Spork Boards
Hot Spork Chat : Join us in an AIM chat room!

Bahoot? Kersplat!

bahamut's Avatar Picture bahamut – December 09, 2007 05:56PM Reply Quote
Well, it's about time.

John Willoughby – August 16, 2010 07:51PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
(Another) milkshake for the NAB and RIAA. People aren't listening to radio anymore, so they want government to legislate them a piece of the consumer electronics marketplace.

Seriously, it's crap like this that portends the decline of Western Civilization.

John Willoughby – August 17, 2010 02:30PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Oh. I guess that the previous post ought to have been in the Milkshakes thread. Well, Milkshake for me, then.

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – August 17, 2010 03:19PM Reply Quote
Arguably it belongs in loonie legislators...

One group of companies - who in theory favor the unfettered free market - wanting the Gubmint to force their product (that not many people want) onto the products of other companies (that people actually do want). Nice.

Since when is it the job of Gubmint to prop up failing irrelevant companies? Oh, right...

John Willoughby – August 17, 2010 03:22PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Well, my government mandated purchases from the blacksmith, cooper, wainwright, sutler, chandler, and fletcher are going fine.

bahamut – August 20, 2010 02:40AM Reply Quote
whoa… i guess i had the short name wrong and had to use my full name (not just my first name) to login. it was saved wrongly. what an idiot. go figure.

The Macbook WILL recover from sleep if I plug it in right away, but if not, it dies. My hunch is something is wrong with the deep sleep image saving and retrieval process. Not sure how to fix though.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 08/20/2010 02:42AM by bahamut.

bahamut – September 04, 2010 08:25PM Reply Quote
So we might as well Kersplat this, eh?

A good decade after the second incarnation of the AppleTV (1st = Pippin, 2nd = unreleased AMP, 3rd = AppleTV, 4th = AppleTV MK2), Apple is as adrift as it was at the start. Mind you, in the intervening years, it gained the tremendous advantage of the iTunes store, not to mention becoming the consumer platform we all thought it could be.

But our favorite fruit has still managed to blow it, in chunks, out all its orifices.

If, on the one hand, it continues to piss off developers and allies left and right for reasons that seems as much rationalization as rational (Adobe, cough, Google, cough cough), it also has failed in key markets, television being the biggest of them.

Steve introduced the new AppleTV as his hobby and it shows. Put in his place, I would've developed Front Row as a truly powerful interface… perhaps leveraging Plex, and then distributed it on every Mac. I would've encouraged game development, finding some common framework between the iOS and the MacOS. Ok, so no Warcraft on iPad, but Angry Birds on the Mac Mini, I mean why not? Some kind of kick ass version of the Wii that requires you to buy iPhones or iPod Touchs should be all you need, no? Nice built in accelerometers there. Maybe some other form factors (Rock Star?) too.

And yes, I might've come up with an AppleTV along the lines of the one the Steved One came up with, but frankly what's the point? Google has the right idea, dude: get it on TVs. The trouble is that Google has been awfully bad at UI lately. It's something we don't think about, but it's also true. Every hit produced in house (quick… what's the last one) is accompanied by a dozen misses (Wave anyone?). I don't see what they'll be able to do.

Oh and maybe there'd be a version that would be in between the two, a $400 2TB expandable NAS (with hybrid SSD-HD's of course) that had brains enough to run some stuff, maybe iOS+ at least.

In contrast, this bit of news just passed me by while I was away… http://elan.plexapp.com/2010/09/02/plex-and-the-future-of-television/

Plex is not only my favorite of choice for HTMac setups, it's going to be an option on the next wave of LG TVs and Blu-Ray players.

Plex still has some rough patches, but it's really remarkable at how clean it is too. After playing with XBMC and Boxee, both of which seem to grunt, groan, and leak steam everywhere, Plex is much, much more. And LG chose it because it's open? Interesting.

All of a sudden, it looks like Plex will be in a lot more living rooms than Apple will be at the end of the year 2011. And as per the other thread, don't count out Roku, which seems to be heading into ethnic programming, which is very, very smart.

Bahoot! Kersplat.

Thank goodness it's still just a hobby. I guess that's because the Steved One knows he has no clue, eh?



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/04/2010 08:34PM by bahamut.

bahamut – September 04, 2010 08:30PM Reply Quote

bahamut – September 04, 2010 08:48PM Reply Quote
Adding fuel to the fire…

I have long said that iTunes sucks. Increasingly, I am not the only one. I have been on vacation for a while so forgive me that I only now discovered that ping is widely hated. No surprise. It's a disaster apparently. And iTunes is showing its age. It's sort of like what Windows was for Microsoft in the 1990s, except that Apple pretends there's progress.

And I'm not the only one. Wade Roush has a very intelligent article here in which he describes iTunes as "the very definition of cruft."

Quote

I want Apple to build something new. And my bet is that Apple’s engineers feel the same urge. But given everything the company has riding on iTunes, the idea of rebuilding the program from scratch (or more likely, breaking it into several programs, in order to bring some logic to the media management madness) must seem incredibly risky and ambitious.

We all know what can happen when such projects go bad—can anyone say Windows Vista? So, instead, Apple will just keep adding cruft, until, at some point around iTunes 11 or 12 or 13, the program will simply suffer a total musical meltdown, like HAL doing his rendition of “Daisy, Daisy.”

http://www.xconomy.com/national/2010/09/03/the-leaning-tower-of-ping-how-itunes-could-be-apples-undoing/

John Willoughby – September 04, 2010 10:23PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
I'm going to give Ping at least a full week before I pronounce it doomed. I have no need for a social network of any kind, let alone a music-based one that keeps trying to get me to follow Lady Ga-Ga, so I am ill-qualified to assess it.

I think that Apple is trying to replace cable companies and provide a better solution. It might be better, but they will never replace the entrenched powers by offering X out of Y major networks. They need to offer the whole enchilada to allow people to throw away all the various boxes, cables, and connectors of their current solutions and adopt a new one. Apple will never be able to do this, at least not until people forget what iTunes did to the music companies. The content providers want to maintain a seething cauldron of content delivery companies competing against each other and allowing the status quo business model to continue.

I think Apple is reaching for something that it can never have, rather than trying to make a legitimate push for a more attainable goal. I expect that they will, slowly, roll out new features for the AppleTV but I don't think that it will be enough. I mean, even in the 30,000 foot view the public sees Apple announce 99 cent HD show rentals the same day that Amazon announces 99 cent show purchases. How does that look? Apple has no lead in this market and will have to do something amazing to get one. I mean even more amazing than recovering from near-bankrupcty to becoming the colossus that they are today.

bahamut – September 05, 2010 08:35AM Reply Quote

ddt – September 05, 2010 02:12PM Reply Quote
Why do you read techcrunch...?

ddt

bahamut – September 06, 2010 04:34PM Reply Quote
why not? it's not like it's not true.

bahamut – September 07, 2010 05:28AM Reply Quote
Since iTunes is a Kersplat …

http://dribbble.com/shots/51446

Man, is this better.

Cloudscout – September 09, 2010 10:08AM Reply Quote
˙pɹɐoqʎǝʞ ʎɯ ɥʇıʍ ƃuoɹʍ ƃuıɥʇǝɯos sı ǝɹǝɥʇ ʞuıɥʇ ı ?ɹǝʇndɯoɔ ʎɯ ɥʇıʍ ǝɯ dlǝɥ ǝuoǝɯos uɐɔ
Perhaps "Google Instant" wasn't such a smart thing for them to automatically enable for all visitors... at least not without contemplating how their black-list filters will react to the traffic generated when every single keystroke is passed to Google's servers in real-time.

For individual users this isn't a problem but when you have, oh, let's say 100,000 people connecting through a single proxy server with a single IP address, you end up with problems as a visit to Google ends up giving everybody a captcha with the message, "Your computer appears to be sending automated requests..."

dharlow – September 09, 2010 02:57PM Reply Quote
I have gotten that from my home computer before, not sure why but sometimes that message is pretty buggy. Called Google Apps support (as it was impacting not just my google searches but also my Apps usage) and complained and they fixed it for me.

bahamut – September 12, 2010 07:00PM Reply Quote

Alan Lehman – September 12, 2010 08:03PM Reply Quote
I canceled my order for the AppleTV after I bought the WD media center plus. It wasn't because the WD was so great, in fact, it was because the WD was so 'meh' that I couldn't be bothered to waste any time with the ATV either. Plus it was 720p.

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – September 13, 2010 12:26AM Reply Quote
Quote

“Apple TV … it’s like a shit, single-purpose Mac Mini for people who don’t know what BitTorrent is.”

heh.

bahamut – September 13, 2010 02:41AM Reply Quote
At least the last version you could hack and run boxee on.

Mokers (Moderator) – November 05, 2010 06:57AM Reply Quote
Formerly Remy Martin
http://www.macrumors.com/2010/11/05/apple-discontinues-xserve-only-available-until-january-31st/

Splat goes xserve. Fuck you steve, I actually need rackmount, hot swappable shit for my clients. I may be able to get away with this if they alter their OS X Server license so it will run in VMs, but this fucks a lot of us enterprise folks.

Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.

Click here to login