Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Apple Trades Below 500. Sky Falls.

For the first time in 9 months Apple stock is trading below $500, after hitting a high of $700 in 2012. A lot of this has to do with a report in the Wall Street Journal regarding Apple cutting component orders %50. Is it stock manipulation? Has Apple run out of steam? Nothing is certain yet other than the fact that Apple stock has taken a hit.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Celebrating the Birth of an iCon: How Steve Inspired a Techgeek

Today would have been the 57th birthday of one of the greatest innovators the world has ever known. I like many others, never had the opportunity to meet Steve but his vision had a major effect on my life. Like many people my age I was first fascinated by the products before I was fascinated by Steve.

The first Apple products I encountered were the Macs used in my elementary school’s Macs in the early to mid 90’s. They were probably Quadras that were eventually replaced by Performas, I cannot remember at this time, and let’s be honest they weren’t memorable products. In that time there were so many Macs with different model numbers and their product lines were a total mess. Even still, I think there was a bit of Steve’s touch to these devices in that they looked better than the Windows boxes of the day. Take for instance the Quadra 605, it looked pretty good for it’s time. I cannot attest to the reliability of such devices, but they never felt laggy.

Around this time my family bought their first computer, an IBM Aptiva with Windows 95 (my research shows it may have been an Aptiva 2168-M40, because of processor speed). It had a then top of the line 75Mhz processor, or at least it was the fastest IBM PC in the store, and was far above anything in the Mac section. Besides, Windows 95 was the future. It had major success right out of the gate and dwarfed Apple’s Mac marketshare almost instantly. All the best programs (my dad was going back to college at the time) and games (my brother and I were 8 and 13 years old at the time) were going to come out for Windows, there was no advantage to getting the Mac. We get home, not knowing a thing about computers other than that we just bought the best (and most expensive) one at the store, and quickly got to connecting everything and trying to get everything to install. It wasn’t a difficult process but it took long. The sound the processor made when doing just simple tasks like opening a document folder, was really loud. Opening a folder wasn’t just loud though, it was slow. The “hourglass” was visible more often than the arrow, and we seemed to try to convince ourselves that it was a good decision. “Oh it’s really fast” we’d say when simple things like hitting the Start button worked like they were supposed to. And when installing a program like a simple children’s game took long we comforted ourselves by saying “well at least we didn’t get a cheaper computer it would have take even longer!” And this was pretty much our life with Windows from then on.

We got that Aptiva on a weekend, and the following Monday going back to school, I bragged in my journal about the computer we had just gotten. The teacher wrote in a comment “I’m so jealous!” Sometime that week we had computer class (essentially Mario Teaches Typing). The Macs in that classroom were inferior to my Aptiva, but they never felt as slow. 8 year old me knew something was up but didn’t know what. Later that year the computer teacher told us that we were going to upgrade our computers. Although I was a total nerd, I was never the best in computer class, and was pretty nervous of what “upgrading” entailed. Although I bragged about the IBM, I never touched it. It was too fickle. It made noise and froze often. the teachers first warning to us was to follow the instruction he gave, and that the instructions weren’t hard but starting over would be difficult because there would be nothing on the computer after turning it off. Anyway. Upgrading apparently entailed screens with a 2-D man asking questions and us hitting “Yes” or “No”. Before we knew it we were done, and everything looked, well, like normal. It took less than the 45 minutes between bells and felt like we did nothing at all. Only until recently did I realize what me and a class full of 8 year olds (many with no computer at home) had done: we installed System 7.5 from scratch.

Flash forward to 2000. My dad got me an iMac DV+ (with a matching printer!) for reasons that remain a mystery to me to this day. I never really wanted a Mac. If I wanted anything, it was a Windows PC so I could play games on it. The iMac was relegated to homework duty and the occasional game of Nanosaur and Bugdom. The Windows PC (by then it was an updated IBM Aptiva running Windows 98 that wasn’t as finicky) did everything though: homework, spreadsheets, gaming, web browsing and IM. Perhaps because it did everything it also caught everything: viruses, trojans, malware, blue screens you name it, it got it. The custom build that replaced, was faster and would go on to run Windows XP but eventually succumbed to similar problems and poor drivers to boot. The iMac was rock solid and we could browse the web without worry. Slowly but surely I was falling in love. I put up a last stand in 2004, I got a Windows laptop (Sony Vaio TR3A, an awesome laptop) and while it wasn’t bad it lacked the perfection of my iMac. It too got malware occasionally, and the build quality just wasn’t quite there. Installing free apps, even from CNET at times proved perilous. A few months later I would get my first iPod, an iPod Photo. That is when I decided I could not deny it. I wanted to go Mac.

In the summer of 2005, I was entering university and attended my first orientation. During that orientation we read the text to Steve Job’s Stanford Commencement speech given just a month and a half earlier, and were asked to write our thoughts on it. I have no idea what my written response was and didn’t think much of the speech even knowing Jobs was CEO of Apple, a company I was slowly falling for. Later in life I would come to obsessively watch his keynotes and product introductions. Watching keynotes for products that were several years old and yet you could still feel their magic.

The iMac was starting to show it’s age. The more I loved my iPod the more music I crammed into its hard drive. The more I played with Mac OS the more applications I would install just to try out. I wasn’t completely a techy then but I was getting there. Eventually I would have to expand. I researched heavily what my options were and decided it would be most cost effective to get a hard drive and external enclosure (firewire, natch). Got a hard drive and screwed it into the enclosure, messed with iTunes settings and voila my storage problem was solved! The more I was able to play with it the more I came to appreciate Mac OS and Steve Jobs and Jonathan Ive.. It all just seemed so genius. Soon that didn’t become enough things had to be a little more perfect and I gathered my courage and decided it was time to crack that iMac open and replace the drive. I did it using tutorials from iFixit. The internals were amazing, unlike anything I had seen until that point, everything so thought out. My iMac with that upgrade and my increased appreciation for its design, reached “perfection” in my eyes. That was my full blown communion in to the tech world. I’ve since given Powerbooks, iBooks and G4 Cubes new leases on life, and still have a desire to fix even more. And to this day I try to scratch that itch to tinker with things and make them ever closer to “perfect”.

When Steve passed I first heard by way of Twitter on an HTC Sensation running Android. I do have a bit of guilt in that sense because I didn’t learn of his passing through a device that he touched. Not directly at least, since without his influence the device I was using probably wouldn’t even exist. However there is one thing I don’t regret from that moment. My wife and I were preparing to bathe our newborn son, and I think to an extent it made the moment a bit deeper. Someone once said that new life makes losing life easier to understand, and I kind of agreed in that moment. It made it all the more profound: life, death, and technology and information in between. I’m sure Steve would have appreciated it.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Steven P. Jobs 1955-2011

It's with profound sadness that our latest post here at PMB is announcement of Apple co-founder, Steven Paul Jobs' death. Mr. Jobs' contributions through his work at Apple have shaped the world we live in today and will undoubtedly affect the future of computing and technology. He was a visionary, he wasn't without his faults, he just was. Below is a gallery of the many that passed to pay their respects at the Apple Store in SoHo (NYC).

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Mid-July Apple line up refresh a no-go?


Remember back in mid-June when folks were reporting possible Mac Pro and Mac Mini refreshes for mid-July or August? And let's not forget about this gem from late June: MacBook Air to be refreshed in mid-July from the Washington Post; well I hate to break it to you but a source has advised us to not hold our collective breath.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, our source came forward and clearly put those rumors to bed, stating that rumored refresh was "a false alarm." In fact a lot of the buzz about new SKU's lend credence to what was actually going on this week: Apple's point-of-sale handhelds received a major upgrade last night.

Sure it doesn't sound nowhere near as sexy a refreshed Mac Pro or MacBook Air, but according to our source this update will probably make your next trip to the Apple Store a bit more pleasant. "It's a firmware update. Split credit cards, accept checks, receipt lookups etc," says our
source and since we're about halfway done with the day (7/14) I'm leaning towards this being the only change we can expect for now.

That said, on the retail side, Apple seems to be interested in keeping buyers moving on their sales floors versus having them stand in line to take care of most transactions. Keeping the faithful's gazes fixed on shiny new gear and making it easier than ever to accept various payments is probably a win-win for both consumer and retailer.

Sadly we weren't able to pin our source down with a date on when to expect new gear.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Teardown of 4th gen Time Capsule reveals not so server-grade HDD

Oh boy. That RDF must be getting weak around the Poormac because this just doesn't sound right at all. The new Apple Time Capsule was released with the promise of giving Apple customers a 2TB or 3TB "server-grade" backup option is, anything but. In fact a recent teardown of the latest gen Time Capsule revealed a very consumer-grade Western Digital WD Caviar Green HDD found sitting inside.



I'm not going to knock Western Digital's ability to make decent hard drives but Apple is advertising "server-grade" internals and simply not delivering on that promise. This is quite an assholish move considering you're dropping quite a lot of coin for one of these. Ball is in your court Apple.

Apple to release mid-range, contract-free iPhone says Deutsche Bank analyst


Oh you number-crunching analyst. Always with speculating all kinds of iPhones to be announced, released, or introduced, however, considering that the it's an analyst from Duetshe Bank, a $350 unlocked iPhone specifically for the pre-paid market doesn't seem far fetched.

The speculated iPhone would be similar in dimensions to an iPod Touch (obviously maybe a little thicker due to the addition of a wireless antenna) and would be offered without a contract. After reviewing the numbers, at a 53% profit margin and entry into the global pre-paid market, it is totally possible for Apple to pursue such a device. That said, I'd highly doubt we'll see on Stateside in the near future.

Best Buy's MacBook Air out of stock; New MBA's coming soon?

Well by now the MacBook Air refresh is a stale rumor, but adding more fuel to the speculation fire is the above screen cap from BestBuy.com indicating that the current MBA is no longer shipping. Macrumors is reporting that Best Buy is focusing their stock in their brick and mortar stores but have not made mention when a new shipment will be available.

Honestly, I can't wait to see the refreshed line. Especially if it looks anything like this.