“Yes, MacHeist is back. Bundle of 12 Mac software applications and utilities for $49. Recommended? Of course.”
News & Commentary
- Leopard 10.5.3
- Times: The RSS newspaper for your Mac
- Apple ignores Safari carpet bomb flaw (for now)
- Mac market share up to 66-percent (PCs over $1,000)
- Firefox 3.0 Release Candidate available
- Microsoft: We’ll have 40% of smart phone market by 2012
- Can Dell rebound from the brink like Apple?
- The new rules for buying a Mac
- How Microsoft could kill Google on the Web
- AOL Desktop for Mac
- The iMac is a 10
- A Tale of Two Steves
How Microsoft could kill Google on the Web∧
Guess what? Microsoft should offer free advertising to defeat Google. A ridiculously broken premise from Jason Kelly.
When we look at Microsoft history, what is it that has consistently put it on top? Innovation? No. Most of its products are obvious knock-offs not as well-done as the original. Customer loyalty? No. Almost everybody hates the company, but it’s hard to get a day of work done without using one of its products. Computer users are loyal to Microsoft the way North Koreans are loyal to Kim Jong Il. What choice do they have?
Microsoft’s success came not by copying market leaders and offering a lower priced product, but by illegal tactics to lock in customers to mediocre products. On a level playing field, Microsoft loses again and again. They’re losing now. Again.
AOL releases Desktop for Mac. God asks, 'Why?'∧
In another attempt to prove that AOL is not a four letter word, Desktop for Mac arrives. Full of IM, browser, tabs, email, and ready for Tiger and Leopard users. Are they ready for AOL?
AOL Desktop for Mac — the new all-in-one application — was built from the ground up for Mac users, by Mac users. It puts your Web browser, instant messaging, email and other popular features all in one place for you, so you can get more done with fewer clicks.
My Mac’s Dock does that. Please don’t tell me that you still use AOL. Please. Ms. Bambi on AOL Desktop for Mac.
The iMac is a 10∧
As Kermit the Frog said, “Time’s fun when you’re having flies.” Time flies, too. The iMac is 10 years old. ArsTechnica does a mini-multi-model review from Bondi Blue to Sunflower to today’s iMac:
Steve Jobs on the original iMac:
The back of this thing looks better than the front of the other guys.
My, how things change. Anybody remember when 233MHz was screaming fast (32 megs RAM, 4 gigabyte hard drive)? Macworld’s first look at the iMac 10 years ago.
A Tale of Two Steves∧
Not Mac news but a fun read: Technopundit Rob Enderle on Apple’s Steve Jobs and Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer (writing from a convention with 5,000 of his closest friends in Las Vegas).
On Jobs:
Jobs is like a master craftsman. The first things he did when he took over at Apple were get rid of the bozos (underperformers), massively simplify the company and its products, and force tightly integrated products that approach—and sometimes surpass—amazing.
On Ballmer:
Ballmer is a master salesman. One of the first things he did when he took over at Microsoft was meet with his top people and realign the company against distinct customer groups. To Ballmer, the customer is the IT Buyer for most of the company, someone else worries about the user, and excellence is defined by financial performance as defined by sales volume.
Enderle’s Epiphany:
Both companies could work (together) to hold off the bigger threat that Google represents and use each other’s strengths to overcome the other’s weaknesses.
Somehow Google’s advertising and Android vaporware threaten Microsoft and Apple.
Shameful: U.S. ranks 15th in broadband∧
New report shows U.S. fell from 4th place to 15th last year in broadband deployment and adoption, a combination of price, speed, and availability. Among the report’s recommendations:
Enact more favorable tax policies to encourage investment in broadband networks, such as accelerated depreciation and exempting broadband services from federal, state, and local taxation.
It’s called incentive.
Microsoft and Yahoo split before they merge. Too bad∧
New York Times says Microsoft withdrew its bid to buy Yahoo. Microsoft’s CEO, Steve Ballmer:
We have a talented team in place and a compelling plan to grow our business through innovative new services and strategic transactions with other business partners.
Uh huh. How’s that been working out for you? Good for Apple. Good for Google.
Do web sites need to look exactly the same in every browser?∧
Yes.
Different browsers can and should have different feature sets to appeal to different users. Web pages should be rendered the same in every browser.
Live dangerously with the nightly version of Safari∧
If you love to have the latest software for your Mac, it doesn’t get any fresher and tastier than the nightly WebKit, the open source browser engine in Safari.
WebKit is an open source web browser engine. WebKit is also the name of the Mac OS X system framework version of the engine that’s used by Safari, Dashboard, Mail, and many other OS X applications.
If it looks like Safari, works like Safari, feels like Safari, is it Safari? No, it’s WebKit; what Safari will be tomorrow.