iPad love

Technologizer just released a survey of iPad satisfaction. The result is no real surprise to those have used one.

We gave [iPad purchasers] a few weeks to explore their new gadgets. And then we fielded a survey earlier this month to gauge the satisfaction level of  some of the first iPad owners. More than six thousand people responded, the largest response to a Technologizer survey to date.

Executive summary in case you don’t feel like reading the rest of this article: They like it. A lot. Ninety-eight percent say they’re satisfied with their iPads overall; ninety-six percent think it’s a good value. In category after category–3G service, most of the individual bundled apps, battery life, speed, the absence of Flash–a majority of respondents are pleased.

The full survey is full of interesting details.

God is a member of the NRA

If you don’t believe me, just listen to Senator Grassley question Elena Kagan yesterday. It seems that the second amendment more or less reflects God’s law. Surprising, in that firearms aren’t prominently featured in the Bible.

I cannot imagine anything more tedious than sitting for days listening to a group of Senatorial blowhards pontificate in the form of questions.

Andy Ihnatko’s full length iPhone 4 review

As usual, Andy Ihnatko’s review of the iPhone 4 is worth a full read. But here is a takeaway from the review:

If a quick glance at the iPhone 4’s new features inspires initial cynicism, spending five days immersed in the actual device makes another impression entirely. For the first time since 2007, I feel as though the device I’m carrying isn’t merely an improved iPhone, but a truly new one.

Disintermediation (updated)

Disintermediation is the process by which a process middleman in a process is eliminated. Remember what the Internet did to travel agents? Who uses a travel agent these days? And how about bricks-and-mortor book stores?

Well, we are (finally) getting closer to disintermediation of the cable TV companies. The Internet is a terrific platform for delivering content directly to end users. As users buy increasing numbers IP-enabled gadgets for use in their homes, cars and everywhere else for that matter, the days of cable companies providing programming via a wire are likely numbered. Connect your TV to a computer, pick up your iPad, fire up your cellphone, and you already can access a ton of entertainment available on demand and without traditional broadcast or cable TV signals. No tuner required, just a web browser or entertainment app.

Wired’s Epicenter notes a milestone in the process of Cable TV obsolescence. Hulu, already an extremely popular Internet TV (IPTV) service, appears close to piloting a new service that would provide a huge collection of TV programs for $10/month. This would include CBS, Viacom, Time Warner’s television studio divisions, Fox, NBC Universal, ABC, ABC Family, Biography, Lionsgate, Endemol, MGM, MTV Networks, National Geographic, Digital Rights Group, Paramount, PBS, Sony Pictures Television, Warner Bros. and more, including Wired.com.

For ten bucks, one wouldn’t expect the level of programming cable and satellite offer for larger monthly bills. But if paid Hulu works, the networks will have proof that the internet can circumvent cable and satellite companies and they could easily add more expensive content tiers down the road.

If the networks prove they can charge consumers directly, and consumers are happy to supply their own “cable boxes” in the form of game consoles, television-connected computers, set-top boxes, tablets and so on, it’s difficult to see why networks would tolerate cable and satellite providers grabbing a slice of profits, just for sending the shows through one pipe rather than the other.

Cable and satellite are classic middlemen. When the internet meets the middleman, the middleman tends to disappear — or at least be replaced by a thinner middleman. We’ve seen it with record stores, classified ad-dependent newspapers, video-rental stores, bookstores and any other business that delivers something that the internet can deliver more efficiently.

The “thinner middleman” as far as IPTV is concerned could be ISPs, which already charge more for faster data plans capable of delivering better-looking video. But as multipurpose providers, they’ll never command as large a slice of the pie as cable/satellite companies did with their television-only pipes.

Think about it. Wouldn’t you love to replace your current cable television provider with a $10 monthly fee? And wouldn’t you love to access the programing on your computer-connected TVs, your iPad, your computers, your cellphone, etc.? And, via IPTV, you can also access hundreds of alternative programming sources, like this, that no cable provider carries at all. The fabled universal jukebox that would let you call up any media on demand is closer every day.

Or do you want to be wired to your cable provider and its monthly bills?

Update 6/29/10: Hulu Plus is now here. Or at least it is here enough that you can ask for invitation to try the preview.  The iPhone and iPad apps are now available in the iTunes app store. Looks great to me.

iPhone “death grip” antenna fix on the way? (updated x2)

Yes. According to Apple Insider.

Meanwhile, the problem seems to have been massively overstated. David Pogue has a thorough review of the situation over at the New York Times.

I’ve asked Apple about the problem three times, and nobody’s gotten back to me, but the company did issue a statement:

“Gripping any phone will result in some attenuation of its antenna performance,” it said, “depending on the placement of the antennas. This is a fact of life for every wireless phone. If you ever experience this on your Phone 4, avoid gripping it in the lower left corner in a way that covers both sides of the black strip in the metal band, or simply use one of many available cases.” (Or, as Steve Jobs himself wrote to one customer: “Non issue. Just avoid holding it in that way.”)

Avoid holding it that way!? Seriously?

Update: Steve Jobs emailed a customer asking about the issue. Jobs’ response:

There are no reception issues. Stay Tuned.

This seems consistent with some sort of pending fix.

Update 2: On the other hand, Fake Steve Jobs has an alternate take: there is no spoon.

It’s a pretty safe assumption that if you’re reading this blog, you’ve seen “The Matrix.” And you may or may not remember the scene where a kid explains to Neo that the trick to bending a spoon with your mind is simply to remember that, “There is no spoon.”

So it is with marketing. One thing I learned very early in life, thanks to intentional overuse of psychedelic drugs, is that there is no reality. As a guy at the commune once put it: “The reality is, there is no reality.”