dotlinklogo_hover

Thursday, August 30, 2007

TV Shows Crawl Out of Pond.... Arrive in UK.

I noticed today that the UK iTunes store now sells TV show episodes. This is a brilliant step in the right direction, and hopefully we'll be on par with those chaps in the US soon enough. (What with their automatic TV Show season passes, and movies...)

A handful of shows are now available, including Ugly Betty, LOST, Desperate Housewives and of course: That 70's Show.
I have no idea what That 70's Show is, all I know is that it isn't Stargate, CSI, Lost, 24 or COPS, therefore it sucks.


My logic is impeccable.
Anyway, Alasdair and I have been chatting, and we've decided that I need to post more on tWTB, and that he will probably become a regular writer on The MacTake. Also, we're planning to resume those tips & reviews posts, as well as our 5 Podcast Picks (Of the Month), and weekly App Picks.
We also think a blog pick is in order, but we'll see about that after things get back on track.

I guess after the exams I just forgot the meaning of the phrase "regular blogging" and its taken me all this time to rediscover the MacTake and its reader base, and realize that I have a lot of things crammed in my head that I really need to post about.

Labels:

2 Comments. | By Skippy, Thursday, August 30, 2007 4:23 PM

Monday, August 27, 2007

Alasdair Visits Glasgow's New Apple Store

So I visited the new Apple Store on Buchanan Street in Glasgow this morning.

And that nicely summarises all I can say about the experience

I mean, it's a nice enough place and the staff, from what contact I had with them, seem to be pretty knowledgeable and friendly, which is more than you can say for a lot of places, computer stores in particular.

There were, unsurprisingly, a great many Macs scattered around, including various laptops and the newest iteration of the iMac (complete with new keyboards, but I'll get to that in a moment), all running various pieces of software that you could walk up to and play with. At a few places, staff were demonstrating OS X to users and there was one section, with curiously spherical “chairs”, running children's software. Well, they weren't really running it but the 4 iMacs did have a really nice looking rotating display of the boxart for about 5 different games. Which is nice, I guess.

The interior of the shop has been much talked about in reports, including that standard Apple minimalism combined with some flashy combinations of metal and glass, contrasted with the much older exterior of the building. The whole design wouldn't have looked out of place in, or as, a modern art gallery.

This, I think, is the problem. With all the emphasis on demonstrating stuff and looking cool, the Apple Store, at least here, has forgotten that a “store” is somewhere people go to buy things.

That glass spiral staircase looks really cool, but I'd appreciate some kind of sign indicating what items could be found on the upper level it leads to. Actually, I'd appreciate some signs anywhere, of anything. Something next to the product to tell me what I was looking at. The headphones all neatly lined up next to the different models of iPod tell me that they produce noise of some sort but should I want to know how much of that noise they can store or for how many hours they can play it back to me, I'm in the dark.

The same seems to go for everything else: MacBooks, iMacs, Mac Minis, (there wasn't a Mac Pro in sight, presumably because they're for the professional market) all were laid out, widely spaced, on big white tables with nary a label in site. Even outside, the only indication of the store is a large white Apple logo hung over the door.

Upstairs, software and cables were hooked to the wall roughly according to what they did, but again, nothing to indicate what this was. I was looking for one of the new keyboards and eventually found it, tucked in at the back of a shelf, though it wasn't the wireless model that I wanted*, beneath the more prominent old-style keyboards and amongst some AV cables.

Should I have decided to buy it anyway, there's no way of knowing how. It looks like the checkout is located on the ground floor, stuck under the stairs as an afterthought. As an aside, I have no idea how you would go about purchasing one of the computers. Presumably it involves grabbing a member of staff and discussing it with them.

Now, I've never been in any other Apple Stores so I can't judge anything but the Buchanan Street branch. What I will say about that, is that there's room for improvement, without a doubt. Personally, I'd start by labelling things but going further, I'd suggest putting things closer together. This seems like a very minor nitpick but as it is, the computers are very widely spaced, especially along the back wall of the ground floor, and it just looks very barren and dull. Nobody's going to complain if they can't straighten out their arms and spin around while testing the iMac, guys.

Next, separating out the shop and demo sections would be useful. I don't appreciate having to squeeze past the guy learning how to use a Mighty Mouse just so that I can grab a copy of The Sims 2 off the rack. But that's what I have to do as things are laid out now. In fact, the design of the shop even lends itself very easily to physically separating the two – move the accessories downstairs and let people do more extensive trials up above.

“More extensive trials” would also be useful. The whole place seems to be geared towards acquiring new users and showing them the wonders of OS X, which is all well and good, but what if I want to just sit down and try something out? I don't want to purchase the new keyboard without at least trying it for ten minutes. I've read much about the iLife '08 and the chance to try it out would have been great.

All this can hypothetically be done on the demo machines right now, but anyone who's ever tried just leaning over a desk and typing for more than two minutes will know how much of a pain this quickly becomes, figuratively and literally.

So, in the end, what do I think of it? Well, it's an interesting enough place to poke my head into for five minutes and I suppose it may well be useful to first time Mac buyers and those looking for tech support. I may use it some day if I happen to be walking past and remember that I need a cable, or if I find myself faced with a problem that can't be solved by applying Google and a Dummies book.

But until it tidies up a bit and becomes more practical for existing Apple users, I reckon that I'll stick to buying my tech gear, Apple and otherwise, online.





*while this might be an issue with supplies to the store, the Apple website is giving delivery times as 4-6 weeks so I'm giving them the benefit of the doubt and assuming that it's a company-wide shortage due to demand.



(MacNN has a brief article regarding this, but they have plenty of photos which may give you some idea of what I was talking

Labels: , ,

3 Comments. | By Alasdair Corbett, Monday, August 27, 2007 6:24 PM

iPhone Updates + Unlockification

It seems that Apple's latest update for the iPhone has made many of its users very happy indeed. Among this list of unspecified bug fixes was a wifi and camera patch. Apparently now the wifi reception range of the iPhone has greatly increased, and the camera no longer blurifies moving objects. (Source).

Yes I love my crappy non-existent verbs use, don't you?

Also a team of dedicated do no gooders claim they have found the end to AT&T goodness on the iPhone. They reckon that they even managed to unlock the phone with a software driven service, no hardware meddling for them! (Site).

Now I think Apple is mighty unhappy about this, well actually I think Apple couldn't care less but AT&T are mighty unhappy about this, and they're directing their unhappiness at Apple. You know: why didn't you make the phone more unlockification proof? Geez Steve, we spent all this money ripping you and everyone else off and you didn't even make the phone like um, more magic!
Not that anyone at AT&T would have coined my new term (just yet). Unlockification is hereby taking its first few steps* out into the wild west of the intertubes.

So my advice would be that if you are using this unlockification service: change your name, dye your hair, cut your hair, get a tan / lose your tan, leave the country, and stay far away from Cupertino, before Steve Jobs co-releases with AT&T, the iKill.

All humor aside, its an interesting achievement and if I was standing next to the guys who did it, I'd hi-five them for sure.

* Official first few steps anyway...

Note:
This post lives in 132 Diminishing-Ability Drive, Spelling-Mistake Land.

Labels: ,

0 Comments. | By Skippy, 10:07 AM