Sunday, January 31, 2010

thoughts on the ipad

Despite it’s nicknames such as the itampon – it poses an interesting idea.

So we all know by now it is basically an iphone on roids.. – so what’s the deal. The deal is apple. They are a marketing power not to be taken lightly. They do a damn good job of convincing you that you need to buy a shiny version of relatively normal hardware. So…

Software: Basically if you have used an iphone you will know how to use the ipad. Why they didn’t choose a lighter version of OS X – who knows. My gripes – single program usage. In today’s world, people are use to multi-tasking. They have multiple programs at once. Like the iphone the ipad only lets you have a single piece of software running at once. There is no minimise, its open or close. This is a smart idea as it minimise the need for large amounts of RAM (of which apple doesn’t say how much in the Tech Specs.  It’s also annoying as all software must be loaded via itunes – no plug and play. At least until you hack it and therefore void your warranty. Of course this forces you to use apple software, have an apple account – list your credit card details in the apple store and yeah – be one with apple. I am surprised that the US government hasn’t deemed this some sort of anti-trust, c’est la vie. The 3g model is the only one I would consider – this also gives you a choice of GPS software – if you feel so inclined. Several features such as ibooks aren’t available in australia (and won’t be for at least a year, if ever). This is due to licensing agreements with the authors publishers.

Hardware: Now this is nothing new. It’s all been around before. Apple claims they have this special A4 processor that is all theres. It’s based upon the typical ARM-based processors found in your GPS or smartphone and made typically by centrality or samsung etc. They are good processors and power windows CE, windows mobile, android, win 95 (on a nokia) or even linux (tomtom etc). APple has modified – and supposedly produce it themselves (which is a first in a while). This version runs a 1ghz chip – which is pretty damn fast for a little device that only runs one program at a time. I have a more powerful than average GPS unit running a dual-core 600mhz ARM chip and it is damn impressive what it can run (my GPS plays divx’s, has a DVB-T tuner in it, opens word files, opens pdfs, has corel draw, reads out ebooks using text-to-speech etc). These ipads come with various size flash disks (!6, 32 or 64gb) which is nice. Of course they are tablet-only (multi-touchscreen) which is getting more and more common – and the way of the future. All will be that way soon enough. It is a 9.7” screen (diagonally, non-widescreen). Why the hell aren’t they widescreen apple – they would be perfect for playing movies. They also only run 1024x768, so despite having a good quality, shiny, pretty screen, isn’t even true High-Definition.

I guess apple is the first to put it all together with a 10” version – but the 13” netbooks are getting damn common nowadays (and make a lot more sense for travelling than a laptop). a 10” tablet will be available by other manufacturers soon enough (one would imagine). The other features like 3g, N(108mbps) Wifi, A-GPS, acceleromator, light sensor, etc are all found in current ARM-based GPS devices with touchscreen (though not many on the Australian market – I can get all of those features on a 5”/7” iphone clone GPS device for about $200/$280AU incl. duties). The apple software does multi-touch better than most though and they are the first to do it in 10”. It is interesting to see how well it goes. It looks damn hot and the apple marketing will tell you need it (especially to go with your iphone or apple mac laptop). For me the ability to only run one piece of software at a time and forced to use itunes is a deal-breaker. It’s a big NO from me…. though it looks sexy and I don’t have one.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The demise of coffee in Melbourne

As most of you know – Melbourne has some damn good coffee. It has some crap coffee and a lot of average coffee, but yes, some damn good coffee. The problem is – you find a good place and then some toss* like Matt Preston writes a review and voila – busy as hell. Two of my favourite places have slowly declined in quality that much that I don’t even want to go there anymore.

Liar Liar in hawthorn, just hasn’t been the same since the owner sold it and moved on. The new staff just can’t cut it and I have actually had bad coffees from there. The vibe is just all wrong aswell.

Chimmy’s in Richmond – again just can’t cut it with the crowds lately. Cold meals, massive waits and then the coffee is more often average than not lately. Very disappointing based on how good it has been in the past. They have all their fresh-baked goodness though.

A lot of places are just dishing out mediocre coffees as they can’t handle the amount of people anymore… I blame the write-ups for all the extra people. It certainly can’t be the global financial crisis.

Anyway there is hope. The dancing Goat in the city. St Ali in sth Melbourne. Artichoke and Whitebait @ Monash. Jones @ Chadstone. Ilios at Richmond. The new merlo place in degraves. Di Bella in nth melbourne or at the vic markets. The green room @ Brunwsick. BBB also in the city and lat but not least, BBB’s sister – Seven Seeds at Carlton. There are plenty of other Gems around but Seven seeds takes the cake.

seven low_0.jpg

Definitely my pick of the cafes in melbourne at the moment.

One day soon I will do up a list of all the good cafes/coffee places to visit.