo and Microsoft in terms of graphic quality and machine power, the two things that real hardcore gamers like me, want. And the Zionists know that. Internet is the future and if Sony succeeded in brining such graphic quality and machine power to the internet gaming, this would destroy the console of the Zionists, Xbox from Microsoft and Bill Gates.
And here is where I feel strongly that I am right about Sir Howard Stringer being a Zionist. He said the following words for Bill Gates of Microsoft in the recent D: all things digital conference."Look, the skill of Bill Gates is he's so brilliant at his detail that when he slips in the salesmanship, most of us think: oh my God, he must be right. ... He talked on the one hand, and I loved it, he talked about [Windows] Vista [being] delayed as if delay was normal, and then he started mocking me for delaying PS3 [PlayStation 3]."
He sounds as if he feels sorry that he is not working for Microsoft and I think Sony needs to test him and see if he really wants to help Sony.
Sunday, 12 August 2007
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Apple iPhone questions
I've got questions about this iPhone thingy. And you should too. Tech insiders are claiming that the Apple iPhone is going to be a huge hit when it is released. When Steve Jobs announced the Apple iPhone many months ago, the world responded with a roar of applause. Just like the Apple iPod before it the iPhone is being talked about as if it is an electronic messiah. And with the iPod the popularity was beyond expectations. However, the Apple iPod was so popular because it combined a fresh design with great features. Will the Apple iPhone do the same? Absolutely.
The Apple iPhone has a very typical Apple design. It is fresh, modern, and just screams ?high-tech?. It even looks futuristic.
However it still does not appear intimidating. Apple combines a very high-tech look with a very welcoming design that will help attract people that are not technophiles.The Apple iPhone also has some great design features that give it a huge advantage over its competitors like Nokia and it's LG Shine. There are many smart phones on the market that have achieved some level of popularity, such as the Blackberry and the Blackjack. However every existing smart phone has the same two design flaws. First of all they have to fit a screen and a keypad on the same face, and second of all they make navigating menus very difficult. The Apple iPhone solves these two problems and will surely be a popular choice when it is released.
The Apple iPhone uses a dynamic touch screen. This means that there is no physical keypad. The whole front face of the iPhone is a screen, and the keypad is on the screen. The reason this solves the ?tiny screen, tiny keys? problem is because the keypad can change depending on what you are doing. If you are watching a movie the keypad can disappear completely, giving you a large viewing display. If you are typing the keypad can take up most of the screen so that you get to press larger keys. When you are browsing menus on the needed keys are displayed while the irrelevant keys are removed, thus giving you more room for both the display and the keys you need.
The iPhone also approaches menu design and user interface in the typically innovative Apple fashion. Instead of having to use a small scroll bar to move through menus, the iPhone allows you to simply slide your finger. This requires far less precision and is far more intuitive. The design of the iPhone interface is so organic and logical that people will be able to use it right after they pick it up. There is no learning curve, and using it does not seem like a test of your motor skills.
Is this the merger of entertainment gadgets and mobile phones ? Yes. Has Apple annouced the future death of the iPod ? Maybe. They are practically the same size and width. What will happen to the iPod 5 years from now ? Who knows.
The Apple iPhone will surely be a big hit because it looks very approachable, is easy to use, and has all of the features of current smart phones plus more. While the iPhone would probably sell many units even if it were poorly designed, thanks to the popularity of the iPod, we do not have to suffer that disappointment. The iPhone is an even greatly leap forward than the iPod was.

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iPhone orders at online Apple Store see 2-4 week delays
Filed under: Retail, iPhone. Uh oh, it looks like Apple might have dumped the majority of their iPhones into brick and mortar stores, making web shoppers wait longer than usual for a new device. The online Apple Store currently displays a 2-4 week shipping time for both 4GB and 8GB iPhones.
TAGS: iPhone, AppleLINK: iPhone orders at online Apple Store see 2-4 week delays by David Chartier The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) from Boxxet Collection
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MORE FROM Gizmodo | Gizmodo Australia, The Gadget Guide
Saturday, 11 August 2007
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TECH TALK: Apple iPhone: Industry Impact
Om Malik wrote about how Apple's iPhone will change the mobile business:
A true web applications platform for the mobile: Charles Ying thinks that Apple just reinvented the mobile applications platform. “This isn’t mobile Flash, mobile Java, or even the mobile Web. It’s the real Web, the real deal,” he writes.Break the Wireless Walled Gardens iPhone is fully functional iPod, with full tracks of music. Do you need to download ring tones for $2.99 a pop, when you get a full song for a third of that price? Ditto for Wallpapers, and themes, and everything else that is being sold on the carrier deck.
Shift of control to the customers: If the embedded (Safari) browser if it performs the way as hyped by Jobs & Co., will give us the choice-control we have on the web. Search engines to web sites – nothing will be determined by the wireless carriers who have thus far done nothing but create barriers between what we want, and giving us what they want to sell.
Slow demise of subsidized, boring phones filled with bloat ware: The introduction of the unlocked iPhone will do two things – it would basically get US buyers savvy to the idea of buying full priced unlocked phones. Secondly, it is going to cause a behavior change - of buying phones instead of freebies.
Keep it simple or else: One of the lasting (at least for me) changes that iPhone will bring to the mobile market is simplification. Their new user interface is going to make complex mobile services relatively simple, and can have the same impact as Blackberry had on the corporate market.
Tomi Ahonen wrote:
I am certain that the mobile telecoms world will count its time in two Eras. The Era BI: time Before the iPhone, and the ERA AI: time After the iPhone.
...
From June all reviewers around the world will compare all new high-end phones with the iPhone. How near do they arrive in being "almost as good as the iPhone". This is the phrase we will see in most reviews of smartphones. And the yardstick in usability will from now on - and my prediction is that for the fore-seeable future of mobile phones - the latest iPhone. A clear watershed moment in the industry. For the first time a major handset device which was designed from the start to be both a multipurpose smartphone and yet easy to use.
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The second and much greater impact is the mobile internet, or the value-add services industry of mobile telecoms...It has been a lopsided battle, when most early internet-capable phones were monochrome WAP phones or modest speed GPRS phones with still tiny colour screens. Now we get the glorious sharp 3.5" iPhone screen and its powerful web access software. It was easy to suggest a laptop with a WiFi or WiMax access card would "forever" trump a 2" tiny pocket screen of an early 2.5G or 3G phone. Now we get the big screen iPhone and suddenly the pocket internet seems very plausible. And even at 500 dollars (subsidised) the iPhone costs half that of a laptop. Do we really need a new computer. If all we need is e-mail and music and uploading some pictures to Flickr or Myspace, isn't an iPhone enough?
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Yes the iPhone is a radical device and yes, we need the American IT and media and adveritsing industries to wake up to mobile phones. And yes, the iPhone will bring valuable goals for all user interface design in mobile telecoms, both for handset makers and mobile operators. But all invention didn't happen at Apple or be caused by the iPhone.But the level of the noise around mobile will double in June. Very many big guns will join the game. That is good. And it will be a change from an old Era, where handset makers like Nokia and Motorola ran the show with the major mobile operators (carriers). Now media giants will join in, as will major IT players and internet companies.
AT&T too is expected to benefit from being the exclusive partner for iPhone. The New York Times wrote:
It is a testament to the power of AppleÂ’s brand name and reputation that many consumers appear to be giving it a chance to redefine phones as the iPod did music players. AT&T said 1.1 million potential customers had signed up on the companyÂ’s Web site asking to be contacted when the phone is for sale.Steven P. Jobs, AppleÂ’s chief executive, has said that he expects Apple to sell 10 million iPhones by the end of 2008. That projection could include sales outside the United States, but Apple has not yet announced any deals with foreign carriers.
Â…
For AT&T “the iPhone launch is bigger than the launch of a new device,” Mr. Hodulik said. “It’s something more strategic. It’s about moving the whole brand.”
Tomorrow: The Platform
Friday, 10 August 2007
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iPhone Activation Could Take an Hour, May Not Require a Contract

The iPhone activation process is quite user-friendly, but it's not necessarily as seamless or as quick as you might like. In my case, it took nearly an hour to complete. Once I'd entered the information needed to sign up, a screen popped up saying that activation was taking longer than expected, and that I'd receive an email when it was complete. It was 60 minutes before that email arrived.There were other delays. If you don't have the most recent version of iTunes (7.3) you'll need to upgrade (a 34MB download in my case) and if you're using a Mac, you'll need to upgrade your OS to OS X 10.4.10 (a 26MB download for me).
If you've just brought home a brand-new iPhone, these delays will be a bit frustrating.
However, there was one intriguing hint during the signup process that it might be possible to get an iPhone on a prepaid plan from AT&T (aka AT&T's "GoPhone" program).
Apparently, if you need to place a deposit in order to get monthly service -- presumably because your credit isn't any good -- you can get a "Pre-Approved Credit Check Code" from an AT&T Store. Or, without that code, you can activate the iPhone using the GoPhone plan.
I couldn't figure out how to force the activation process into the GoPhone plan, however. But the fact that it's there is tantalizing.
Of course, you could always cancel your 2-year contract. The early termination penalty is just $175 -- a small amount relative to the $2000 or more you could pay over the life of the contract, and smaller than termination fees and penalties for some other phones.
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