A slew of new Apple updates hit my computer this week. The Bonjour update is the intriguing one, if it includes something to support a new Apple iSlate/iPad communing with Macs and iPhone screens.
We'll have to wait a week or two to see whether a maximised iPhone emerges and whether 3D gesture support gets included, although some of the Apple patents are rather recent.
If the guys that designed the Newton had a finger in the works of a new design, then anyone looking for hints or gestures could start with the chordic manipulation of a multi touch surface.
Conspiratorially, someone has just shut down the gesture guide site for the pre-Apple technology. If you didn't know, it would be difficult to spot that it had ever existed, were it not for the power of cache. It could make magazines look quite different.
Maybe there's a new 'go large' iPhone with iReader software. Maybe it has 3D gesture support. And something to stop it from getting scratched when its in a bag.
So, keep taking the tablets and maybe reading the new style magazines...
Link the tablet technology and the gesture interfaces together to start to see the bubble of uncertainty for the traditional media world.
Colour, mixed media, interactive, gesture based, customisable wireless distribution, channel linked. An iTunes style distribution of content. IS-Interactive Slate. iPad to differentiate from Windows?
Then I found the little song to the tune of American Pie, which summarises the media 2010 turmoil in a ten minute slide show.
I'll need to get a bigger battery charger. Oh, and more bandwidth.
Showing posts with label ereader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ereader. Show all posts
Friday, 15 January 2010
Saturday, 2 January 2010
iSlate
We received some secret samples of the still in development handheld graphically enabled PDA with built in memory, text and reader support. They appeared from within innovative packaging akin to tinsel covered crackers. Along with a supply of apples and peppermints, we took them for a test run today.
There were a few teething troubles, mainly because of the ability to fold the device, and then to find new lines appearing in the text.
This would be okay for a mystery novel, but less so for a more factual account. It may rekindle writing ideas for some, but we wondered if a more permanent form of memory might be better, perhaps supplied in larger quantities. We hear the code name for these under development memory units is 'Pages'.
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