Archive for July, 2010

Big Copyright News

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Some significant news from the US. It is now legal to jailbreak your iPhone, rip DVDs, crack computer games and… read to the blind… in certain circumstances. Copyright.gov has the actual law, Crunchgear has the rundown, and GigaOm has some analysis.

Attenugate, and that’s just off the top of my head right there

Monday, July 19th, 2010

It seems that the now well-known iPhone 4 antenna issues has been deemed worthy of a -gate suffix, joining the esteemed ranks of Grannygate (regarding rugby union team eligibility), Ketchupgate (regarding a Reagan initiative that would have classified ketchup as a vegetable) and Watergate (presumably some kind of scandal involving water).

And Sexy Photo Gate, which is especially hilarious for not even bothering to hyphenate. Oh, Hong Kong, how I loves ya.

So, “Antennagate”. If you don’t already know – and of course you do, but I’m probably going to describe it in some entertaining manner – the iPhone 4 loses signal when you hold it the wrong way (which is to say, the way you’ve always held every mobile phone you’ve ever used). The problem is not insoluble, if you’ve got some duct tape handy, but due to the impending threat of lawsuits and of people not liking him, Steve Jobs has announced the inevitable: free cases for everyone.

What I like about the whole thing is that the problem somehow didn’t come up in testing, and in my cartoonish imagination, that’s because no one testing the iPhone 4 thought to actually use it as a phone. “How’s the testing going?” “Just tried out an app that gives me live updates of the salinity of Wil Wheaton’s sweat: works fine.”

Anyway, this is all going to blow over soon enough. If that’s the biggest complaint about the iPhone 4, it sounds pretty damned sweet.  And these scandals never last. Remember Toallagate? Yeah, me neither.

We shall conclude with a song.

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An interactive display on any surface

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

It’s the British, not the Japanese, who are amazing us this time. The Light Touch is a display projector and touchscreen in one, letting you create an interactive environment on any flat surface. Obviously handy for smallerising (yes, smallerising) portable computing, but I was watching Pan’s Labyrinth last night, and I have another application in mind.

light-touch-touchscreen-projector-uk-0

You know those animations where a kid in a movie opens a book and the ink spread out and displays the page in a kind of spreading creeper of art? I want to see the Light Touch hovering over a book that is blank except for a few small points of reference for the computer, and have an interactive book that knows when you’ve turned pages.

That’s possible now. You know why? Because we’re living in the future.

It was inevitable…

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Engadget has provided instructions on installing Flash on the iPad. Naturally, the iPad must be jailbroken first. (What? How?) A cheer from the masses, perhaps, but Steve Jobs is likely to want someone’s organs.

Naturally, Engadget’s title image is of the optimal use of Flash – watching Homestar Runner cartoons.