the tablet war is heating up

I don't expect any major new hardware: no iPhone, no iPad, no iPod. There could be some minor new hardware: Time Capsule, maybe Apple TV.

I do expect some pretty damned cool software, however: iOS 5 with things no one's considered, or at least thought feasible, and hopefully some kind of magic-y seeming cloud integration between all things iOS and Mac.

I'm excited, but not as excited as I'd be if new hardware was likely, especially since it's time to replace my phone.
 

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It's what happens when you control 95% of the market: it is anti-competitive in that situation. I'm confident that for that very reason Apple would be ultimately very happy with, say, 40% of the smartphone market and 40% of the tablet market, especially if they are generally leading the way, with other companies mostly catching up to whatever they came up with last year. A greater percentage puts them in similar danger, and a smaller percentage makes less money. (FWIW Apple currently has about 26% of the smartphone market and 75% of the tablet market.)

On the Kinect, I agree, that's a truly innovative technology from Microsoft. The Xbox department seems to have the most permission and impetus to innovate. They get credit for it, though, and if Apple came out with similar technology next week at their developer's conference, Microsoft would still get credit for the tech, I'm certain. (Now, if they managed to do something truly amazing with it in the mobile space it might overshadow Microsoft's achievement).

I'm just saying that Apple really did repeatedly change the face of computing, stuff that literally redefined how computers were used for years to follow:
  • Personal Computing: the Apple II, the first non-kit personal computer, almost a year before the TRS-80 and the Commodore PET;
  • Graphic User Interface: the Macintosh, the first personal computer with a graphical user interface and a mouse, a full year before Windows 1 (which was spectacularly lame, even compared to the very lame early Mac);
  • Multitouch All-Screen Smartphone: it's hard to believe despite the fact that it's only been four years, but prior to the iPhone these devices didn't exist (though the LG Prada and the HTC Touch were announced at about the same time, they weren't multitouch). The biggest innovation, perhaps, is the way the device transforms into the app running on it, something that earlier smartphones and PDAs failed to accomplish.

I'm not at all deifying Apple: they've made plenty of mistakes and even outright crap, and sometimes their innovations were just the right amount of refinement of an existing idea that they later got credit for (e.g. there were tons of mp3 players before the iPod, and many better ones, especially in the early years; iTunes, however, changed things in just the right way).

Nonetheless, they actually redefined the way the world used computers at least three times, and the same may be true of the iPad. I agree that Microsoft doesn't get credit for much innovation and Apple does, but that's mostly because that's the reality of what happened.

(I'm no Apple fanboy, to be clear: I use Windows, Linux, and a Mac daily; though I enjoy using the Mac the most, they all have their strengths and places. I loved my Palm III and V and VII; I programmed Windows CE, Pocket PC, and Windows Mobile devices throughout the last decade and really loved them, too. I gave my Droid several months to grow on me and even survived my month with a BlackBerry, but my iPhone is by far my favorite. I even used to use a Windows Tablet PC and generally hailed it, but it didn't change my daily life the way the iPad did. I still give Apple and, to a large extent, Steve Jobs credit for changing personal computing in ways that no other company has managed, though.)

Now, I've read in a few places that regarding innovation, there are some pearls of truth to Apple not being as innovative as they claim. I'll try to find a link to the discussions, but I came across a few articles where Microsoft, Samsung, and Apple people were duking it out, and the Apple guys were calling the Samsung guys and Microsoft guys copycats, and one of the Samsung guys pointed out that in most years Samsung and Microsoft patent *far* more new technology than Apple does. I think 2010 was the first year Apple had more than a handful.....in several of the example years, it was something crazy like Samsung 80 patents, Microsoft 77 patents, and Apple 3 patents.

I can't speak to the accuracy of the statements, and I'm not sure how I'd even look that up.

Banshee
 

I'll try to find a link to the discussions, but I came across a few articles where Microsoft, Samsung, and Apple people were duking it out, and the Apple guys were calling the Samsung guys and Microsoft guys copycats, and one of the Samsung guys pointed out that in most years Samsung and Microsoft patent *far* more new technology than Apple does. I think 2010 was the first year Apple had more than a handful.....in several of the example years, it was something crazy like Samsung 80 patents, Microsoft 77 patents, and Apple 3 patents.

I am not sure I would say the number of patents filed are necessarily indicative of how innovative a company is. Of course that isn't to say that I think Apple is more or less innovative - just not sure number of patents filed is a good measure innovation.
 

Samsung and Microsoft both have great research arms and come up with a lot of new things. Where Apple excels, I think, is in putting the pieces together in a way that works well together and that's customer-friendly.

The iPod wasn't the first MP3 player, the iPhone wasn't the first smartphone, the iPad wasn't the first tablet. But in each case, Apple put the pieces together in a way that none of the other companies had, that made it work better. In fact, I think the biggest innovation on the iPhone wasn't a technical one at all: it was getting control away from the carriers so that Apple could control the experience.

For example, until the iPhone came out, location-aware apps were really scarce on smartphones. The phones had the capabilities, but they were often locked away by carriers so you couldn't use them until you'd signed some specific and arcane agreement with each carrier you wanted to be on. On many otherwise capable devices, the carrier had locked out features or applications completely.
 

Samsung and Microsoft both have great research arms and come up with a lot of new things. Where Apple excels, I think, is in putting the pieces together in a way that works well together and that's customer-friendly.

The iPod wasn't the first MP3 player, the iPhone wasn't the first smartphone, the iPad wasn't the first tablet. But in each case, Apple put the pieces together in a way that none of the other companies had, that made it work better. In fact, I think the biggest innovation on the iPhone wasn't a technical one at all: it was getting control away from the carriers so that Apple could control the experience.

For example, until the iPhone came out, location-aware apps were really scarce on smartphones. The phones had the capabilities, but they were often locked away by carriers so you couldn't use them until you'd signed some specific and arcane agreement with each carrier you wanted to be on. On many otherwise capable devices, the carrier had locked out features or applications completely.

That makes intuitive sense to me. That could be the kind of thing they were referring to.

Apple *is* a master of both marketing, and making easy to use products, for the regular masses. But I think back to stuff that they've created, and I can think of very little where they were first. Even with some of their best devices, such as the iPhone, I can think of companies with other devices that do individual things better.....but Apple almost seems to be consistently #2 at pretty much everything, making their devices very solid choices....instead of being #1 at one feature, but then #5 or #10 at a bunch of others.

Banshee
 

I don't expect any major new hardware: no iPhone, no iPad, no iPod. There could be some minor new hardware: Time Capsule, maybe Apple TV.

I do expect some pretty damned cool software, however: iOS 5 with things no one's considered, or at least thought feasible, and hopefully some kind of magic-y seeming cloud integration between all things iOS and Mac.

I'm excited, but not as excited as I'd be if new hardware was likely, especially since it's time to replace my phone.

No new hardware was anounced.
iOS5 will changes in mail, tabs in Safari, and iMessage (instant messages).
iCloud is free. But if you have music ripped from cd etc. It will cost you $25 a year to store them in the cloud. If you bought them through Itunes storage is free. You get 5g to use for files. Anything on your camera roll automaticly is saved in the cloud and on your computer. Make sure you organize your pics in files or they get deleted in thrity days on the cloud. As of today moble me is dead.
There is alot more to iOS5 and the iCloud then I listed so check it out.
 

The cloud stuf is great. It's an "yeah, about friggin time!" evolution rather than a revolution, but it is about friggin time. This is how IP should always have been handled with digital media.

Combined with the PC-Free stuff, this is a bigger evolotion than it sounds.

Plenty of compaines do some of this quite well; hopefully Apple is gonna do all of this very well. Nothing new or exciting, but taking ideas that exist already and putting them together in a good way.
 

The cloud stuf is great. It's an "yeah, about friggin time!" evolution rather than a revolution, but it is about friggin time. This is how IP should always have been handled with digital media.

Combined with the PC-Free stuff, this is a bigger evolotion than it sounds.

Plenty of compaines do some of this quite well; hopefully Apple is gonna do all of this very well. Nothing new or exciting, but taking ideas that exist already and putting them together in a good way.

I also think the icloud is nice except for ripped cd's. If I have to pay $25 every year to keep my ripped cd's in iCloud. It's just not worth it to me.
If I only had to pay it once and it would be there forever no problem.
If it was only a couple of cds, I would repurchase. but their is no way I'm going to repurchase around 100 cd's.
I'll just keep them in itunes and load what I want at the time.
 

On paying, it's a pretty great price, imo, cheaper than Dropbox, say, and cheaper than their direct competitors, Google's and Amazon's music locker thingies

On today's announcements, what they showed on stage is just a sliver of what's happening on the back-end developer side: there are going to be some truly awesome, even mind-blowing apps coming out this Fall because Apple provided incredible new tools and frameworks.
 

On paying, it's a pretty great price, imo, cheaper than Dropbox, say, and cheaper than their direct competitors, Google's and Amazon's music locker thingies
.

Currently Google's Music Beta is CURRENTLY FREE for 5gb / 20k songs. No pricing plan announced.

Currently Amazon's Cloud Player is FREE for 5gb / 20k songs.
$20/20gb... $50/50gb.. etc. (Basically $1 per GB).
 

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