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Aug 03 2010

Apple iPad vs. e-Readers Nook and Kindle: Do You Read?

There is something satisfying about burning through the pages of a paperback book. You get to see how many pages you are wizzing through. And if the book is really good your anticipation of the beginning and ending is bittersweet. Maybe they will write a sequel, or another set in the same universe. This is how I always felt about Phillip K. Dick books. Enter the eReader opportunities. Hey a complete book for 5 – 10 bucks! That sounds like a deal to me. Let's see what the different products might offer.

The nook, the kindle and the apple ipad

For compact, lightweight and long battery life: the Nook and Kindle might be choices, IF… All you want to do is read eBooks or eMagazines. The Barnes and Noble Nook adds some color and what they are calling FREE WIFI for $149. The black and white Amazon Kindle is about the same. Both products are advertised at getting the WIFI, and the Kindle even adds a cellular variety for off-the-map places. BUT… Again, if you are happy with black and white and are satisfied with your WIFI providing only books, well you might consider looking on Craigslist or eBay for the first two. I doubt you will see discounted iPads until the next generation comes out sometime before Christmas 2010.

So I recently finished my first full book on the iPad. It was inside the Kindle software provided by WhisperSync, whoever they are. I was able to buy the book in the Kindle store as a Kindle. I'm not sure if Amazon notes that I am on an iPad or not. To them it is a sale either way. And for purists, perhaps the eInk is nicer to read from in a well-lit place. But the glow of my iPad display was refreshing and crisp. I still missed not being able to see the thickness of the pages left to go. It's like, not being able to see how much further you have to go. You can jump forward in the software and look how many pages, and the iBook software on the iPad tries to give you a good sense of where you are in the book, there is nothing like the smell of ink and paper and that satisfying thump when you toss the book off the bed at 2am having just finished a page burner.

Okay, you are going to have to pay more for an iPad. But what you are getting is a full-blown computer. A great web-browsing device. I halfway descent email reader and all the same books you can get on your kindle and more. Apple makes the FREE books from Project Gutenberg very easy to find.

I have read books in both the Kindle-emulator and in Apples iBook format and they are almost identical. Apple has a nice feature where you can tone down the bright white into a sepia-toned beige that is easier on the eyes. Like a somewhat aged paperback.

So I will confess today to buying two paperbacks from Amazon (piggy-backed on a different order) and one Kindle book to read on my iPad.

In conclusion: The iPad is not going to fit in your pocket or small purse. If you carry an iPad you are going to have to lug around more than either the Kindle or Nook. Much more. And sometimes the iPad feels heavy when you've been holding it a certain way to read in bed. So for that reason, you can take a Kindle on the plane, on vacation and probably not have to pack a powercord. But the chord is pretty tiny. And with the iPad you have GAMES, full-Web access, email… Did I mention GAMES? The iPad will play every game made for the iPhone except at 2X the size. (I think that's in the hundreds of thousands at this point.)

But seriously, if all you want is a good book and the simplest thing to read it on, the Nook or Kindle might be your choice. And if you forgot to pack enough to read, or if you get bored with what you brought any of the three can download a new book for about $10 bucks in about a minute. Or on the iBooks store on the iPad you can get thousands of great books for free. Think Emerson, Whitman, Joyce… All copyright free.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/eReader-review

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May 17 2010

Just Click It Links for Monday 5-17-10: Microsoft IE, Facebook Privacy, Apple iPad

Category: just click it (links),social mediajmacofearth @ 2:08 pm

Screen shot 2010 01 05 at 10.12.30 AM Just Click It Links for Monday 5 17 10: Microsoft IE, Facebook Privacy, Apple iPad
Mayors of Starbucks Now Get Discounts Nationwide with Foursquare
It had to happen. Foursquare is tying into Foursquare promotions. I saw this coming, but now I might have to join the movement… Nah… I'll check in on my own, thanks very much.

Check Your Facebook Privacy Settings With ReclaimPrivacy
Fighting privacy battles with Facebook, is like trying to protect your online data from Google. All I can say is, "Good luck." The rest of my advice is, "Be informed, and turn the shit off if you are worried about it. And if it *really* freaks you out, just quit using Facebook. And then get over it." But all my rants aside, there are some issues with Facebook's rampant use of your images, your "likes" and other information that they want to use and sell to third party vendors. I'd say these are worth opting out of.

How Facebook’s ‘Community Pages’ and Privacy Changes Impact Brands by Jeremiah Owyang
When JO speaks you need to listen. One of the smartest guys in social media and business metrics. Here's the nut:

Facebook has launched  several new policies and features since the F8 Conference ‘Crusade of Colonization’ which has resulted in a large backlash from media around user privacy.  It’s not clear if beyond the vocal media if users will leave the site in droves.  Perhaps more importantly,  Facebook launched “Facebook Community Pages” (read the official post) a feature that aggregates content from wikipedia and Facebook wall posts.  Think of it as a cross between Wikipedia with user comments –sometimes unwittingly.  These changes cause confusion for users, diminishing control for brands, and strains on the already torrid relationship between Facebook and brands.

What if FDR’s Ideas Ran the C-Suite and Your Social Media?
I can’t help to think his words and wisdom might serve us all now as we look for leaders — not dreamers — to change the world and get growing again.

Federated Media goes all Facebook for this Monday's SIGNAL.

Microsoft Needs to Stop Trash-talking IE6 and Just Trash It
Microsoft Australia has launched an online campaign to try to persuade people to stop using Internet Explorer 6. The campaign likens the browser to a carton of milk: you wouldn't drink nine-year old milk, so why would you use a browser of a similar vintage?

The iPad: Beautiful product demos, rich presentations & seamless syncing between HQ and travel
We’re not waiting. As soon as the iPad was unveiled, my team saw its potential and ordered a few. For $31 worth of apps, total, we’ve turned the device into a powerful way to show off our products and keep our travelers in sync with each other and our Austin HQ. Our Sales Directors, Client Success Directors and Market Developers attend around 30 total events per quarter, from the Bay Area to London and beyond. When they bring along fully-equipped iPads to each conference, show, meeting and client dinner, they’re bringing with them a way to enrich each interaction.

How To Get Verified on Twitter
Twitter verifies a limited number of accounts. There’s no guarantee that your verification request will be processed by Twitter. I know of several celebrities whose verification request was turned down by Twitter. Therefore, Twitter advises users to apply for a verified account only if they are under the threat of impersonation account.

And if you can't get Verified, you can go to an earlier post of mine
So If I Can't Get Twitter-Verified, I'll Just Create An Elite Club Of My Own

@jmacofearth
permalink:

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May 03 2010

The Sony DASH Launches, the Kindle Still Sells & The Apple iPad Steals Their Hearts

So what is it about the Apple iPad that is so different from the Sony's just released Dash, and the Amazon Kindle and Kindle DX?

Today my friend Patrick Moorhead wrote a nice post about the Kindle vs iPad, and his opinions are well considered. He has been a long-time Kindle owner and user. And he still has a couple things he likes about the Kindle.

And while reading his post and writing a comment, I saw a Tweet about the Sony Dash. The Sony WHAT?

Here's the scoop on the Dash if you think Sony still has a clue about anything in digital consumer electronics besides TVs.

sony's fall from electronic heaven - the sony dash

Designed to stand on a bedside table, a kitchen — or even a bathroom — counter, Sony's new $199 device plugs into a home's wireless Internet connection to constantly serve up a variety of personalized digital bits. Users can configure the Dash to display Twitter feeds, Facebook updates, local traffic alerts or about a thousand other Internet "widgets."   – Sony Dash: One part touch-screen, two parts Internet

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Here is my considered response to Patrick Moorhead's Kindle vs iPad post:

I have not spent a lot of time with a Kindle. In fact I sort of revel in the fact that the "one-trick" pony was DOA, except for last Christmas's sales moment. And as for the Nook and the Sony thing, well… Along came the iPad.

Patrick, your financial comparison is odd. Adding in the 3G wireless subscription is like trying to subtract for the fact that the Kindle doesn't do the web. What's the number for that?

I got my iPad on the day they released. And I do agree the book-mode gets a bit heavy after awhile. BUT, my iPad can make Amazon think it's a Kindle. So the number of books, is exactly the same as for Amazon's inventory, and then you add the iBooks store and all the content that Google has put into the e-book format that the iPad can read.

So as a book reader, there may be favorable options on the Kindle, and I agree e-ink is pretty. BUT… again, it's black and while. Period.
If the Wall Street Journal is all you want, that's cool, cause WSJ doesn't do color. For everything else, with the Kindle your SOL. And then all the other stuff the iPad does. My goodness. This is why you're seeing Kindles on Craigslist in the 10% of list price range. Cause if you wanna do more than read, you have only one option at the moment.

I wish the iPad had an AMD chip in it. I wish the MBP I just bought had an AMD chip in it, rather than the i5 from Intel. But wishes ain't horses, and they probably won't ever be.

Great post, PM. Always thoughtful and fully informed.

++
How fun that this dialogue is happening even before the slates and tablets arrive from other vendors like HP and Dell. And with OS's like Android, Windows 7 (oops, Microsoft seems to have stumbled with there deal with HP on this one), and perhaps the resurrected Palm OS, we're gonna see a bunch of "me-too" devices. And I'm sure a fair share of iPad-killer devices. (Remember all the iPod-killer devices? Or even the iPhone-killer phones like the Nexus One?)

And I, for one, look forward to the innovation contest that will ensue. In the end it will be good for all of us. At this point only the iPad is a contender. But I'm sure MSFT will get it together with some manufacturer for a Windows 7 tablet. I'm almost certain they won't go it alone like they have with the X-Box or the Zune. (Cause both of those projects LOSE money for Microsoft.)

But we'll see how they do. And we'll see what the iPad v2 looks like in September or so, just in time for Christmas.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/ipad-dash

See all the iPad-iWay posts.

Sources mentioned in this post:

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Apr 23 2010

iQuest Day Prep: What's the Apple iPad Survival Package? I'm Going Cold Turkey Today

Apple iPad Vision Quest image

UPDATE 4-24-10: Whew! Some good and some bad. Overall, my experience with the iPad alone was positive. An 8 on a scale of 1 – 10. The good: didn't miss PPT one bit, was happy to not create any content for 24-hours; enjoyed negotiating with my daughter and son for the iPad through the course of Friday afternoon and evening. The BAD: email really sucks (if you have more than one account to check, the back and forth in MAIL is awful); and I tried several ways to edit this post using Safari and then even the WordPress iPad app, but something kept getting messed up. And I really hate the way the App Store basically closes out every time you select an app to download. If you've tabbed in on a category, you are set back to square one. But I survived.

UPDATE 4-23-10: I just completed my last PPT for the day. And once I hook up my email accounts so I can check them on the iPad, I will turn off the MacBook Pro for 24-hours. Starting at 9AM. Oh the wonders we will learn, the frustrations we might find, and the discovery of just how far can a heavy-user, writer, and tech worker get from a full-powered computer, in the course of one day. A Friday, yes, but a full day nonetheless. Wish me luck. [MBP over and out.] The last keystrokes will be "update" on this post and "shutdown" on the Mac. wOOt!

My iQuest to discover myself and my iPad in 24-hours alone together.

[Er... I have PowerPoint work to do today, so the iPad Vision Quest is off. My daughter nailed me on it. "DAD!" she yelled as she got home this afternoon. "You were supposed to be on the iPad today." I'm not trying to pin this on Microsoft, but...]

We've now had our iPads for a week or so. And many have expressed the ennui that comes with any computer purchase. "What now?" or "So what." And I do count myself among the, "So What," group. However, I do believe the revolution has begun.

So here's my plan: On Friday, 4-23-10, I will go cold turkey to live with the iPad for 24-hours with nothing else. (Wait, can I make or take calls on the iPad with Google Voice or something?) Or to be more clear, I will give up my MacBook Pro for 24 hours. And other than my "phone" needs that will be satisfied with my Blackberry, I will use only the iPad to do my work.

Now the caveat is, I don't have any critical path business meetings that day, YET. And I don't have any key deliverables that day, as far as my client's needs. So it's not like I'm going to jump off my workflow process into a crash and burn drama that could happen were I to need the iPad to do "actual work." (grin)

Okay, so here's what I've got so far.

  1. Today I purchased Keynote, Pages, and Numbers for the iPad. ($10 each)
  2. I also purchased Alias Sketch (a professional grade drawing program) and NOVA (a full-motion iPad-optimized game, the one that was presented in the iPad launch presentation).
  3. I've begun weeding my mp3 collection for what will fit in a working amount of space on the iPad. (Try that alone as an exercise. Wow, quite fun. Take your entire music collection and choose 10% of it to take with you.)

I opted for the 32 gig iPad. And I'm nearly full. But I'm not expecting to put all my music on it. My 120 gig iPod could be filled several times with the collection I have amassed over the years.

what's on my iPad

That's as far as I've gotten. I have a few other tasks to complete before I go iPad-centric.

  1. Email accounts to iPad. (IMAP only, of course)
  2. A full charge and good sync of contacts and calendar data the morning of Wednesday 4-14-10.
  3. Look into the movie streaming from other machines software that I heard about on Thursday. (Air Video Server works fantastic. I'm watching Generation Kill on my iPad from raw AVI files. The MBP is cranking the conversion as I'm watching in real time on the iPad. Amazing!)

I think that's it. Of course I'll need food, shelter and water. And WIFI!

My signal is strong, my expectations are high and my iPad is looking more and more like home.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/iQuest

Note: I'd love to hear about YOUR iPad survival software. And if anyone wants to join my iQuest please let me know. I'd be happy to co-blog it with some iFriends. Even if you're only virtually connected to me and living in Portland Oregon. (grin)

Update 4-15-10: I spent a good bit of time last night with the iPad getting more parts ready for iQuest day. And I AM beginning to think the iPad will actually be enough computer for many people. If email, browsing and entertainment are your primary computing tasks, the iPad is almost everything you need. I was watching a movie last night, using Air Video Server the content was streaming off my MBP. My experience was, "Wow, this is fantastic!" The video was sharp, bright, and even over wireless, glitch free.

Today I'll be setting up my email accounts to do a test-run on that functionality.

And finally, if you like first-person-shooters, you really need to buy and play NOVA. Unreal immersion.

I wonder if I did go the 24-hours without food or sleep if I'd start having visions? Maybe not this coming week, but it's a thought.

++

Update 4-14-10: I'm almost positive this app is NOT part of the iPad Survival Kit. Um, Team iTehu, which is it the "Health Pad" or the "Health Calc XL?" And are you planning on offering S, M, L versions of the Health Calc Pad thingy? I hope so.

Apple iPad humor - the health pad for fat people

an app for fat people - the health pad

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The iQuest for the iPad illustration was based on the VisionQuesting Indian from this site.

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A Collaborative Space: WebEx, Go-To-Meeting, Skype, Basecamp (Teaming/Meeting Tools)
Twitter Problem: How do you find enough interesting people to follow? Then how do you keep up with them?
The Agile Mind: Construction, Evolution, Care, and Feeding Instructions for Mental Flexibility

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