
Granted, i haven’t seen it in person or used it, but i watched the Macworld speech by Steve Jobs about it and let me tell you – the phone looks incredible. The phone looks awesome but more than that, it is over-delivering. Again, Apple is taking everyone’s expectations, throwing them out the window and giving us something that we didn’t even dream about. There were months of speculation and NONE of them were even close to this. It was never a question of whether or not mobile phones would replace iPods, but rather a question of when. Apple knew this and made the most rockin’ mobile phone one could imagine. Here’s what it’s got….
- Thin as hell. While it is somewhat large which is nice for watching videos, it is really thin and pretty sleek.
- Touch screen. While i’ve not a big fan of them in the past, it looks like they’ve thought about all the screwups that usually happen and made this screen really sizzle. The mouse on MacBooks are really good with recognizing multiple finger scrolling and supposedly the iPhone is too. Also, touch screens can change when you add in applications or change functionality so this phone is forward-compatible.
- A super-high-resolution screen. This makes videos, photos, and web browsing really a fun (or non-painful) experience. Putting only 1/5 of a browser on a screen, which is what most phones do, sucks. The iPhone screen is much better so that a whole browser screen can fit and it makes regular photos and desktop images gorgeous.
- It’s also an iPod. Having it be an iPod too is the way to go. I can imagine a day when all iPods are cell phones. Synergy, got to love it.
- Sycnhing contacts and photos and music, which is really painful for most phones as their computer software sucks. Apple does this really well with iTunes and iPods and this phone will synch with iTunes too which makes lots of sense.
- Wi-fi capabilities. Cell networks sometime suck, so it’s nice to be able to jump onto a wireless connection if it is available. Browing the web on this thing will be fast too.
- Google Maps built in. My current phone has Blackberry maps built in and it’s a great feature to have on a phone. Google Maps are even better (Double True!) so that’s a big plus. I’ve yet to see any phone have this feature. It shows that bringing Google’s CEO onto the Apple board was good for something.
- Voicemail browsing similar to email browsing. Don’t know why this hasn’t been done before but it’s awesome.
- Even the bluetooth accessories look slick
Some other specifics: $499 (4GB) or $599 (8GB) avaialble in June with 2 commitment from Cingular.



10-10:30: Real World and why it matters: Hans Rosling
2-2:20: State of the Blogosphere (David Sifry, CEO of Technorati)
resumes are “very 1.0, sometimes lack information, and they lack metadata.” They should be demonstration of expertise which they currently aren’t. LinkedIn is trying to become the next version of that resume. He also sees Business 2.0 right around the corner and what are the new set of business applications. So many professionals are online, there will be increased collaboration
Fo drizzle, yo
First, i would buy the best, more user-friendly and one of hte most popular social networks around – Facebook. With facebook, you not only get a great social network, but you also get one of the best photo-sharing applications on the internet. Then i would merge it with AIM, change all AIM-pages to be facebook pages, and place the mini-feed on every users home AOL.com page.
Buy Meebo
Page views equal cash and YouTube has a lot of them. Because they haven’t fully monetized them yet doesn’t mean they won’t. They needed a partner with an ad serving system and relationships with advertisers – Google’s the best at both. In fact, Scoble 


stamp. Look at
This completely annoys me. I want people to develop a site until it’s worthy for people to use and then put it out. If it is available for anyone to use – it’s ready. Call it version 1.0. People know what 1.0 means, it means the first iteration. As you fix it and add features, you can go to 1.2, 1.5, 2.0, whatever. But keeping a product in perpetual beta mode is just wrong – have the balls to actually take the training wheels off and see if you can ride.
eir page they have a “beta meter” where users can vote whether their service is stable enough to come out of beta. That’s a great idea. It’s the users who you’re trying to please and if they deem the service solid, then it probably is. This is a company that Google bought earlier this year to build their Google Suite that i’ve speculated about for many a moon.
2.
talk to its nearest neighbors, creating an ad hoc, local area network. The laptops will use innovative power (including wind-up) and will be able to do most everything except store huge amounts of data. (