Archives by Topic: Apple
iPhone Porn in 3G
Time magazine’s Jeremy Caplan is reporting that the iPhone’s next frontier will be pornography.
To date, mobile porn has consisted largely of still images, racy text services and “moan tones,"… But now, thanks in large part to the iPhone’s video dexterity, short clips are becoming a staple of the mobile porn business. The speed promised by the iPhone 2.0 is much anticipated… “It’s by far the porn-friendliest phone,” says Devan Cypher, representative for San Francisco–based Sin City Entertainment.
Apple restricts adult content in the podcast section of their iTunes Music Store, and they will apparently do the same for the upcoming iPhone/iPod Touch Application Store. But they can’t stop adult entertainment providers from supplying Websites tailored for their devices. Their main challenge in all of this is to ensure that parental controls are easy to use and very secure. As the Time article wisely points out, the last thing Apple or AT&T need here is to have a Janet Jackson Boobgate-type controversy on their hands. I’m sure the FCC will be watching very, very closely.
[Source: MacNN ]
Worth Your Consideration 004 - A GF5 Linkdump
- Viddler Technology Evangelist Colin Devroe started using Spaces in Mac OS X Leopard shortly after the release of the 10.5.3 update, and he’s reporting today on how it’s been going. He certainly seems to be making better use of the program/feature than I am, and I can’t wait to get home and give some of his suggestions a try.
- AppleInsider is offering a ray of hope for those iPhone enthusiasts who are hoping to get in and out of the Apple/AT&T store of their choice in a timely fashion on release day. They report that iPhone 3G buyers may be able to complete activation at home, after all.
Merlin Mann’s Take on Mobile Me
43 Folders has an article by Merlin Mann on MobileMe that I found quite good. Mann describes himself as “someone who’s had strong feelings, high hopes, and occasional disappointmens with .Mac” and his thoughts on the service that Apple is launching to replace it are pretty comprehensive. My favorite observation:
Hiya, Windows hold-outs - I don’t know enough about “Enterprise” buying decisions to speak intelligently about business adoption, but I will say that MobileMe seems like a smart way reach out to individual Windows users and say, “See? Look how easy this all is!” Similarly, a lot of people I talk to these days are down to a single Windows device, and that’s the one they have to use at work. MobileMe potentially keeps them connected to their Apple world, even when they’re on a PC.
That’s the single most important benefit of MobileMe over .Mac for me: the inclusion of Windows computers in the mix.
Further Thoughts on the iPhone 3G
Shortly after Monday’s WWDC keynote address, Alex Albrecht of The Totally Rad Show and Diggnation tweeted that the just-announced iPhone 3G was “very disappointing.” Alex complained that the only thing the new iPhone had that the old iPhone couldn’t get (aside from GPS, which he didn’t care about) was 3G reception.
I think Alex is missing the point. As John Gruber of Daring Fireball pointed out, it’s the iPhone platform that’s the real story right now, and not the latest and greatest version of the device:
The physical phone is not the story. A year from now, the iPhone 3G will be replaced by another new model. The platform is the story. Platforms have staying power, and, once entrenched, are very hard to displace.
(Thanks to Colin Devroe for pointing the way to that article.)
Alex should be stoked that his existing iPhone is going to be capable of so many more cool things next month, and that the upgrade isn’t going to cost him a thing. Every year is sure to bring a newer version of the iPhone device, but it seems to me that the hardware will see only incremental improvements as time goes on (how many more hardware features can you add to the thing before it becomes a cumbersome phone or an undersized laptop?). What all existing owners and all future owners should be happy about is that Apple seems dedicated to making the platform for all versions of the iPhone cooler and cooler every time we swing around the upgrade tree. Until there’s a platform upgrade that doesn’t include older versions of the iPhone, I say there’s nothing to be upset or disappointed about at all.
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Apple’s target market for the 3G iPhone is not the early adopters and gadget geeks like Alex. This time, they’re after holdouts like Jason Martin and myself. That’s why the new, lower price is the major selling point, probably even more so than the faster speeds. Many of us, myself included, don’t live in areas where 3G is going to make any difference. But the price is going to make all of the difference in the world.
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In the comments section of the iPhone piece I posted the other day, my friend Erik wrote, “All I really need in a cell phone is the ability to call people and text message. I hardly even use the camera on the one I’ve got, nevermind all that extra whizbangery.” I appreciate Erik’s position on this. Like Erik, there are certain features of my current phone and certain features of the iPhone that I will probably hardly ever use. The phone part is something that I hardly ever use now, and that I’ll probably hardly ever use no matter what phone I own. I don’t use text messaging either, as I’ve never really seen the point. And, while I have used the camera on occasion, I’ve never played a game on my phone, and I’ve never used any program for it, other than the calculator.
What the iPhone is about for me is carrying one less device. Right now, I carry an iPod and a phone with me almost everywhere I go. I use the iPod regularly, and I have the phone for emergencies. If those two things were one thing instead, I would be a happy monkey. The fact that the iPhone can also browse the Web from anywhere is huge for me, because that means I don’t have to open up my laptop and I don’t have to find Wi-Fi. And everything else the iPhone can do, like games that are simple enough for a geezer like me to enjoy: that’s all bonus.
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The biggest downer of the new iPhone experience will be mandatory in-store activation. The previous version of the device was activated at home, on your own computer, at your own convenience. This was one of the major factors which led to the massive iPhone hacking/unlocking community on the Web, so I can understand why Apple and AT&T want to lock everyone into a contract before the device is even useable, but I join the chorus of people who wonder if the two companies know what they’re doing. People will stand in line for this phone when it comes out on July 11. The estimated activation time is something like ten to eleven minutes, and when you multiply that by the hundreds of people who will be camped outside of each store, you’ve got a recipe for disaster. I’m not exactly sure how they get around this while still addressing their concerns about the proliferation of unlocked iPhones, but I feel like they have to do something.
iPhone 3G for $199
Apple today announced the iPhone 3G, which will retail for $199. I think I may have wet myself when I heard that, and I’m about to go check and see, but I wanted to share with all of you my incredible sense of joy about this announcement before I did so.
Listen: I can actually afford a $199 product. I’m actually halfway there, in terms of how much I have saved. For me, my dying iPod, and my horrible Verizon cellphone, this is amazing, amazing news. Sure, it doesn’t come out until July 11, which is a bit further away than I would like, but that just gives me more time to save up.
How about the rest of you Geek Forcers? Are you interested in picking one up? I’m sure that I’m not the only one out there who is salivating about this. Apple has just guaranteed itself a huge boost in its marketshare, in my opinion.
Oh, and did you hear about MobileMe, which will apparently solve all of the synchronization issues I’ve written about previously? It’s only $99 a year, and it sounds great.
I am one happy monkey right now, one very happy monkey.

