Comment There is no way this will end well (Score 5, Funny) 239
Posted Anonymously for obvious reasons. The computers will never get me!
Posted Anonymously for obvious reasons. The computers will never get me!
Not to worry
Because the proposed shutdown process is so blatantly wrong that any inhibition that blocks misguided developers from copying it is a good thing.
What should happen is that the apps all shut down and go away without any IF/AND/ORs/BUTs about it. If they need to save some state or or whatever then they should get a chance to do so. They should NOT EVER get to communicate with the user or otherwise delay the shutdown process. The OS layer should chose, prior to sending the message, if there is any opportunity for GUI interactions (and should not normally do so).
In an ideal world this would force application developers to maintain proper state and properly deal with auto-save and other features to make the user's life easier. The current model, as detailed in this patent, just pushes the problem off to the end user (which is wrong).
Your conclusion that the iphone4 drops "twice as many calls" as the 3GS doesn't pass the sniff test. If things were that bad I think it would be a much more obvious problem and would have taken a much more proactive fix by Apple. I suspect you're reading the Apple messaging wrong. The actual wording from the apple slide is, "(less than) 1 Additional calls dropped per 100 calls compared to iPhone 3GS".
You took this to mean 3GS drops 1/100 calls and that the iphone4 was dropping 2/100. But I think what they actually meant to say was "1 additional calls dropped per 100 dropped calls compared to the 3GS", e.g. that for any location and any number of successful calls if the 3GS would have dropped 100 of them the iphone4 would have dropped 101 of them. This is about a 1% degradation in performance.
Although still a PR problem for Apple -- particularly given that they bragged about this new antenna system. I don't see this as being earth shatteringly worse.
I myself have had work come back as plagarised beacuse there arte only so many ways to write the same damn sentance.
Creative spelling does help expand the number of ways 1 can right the same dam sentence!
A good reason for the OS to support multitasking: Assume you hit 'upload' in your favorite application and now want to do something else while the data is slowly streaming out to the server. This allows you to move on to do something else.
You aren't the one multitasking though because, from your perspective, you're done with that previous task. This lets the application/OS do the multitasking that allows you to move on and do something else. Apple would argue this "good" vs making you think about it as a new task: "I want this upload to complete so I'll run this application in the background while I do something else then I'll come back and close this application when it is done". In the latter case you truly are doing the multitasking.
Similar to your story I was out shoveling snow one day last winter... and after I was done my iPhone was missing.
I tracked it down in the tracks of my truck -- I'd moved it to finish shoveling and driven over my phone. As in your case all was fine -- didn't break the screen and it's been working just fine for at least a year since then.
This is a technical "solution" to a non-technical problem. The ability exists today but is predominately blocked by the cell phone providers.
This quote from the article shows how deluded these people are: "it seems likely that carriers would give the SIMFi away as long as you took out some sort of mobile data contract". If that was the case then I'd be able to use tethering on my iphone RIGHT NOW.
Sure, neat technical hack. Nice miniaturization there. But making this functionality available in a smaller form factor isn't the problem.
Oddly, I've recently moved to Wisconsin and many conversations about the weather turn to global warming. Apparently plenty of WI folks feel that recent winters are proof of "Global Warming". Anecdotal discussions aside, people around here seem to be very aware that the world is changing around them and, if anything, seem to be more willing to take these changes as signs of climate change.
Heck, I'd have argued that these strong seasons with a long history of "how cold does it get" and "when do the lakes freeze" and "when do the lakes thaw" and "when do the birds come back" make these midwesterner folks more interested in, and realizing of, the potential/risk of climate change. As opposed to the folks on the coast where small changes in weather/temperature hardly make a difference.
In the Star Trek future you can always route auxiliary power to the overloaded/failed device; which is usually sufficient to get to the end of the episode.
Apple is moving the computer interface in a new direction. Apparently they were not satisfied with one, two, three (lets add some more!) button mice. I can imagine them asking what the value was of having "a little tiny keyboard that you slide around your desk", and subsequently deciding to do something different.
Oddly they've taken the "multiple buttons is confusing" approach and leapt off a cliff. Have you watched a new user try to figure out one of the new apple trackpads? There is so little feedback that they have a hard time even understanding that there is a button available... and its seriously too bad if they meet up with a highly customized desktop supporting multiple gestures. I've noted that even experienced users need to take some time to figure out a peers configuration (concerning which corners do what).... but can you imagine what will happen as the gestures themselves become more and more customizable and as applications add their own gestures to the mix?
This leads to my greatest complaint about the new Magic Mouse -- it doesn't behave the same as a trackpad. In effect having pushed back on movable "mice keyboards" they've also neglected to build a moveable "mice trackpad". Just because it is mounted onto a "mouse" and can be slid around on the desk is no reason, in my book, to introduce a bunch of different gestures and actions. I think they should instead simply mount a full featured trackpad there in mouse form factor. Rather than build their own set of "here is how gestures might be different on this device" instead they should have focused on making gestures customizable in general.
We don't have a mechanism for customizing gestures today and I think there is a lot of software research on making that interface work better
(All this, by the way, leaves your average windows trackpad in the dust; and it is good to see MS is at least experimenting with the ideas. I hope they find the flaws in Apples approach rather than trying to leapfrog in an entirely new direction).
Nobody expected it, I guess.
Nobody expects the Spamish Inquisition!!
From the article:
"Indeed, where Android's browser makes sense on a smartphone's touchscreen, it just doesn't translate here. The process of clicking and holding the left mouse button, while pushing up to scroll the page down, seems clunky and counter-intuitive,"
Gosh, they took an OS designed for a touchscreen and tried a simplistic hack to make it work with a touchpad... and this isn't easy to use? Well, duh. This says nothing about Android and everything about the marketing folks that messed up.
- So I'd have a convenient location to display all the system monitoring stuff I like to run.
- So I could display videos I'm only 'sorta' watching
- Because it would be cool
- (make one up)
Work without a vision is slavery, Vision without work is a pipe dream, But vision with work is the hope of the world.