Category: iPhone (Page 47 of 55)

The Pre is a Great Phone but the Wrong Phone

the wrong customersThe recently leaked Pre launch guide has set Palm fans atwitter, ready to get their paws on one the minute the phone launches. That is, if Sprint will let them.

In what I find to be the most interesting page (11 if you’re keeping track) of the launch missive, Sprint lays down a heavy warning: “We can’t afford to sell the Pre to the wrong customers.” My knee jerk reaction sounds a lot like “no shit,” especially considering the rumors of a tiny launch stock. But Palm means more than senior citizens and paraplegics. So who is the wrong customer, and why don’t they deserve a Pre?

According to Palm, the wrong customers are the IT business users. The folks who need to run applications. The people with strict mobile device security protocols. A lot of the same people who really want the device. But when those people set foot in a Sprint Store on June 6th, Sprint reps are advised to try to sell them the Treo Pro. This makes sense. Salespeople are there to identify your needs, and then sell you a product to meet or exceed those needs (preferably at atmospheric price points). So why sell you the Pre when it falls short? You should get the phone you need, right?

Right. The Pre isn’t the phone you need. It’s right there in company literature, just mangled and twisted to make it sound like the customer’s wrong, instead of the phone. Make no mistake, though, it’s the phone, and the Pre is going to miss the mark on launch day and probably fade out of existence before long. I’m not talking to you, the individual user who might love Palm’s new features and developer-friendly OS. I’m talking about market share, which is what Palm needs to stay solvent. The Pre was the device to release before Apple sold 20 million iPhones. Before the app store sold a billion apps. Then the Pre could have been Palm’s savior, instead its dying breath.

It’s not that the Pre isn’t a great device. From the hardware to the software, the smooth OS to an overall excellent user experience the Pre is a great device, it’s just the wrong device, and it could be Palm’s last. If the Pre fails to gain significant ground and fast, there’s little hope for a financially stable Palm in the near future.

Update: Eucalytpus is Go

EucalyptusLast week we reported on a pretty little ereader for the iPhone that didn’t make Apple’s crazy approval process because it allowed access to the Kama Sutra. It sounds like Apple’s smarter thinking prevailed, and Eucalyptus has been reinstated at the original $10 price tag.

Though it’s tough to say what really made the difference, I’d like to think rampant posts about the ridiculous rejection brought it to Apple’s attention, at which point they actually thought, instead of just mashing the ‘declined’ stamp on seeing the words ‘Kama Sutra.’

As for the app, I’m not sure I’d spend $10 to read public domain books (read, old) on the go. It’s a nice model, though, and hopefully something others can look at to make future apps with some added functionality.

Kama Sutra Dooms Latest App Store Reject

EucalyptusApple’s most recent app store rejection comes from an app named Eucalyptus. The app allows users to search for and download copyright-free books from Project Gutenberg. Apple’s beef? Eucalyptus allows users to download the Kama Sutra.

To be clear, the Kama Sutra does not come installed on the app, nor is it pre-coded into the application in anyway. To gain access to this “content some users may find objectionable,” a user actually has to search for and then download the book. Sort of like, you know, looking up porn on your iPhone. In Safari. That Apple app. To make matters even worse, Eucalyptus downloads a picture free version, so the only real crime is in the words you can potentially stumble upon suggesting methods for reaching sexual ecstasy.

Unfortunately, Eucalyptus isn’t the sort of app that can benefit from the easter egg exploit we mentioned earlier in the week. The app searches all of Project Gutenberg.

Source: CNet

“More Than 10” iPhone Games to Come From Capcom in 2009

Mega Man 2 for the iPhone.Now that Resident Evil: Degeneration is out, we’ve all been wondering what comes next from Capcom. Of course, we’ve also seen smaller (but not less important, damn it!) titles from them, like Mega Man 2 with its god awful control system. The games have been a big success, with RE:Degeneration set to hit a million units before year’s end.

So for the next fiscal year, Capcom plans to keep the love a-comin’ with ‘more than 10’ new games by the end of March 2010. When serious players like Capcom throw their weight behind a device, I like to pay attention. Hopefully this will mean better games just as much as it means more.

Source: Reuters

Bypass Apple’s App Approval with Easter Eggs

The Baby Shaker app.Apple’s iPhone App Store approval process has created a flurry of news with its stringent requirements, the latest of which involved an eloquent rant by Trent Reznor. It’s pretty hard to disagree with Reznor on this one, though we may have done so with more carefully chosen words (you’re too old to care so much about your rocker persona). The apps that do and don’t make it through seem arbitrary at best, and near fascist at the worst.

Developer Jelle Prins has found a way around the mess by hiding the “worst” of his app with a nifty little easter egg. Prins’ App, Lyrics, which displays the lyrics of songs in a user’s playlist, was initially rejected because it would display all lyrics, even the obscene ones. Approval came only after Prins installed a profanity filter.

That’s not the end of the story. Alongside the profanity filter, Prins scripted an easter egg that enables profanity at the user’s discretion. Just head to the “About” page on the app, swipe your fingers down three times and confirm you want to see the naughty lyrics. Prins said the egg was easy to implement because it’s a difficult thing to notice in the source code.

Prins also says the app was likely approved due to a lack of manpower on Apple’s part. Lyrics ties in to an online database to monitor usage. That database showed only one use during his approval process, meaning just one person fired up the app, searched for a few profanities, and then pushed the thing through when he couldn’t find any. Scouring lines of code for things like Prins’ easter egg isn’t even on the map.

Of course with all the attention on Prins and his little workaround, I would not be surprised to see the app pulled until 3.0 parental controls go live. So much for sticking it to the man.

Source: Wired

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 Gadget Teaser

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑