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Macintosh, Apple, Technology, and Design Blog

Possibly the single most annoying iPhone bug

There’s been a lot written about the bugs in the iPhone 2.0 software and I mean a lot. Most concentrate on apps crashing or the long back up times, or general sluggishness, but for me personally there is one other issue that I haven’t seen that widely reported that is far more frustrating. The keyboard no longer seems to remember custom words. It worked great in 1.x versions of the software. If you wanted it to remember a word you just tapped it and it was stored in the dictionary for future use. Not so much in 2.0.

For example, the local tram service here in dublin is called the “Luas” (It means “speed” in Irish) but every time I go to type it into a text entry field on the iPhone it comes up “lias”. No matter how many times i tap it it won’t remember the correct spelling for more than the current session. It’s incredibly annoying. If I hadn’t used the original iPhone this probably wouldn’t bug me so much but this was one of the great features of the original software. The way it quickly remembered words made the keyboard a joy to use and after a while it almost never got things wrong, but in 2.0 I’m constantly having to correct place names and slang. So, if anyone from Apple is listening, please fix it for the next version. Please.

VAIO Recall

Here’s a perfect example of what I was talking about the other day. If this was a problem with Macbooks there would be mass hysteria in the technology media calling for Apple’s head. Because it’s not Apple, just normal calm, collected and objective reporting (and technology blogs don’t particularly like Sony either)

Apple announces special event September 9

From Macworld:

Apple on Tuesday sent an invitation to select media inviting them to a special event to be held in San Francisco on September 9, 2008.

Judging from the invitation sent by Apple, the event will focus on the iPod. With an iPod looking screen and the words “Let’s Rock” it seems clear Apple will use the time to spark interest in its products for the holiday shopping season.

[Read Macworld | Apple announces special event September 9]
Not exactly a surprise but certainly some upbeat news in the face of the recent less than happy mood in the mac community.

Apple Hysteria

If you follow the technology industry in any shape or form you couldn’t have helped but hear about Apple’s many “problems” over the last month. Since the iPhone 3G and MobileMe launch in July, pundits from all parts of the web have been falling over themselves to criticize apple for just about anything they can think of. It seems that the MobileMe launch in particular was the catalyst for a rallying call to all those with some sort of pent up angst to let loose on the cupertino electronics maker. With varying ferocity bloggers and journalists decried a company that was, as one pundit put it “flailing at the edges”. Yet out of the spotlight of the technology media Apple was doing as well as, if not better than ever. Why has such a gulf developed between what is being reported in the online technology press and the reality on the ground? If you put the seeming hysteria aside you begin to see that this backlash is just that, hysteria.

I had been toying with the Idea of writing about this for a while. Blogging about Apple can be a risky business in someways. If you criticize the company in any way shape or form you can be set upon by the crazy minority of fans who take the company’s pr messages as gospel, but on the other hand, defend them and you’re a crazy fanboy. But what bugged me into writing about this is an increasing level of commentary, much of which is a variation of the same theme, that Apple had in this instance, and has been in the past, given a free pass by the media and the “Apple faithful” and that the Mobile Me launch showed the world what the company was “really like”. Frankly, this is complete and utter rubbish.

Apple is an extremely successful company and not only that but an extremely popular one. Not just by the crazy internet dwelling nerds who seem to think Steve Jobs is some sort of reincarnation of Jesus, but by normal regular people. In fact those normal people, the ones who don’t read technology blogs, but bring their kids to school, go for walks, do the shopping at their supermarket rather than on ebay, probably make up a far bigger demographic than the stereotyped mac zealots. Yet Apple has a few problems and suddenly they are “doomed” again and people are giving the company a “free pass” because we’re all brainwashed zombies under the influence of Steve’s mind control powers? Most of Apple’s customers don’t read blogs or post on digg, they just go about their business and according to several surveys they are very happy with their products. It’s amazing that some people just can not accept this fact, and that in their minds Apple has no business being successful, therefore it must be just mass delusion.

The MobileMe launch was just the catalyst though. People are coming out of the woodwork complaining about everything from hardware failures (that they strangely decide to take apart their computers for spare parts rather than insist on repairs) to software so buggy it’s unusable. And yet survey after survey shows Apple has the one of, if not the highest satisfaction ratings of any computer manufacturer out there. So just why is there so much hysteria surrounding Apple. Why is it that the company makes some relatively minor mishaps in the grand scheme of things and they are portrayed as the beginning of the cyber apocalypse ?

Compared to a lot of mistakes and screw-ups made by other companies, the MobileMe launch and the iPhone 3G teething problems are very VERY minor. Im sure I’ll get hate mail for saying that but look at it with some perspective and with a level head and you’ll see what I mean. Lots of companies screw up email all the time. Yes it is a huge pain, yes it is wrong and it shouldn’t happen. I’m not saying Apple should be let off for it, but they moved quickly to deal with it and they offered financial compensation in the form of free service extensions for those affected. By contrast at least two of the service providers I have had dealings with in the last few years screwed up email access several times and on at least one occasion email was lost. Customers were pissed off but no one thought it was anything more than it was, a technical screw up. But with Apple the reaction has been so strong it is like Steve Jobs personally stabbed someone’s child and threw it in a bonfire then put the fire out with a vat of acid.

I’m not trying to say Apple has done no wrong, or that there haven’t been mistakes or that those mistakes haven’t effected people, I’m just trying to urge a little perspective here, but then the concept of perspective seems to be lost on those who want to rage against Apple. Why is it that the huge demand for iPhones leading to supply issues is considered a sign of bad management by Apple’s company heads, and yet the Nintendo Wii, had months and months of supply issues, and everyone considered this a sign of the console’s great success. Why is it that scientifically conducted surveys get dismissed but a few disgruntled posters on Apple’s support forums some how make for “widespread problems” ?

I think that part of the reason for this backlash is simple “Apple fatigue”. There is huge scrutiny of Apple by the media. For years now Apple’s been the media’s golden boy. The company has enjoyed success after success and I think people writing for the technology press are bored with the same story. The thought of Apple’s shine being tarnished is like a drink of water in the desert to some of these “journalists”. A comment I heard recently was that with Apple gaining market share all of Apple’s new windows converts are not going to put up with the way Apple treats it’s customers and that all of the problems that have always been there but none of its existing users could see because we’re all brainwashed fanboys. But the fact of the matter is most converts are coming from other manufacturers who regularly make mistakes, have technical problems etc, and because they don’t have the media scrutiny it’s just par for the course.

Of course there is always the fail-safe get out of jail free card for someone who wants to bash Apple. If anyone counters your argument, points out flaws in your reasoning or otherwise stands up for Cupertino then they’re just crazy mac zealots. That stereo type lets you write just about anything. Of course there are some pretty crazy fanboys out there, but there are passionate supporters of many platforms who are just as polarized in their views. Just try reading any game sites where xbox 360 fans get onto the comments or forums. Ironically those who believe they are defending Apple are just perpetrating the myth of the religious mac user which in turn reinforces the skeptics who think Apple is just a company for fanatics. But I digress. If Apple was running into financial difficulties, or if iPods, iPhone and macs weren’t selling at record levels then a few hiccups might be something to worry about, but the events of July were really the first relatively major hiccups Apple has made for quite some time and in the grand scheme of things they’re not really that major. Mobile me has been mostly sorted out, the iPhone software updates continue to improve the iPhone bugs and the App store is a massive success. iPhones are selling in record numbers, Macs look set for another record quarter and the company is making in roads into markets previously thought to be out of reach. Hardly the signs of a company “flailing at the edges”. But then again, I’m just a crazy fanboy.

Wired.com’s iPhone 3G Survey Reveals Network Weaknesses

From Wired:

Wired.com’s survey of iPhone 3G users suggests that widespread data speed problems have more to do with carriers’ networks than with Apple’s handsets.

[Read Wired.com’s iPhone 3G Survey Reveals Network Weaknesses | Gadget Lab from Wired.com]

File under “Duh”. It never ceases to amaze me how people always jump to the worst possible conclusion when it comes to Apple. The idea that it must be the phone and that Apple must have released a defective product seems to sit far more with people that the pretty obvious alternative that the network just sucks. We’ve had 3G here in Ireland for several years and it’s always been hit and miss (although O2’s network now is much better than it used to be). Not only that but a Swiss study (which you’ve probably read about by now) confirms that the iPhone 3G is pretty much average in terms of reception when it comes to 3G phones. Doesn’t bode well for that class action suit that’s in the works with this evidence stacked against it.

Is the Mac More than an Expensive Toy?

This is an interesting discussion on the Macworld forums, not so much because of the message but for the way the Macworld staff dealt with it. In fairness I think the guy had some pretty obscure needs and probably should have done a bit more research before switching to he mac, but I think the response of some of the other posters shows the typical mac fanboy approach to anyone who dares question Apple, while the macworld staff offered a very calm and collected approach and offered counterpoints to his arguments. Having said that I do sense a little bit of flame baiting going on and I can’t help but wonder if this was something of a set up because at first he knew nothing of the mac or the market, but he seemed to know just which buttons to push.

Class action suit claims Apple deceived over iPhone 3G speeds

I guess this was only a matter of time. Let’s face it - they’ve been sued over just about every other product they’ve launched in recent years. From Apple Insider:

A lawsuit filed on Tuesday by an Alabama woman alleges that Apple has touted doubled Internet speeds with iPhone 3G when a rash of connection problems have made those speeds seemingly impossible to reach.

In the 10-page complaint, Jessica Smith of Birmingham asserts that Apple’s marketing campaign is a breach of express warranty as it promises Internet access “twice as fast” as with the original where the practical experience has fallen well short of the mark.

[Read AppleInsider | Class action suit claims Apple deceived over iPhone 3G speeds]

Why Apple’s “Push Notification Service” is Not Enough to Replace Background Processing

There was much made of the fact that the recent beta 4 of the iPhone 2.1 software which removed until further notice, the much vaunted “push notification service”. The service which was touted by Apple as an “elegant” solution to the lack of background processing allowed by the iPhone SDK. Some were relieved that Apple wasn’t going to push (pardon the pun) out a half baked iPhone feature that could lead to more instability while others were decrying yet another Apple screw up. Overall though the delay was mostly welcomed as it would allow Apple to perfect the service before launching. Yet the news once again stirred mixed feelings about the whole idea of the service in the first place.

[Read more]

Apple offers iPhone 2.0.2 update via iTunes

From MacNN:

Apple on Monday released iPhone 2.0.2, an update to its second-generation software for the original iPhone and iPhone 3G. The update is about 242MB and first appeared via iTunes just after 5PM EST. As is usually the case with iPhone updates, Apple provided few details, saying simply that the update contains “bug fixes,” and links to existing online iPhone support resources.

[Read MacNN | Apple offers iPhone 2.0.2 update via iTunes]

I upgraded mine this morning but so far haven’t noticed anything different. Of course if Apple were a bit more gracious with information than “bug fixes” then we might know what to expect. But then that would involve acknowledging the bugs in the first place.

Exaggerated Headline of the Day

From USA Today:

” Dropped calls plague iPhone 3G, and not just in U.S.”

I’ve never had a problem and anyone I know who has an iPhone 3G has not suffered from this problem. Apparently it’s something like 2% of people who are affected, hardly a “plague”. But hey, why be factual when you can be sensational. Incidentally, Appleinsider have a great article on this.

Use your iPhone to keep a “Lighting File”

A great tip from Strobist for Photographers on using your iPhone to keep a scrapbook of inspiration on your phone.

The Really Annoying iPhone App Update Behaviour

iPhone update

One of the handy things about the iPhone home screen is the ability to customize the position of icons and to have a number of pages, so you can arrange your icons in a manner that is logical to you. For example, I have all my utility Apps on one page, Games on Another and so on. The problem is, and it’s really really annoying, when you go to update an Application, or even worse when you update a couple at a time, rather than replacing the existing ones, it deletes them and downloads the updated version, putting it at the first available free spot on a page (usually the one that the first App was on).

It makes keeping your iPhone organized really frustrating every time there’s a bunch of updates. Recently there was a flurry of updates for the Apps I have on my phone and after a while I got fed up re organizing everything every couple of days. Just leaving them is a pain too because you become instinctively aware of an apps position after a wile and then when it moves you have to re-train your reflexes to it’s new location. Because there’s no functional problem as such, this is probably low on Apple’s list of things to fix, but I hope they do because it really takes away from the otherwise excellent user experience of the phone.

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Pressing F5 in a text field

Here’s a really great tip from TUAW that I never heard of before:

If you’re typing in a text field (in Safari, TextEdit, or most any Mac OS X app), you can press F5 while your cursor rests in a particular word to see a list of words that begin with the letters after the last space.

[Read Mac 101: Pressing F5 in a text field - The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)]

AppleInsider | Three-alarm fire scorches key building on Apple campus

From Apple Insider:

A three-alarm fire burned for more than three hours late Tuesday night at Apple’s Cupertino headquarters before firefighters were able to fully extinguish the blaze.

[Read AppleInsider | Three-alarm fire scorches key building on Apple campus]

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