iPhone review — one month in

iphoneTiVo, front-loading washing machines, Nike shoes, the Xbox. All are products someone, somewhere has looked forward to buying and using. Yet I don’t recall people weighing in on the features and functions of these, or any other product, as loudly and as passionately as they have with the Apple iPhone.

This is due, in part, because people have a love-hate relationship with their cell phones, which they carry with them every day. And because they use their phones daily, features and functions are of interest, especially when it comes to the iPhone.

After nearly a month of use, I take a look at some of the features and function of the iPhone, noting what I like and dislike, and weighing in on issues people are talking about.

Continue reading »

8 Internet TV apps in 8 weeks

8 Internet TV apps in 8 weeks | last100Since we launched last100, just over eight weeks ago, I’ve been obsessively trying out every Internet TV application that I can get my hands on. To assist some of our newer readers, here’s a quick recap of the Internet TV apps we’ve profiled so far.

Note: Many of the following applications offer very different features and solve different problems. This post isn’t designed to be a product comparison — because it would be like comparing apples with oranges — but instead serves as an overview of some of our coverage to-date. Continue reading »

Is the iPhone the most emotional product of all time?

Is the iPhone the most emotional product of all time?During the last month — or the last seven months, really — I’ve been wondering: Is the iPhone the most emotional product of all time?

Think about it. Forget the Apple-is-or-is-not-making-a-phone speculation that circulated on the Internet before Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone in January 2007. Since then, conjecture hit a boil quickly and has been bubbling ever since, reaching a fevered pitch with traditional media, bloggers, Apple lovers, Apple haters, Treo/Blackberry/Nokia cell phone users, even bystanders on street corners, offering spirited opinions before it was for sale.

iPhone crowds at the Apple store

When the iPhone was released on June 29, the frenzy didn’t die down, it just headed in new directions — real reviews; in-depth analysis, lists of likes/dislikes; what the iPhone was missing; where Apple went wrong; comparisons with smart phones; tips and tricks; hacks; “app” lists; and the ever-present “bug” report. Continue reading »

Sky News now "pay-as-you-go" on Jalipo

Sky News now “pay-as-you-go” on JalipoThe UK-based 24-hour news channel, Sky News, has announced that European viewers will now be able to access its content on the ‘pay-as-you-go’ Internet TV service, Jalipo (see our review). The News Corp-owned channel joins other news organizations including BBC World, EuroNews and Al Jazeera, who have all struck up partnerships with the web-based Internet TV service, since it launched earlier this year.

Rather than charging a subscription fee or funding content through advertising, Jalipo content is viewed in exchange for J:Credits, the company’s own online currency. Jalipo’s strategy hinges on the idea that micro-payments are the key to getting Internet users accustomed to paying for content, in an attempt to emulate the success of ring-tone sales or SMS text-messaging, for example. Continue reading »

Five UK Internet TV offerings compared

This is a guest post by Ryan Jarrett. Ryan is a UK-based IT consultant and blogs regularly on digital content.

The BBC will launch their long-awaited iPlayer this Friday, which has the potential to change the way television is watched by the masses. In this post we examine what the iPlayer is promising, the BBC’s future developments for TV over the internet, and how rival networks are competing for our bandwidth. Continue reading »

Weekly wrapup, 16 – 20 July 2007

Here’s a summary of the week’s digital lifestyle action on last100. Note that you can subscribe to the weekly wrapups, either via the special weekly wrapup RSS feed or by email.

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Top digital lifestyle news

We kicked off the week with news of SoundExchange’s decision not to immediately enforce new royalty rates for Internet radio, which were due to go into effect last Sunday. While it means that our favorite music services, such as Pandora, can carry on operating for the time being, it doesn’t mean that Internet radio is safe just yet. Negotiations continue. Continue reading »

Video of the week: "InDigital"

in digital logoHi, my name is Dan, and I’m a gadget head.

See, there. I’ve admitted what my wife and friends have said for years. I am a gadget head, whether I own the equipment or not. And this love affair with technology and gadgets is what attracts me to tech podcasts and video podcasts like Revision3’s gadget show “InDigital”.

Billed as “Your Life in Gear”, “InDigital” explores the devices of our digital lifestyles: cameras, camcorders, cell phones, GPS, media centers, HD Radio, music players, computers, accessories. Name a gadget, “InDigital” and it’s hosts Hahn Choi, Jessica Corbin and Will Wheaton have deftly covered it. Continue reading »

Google wants to do for TV what it did for the Web

Google wants to do for TV what it did for the WebVincent Dureau, Google’s head of TV technology, gave us another glimpse into the mind of Google and what it might be planning for its television presence in his opening keynote at iTV Con, a trade show conference dedicated to Internet TV.

Television, he said, is experiencing an identity crisis (Register report). As we all know, there has been an explosion of content, with more and more cable and satellite TV channels; with the Internet, IPTV, and YouTube; and with TiVo and DVRs. Viewers have more freedom to pick what they want to watch, when, and to add to the confusion, they can skip the advertising.

Dureau, like many other industry observers, notes that this creates new problems for content producers and for advertisers, “as they struggle to reach an audience that has so many options.” The same thing, he argued, applied to the World Wide Web, which Google helped tame with search and AdSense, among other innovations. With a little Internet know-how, the TV industry can enjoy a brighter future.

Google style. Continue reading »

Survey: consumers want an Internet-connected TV

Survey: consumers want an Internet-connected TVAccording to a survey carried out by iSuppli, nearly two-thirds of U.S. consumers want their televisions to link to the Internet. This, it’s suggested, could path the way for an explosion in sales of network-enabled consumer electronics devices in the next few years.

Home networking is migrating beyond the PC, says the report, and instead devices that sit on a user’s home network now include: DVD recorders, cable modems, Digital Televisions, multi-room Digital Video Recorders, digital media extenders, set-top boxes and video game consoles. Continue reading »

CinemaNow arrives on XBox 360

CinemaNow arrives on XBox 360CinemaNow, which offers paid movie and TV show downloads (rental and to-own), has updated its Media Manager software, so that content from its store can be streamed from a PC to the XBox 360. This represents the latest move by CinemaNow to get its service to work across multiple devices and platforms, from portable media players, media extenders, set-top-boxes, and Internet-connected televisions such as HP’s upcoming line of MediaSmart LCD TVs. Continue reading »