Archive: motorola

Here is iRiver’s “PSP killer”, the G10 (via New Links). Looks nice, but the PSP is bound to win for two reasons:

  1. WipEout Pure (a return to form for the WipEout series!)
  2. Lumines (the most addictive puzzle game I’ve played in ages)

While we’re on fancy new-fangled gadgets, I’ve been hearing one or two people predicting that 2006 will herald the end of mobile phones, MP3 players and hand-held games consoles being separate. I doubt this. It’s been tried several times before. As far as I’m concerned, phones are only ever successful as phones.

Sure, camera phones took off, but only as a novelty as far as I’m concerned. If you really want to take a photograph, you are going to reach for the digital camera every time, not the piece of crap that was appended onto your phone as an afterthought.

As for gaming, remember the N-gage? It didn’t kill anything apart from itself. Then there’s the music. Rokr anyone? Here’s a neat article I found via Wikipedia:

What [the Rokr] seems to lack, is any realisation of the fact that actually, it is difficult to make a device which is both a great phone and a great iPod.

The problem is that power limitations mean you don’t want to play too many tunes before your phone goes dead; that you don’t want to have too many calls before your MP3 player goes quiet; and that the controls are a compromise.

I’m sure this time last year Sony were banging on about their “iPod killer” — did it kill the iPod? I bet nobody can even remember what it is now (I certainly can’t). I have a friend who has a Sony Ericsson phone with Walkman branding on it. Another friend asked him if he actually listens to music on it, and he just laughed — of course he uses his iPod to listen to music.

My iRiver can play music (obviously), but you can also view images and text files on it. Have I used either of the latter two functions? Of course not. The images do look quite nice, but why would I need to look at images when I’m on the move? The text function, meanwhile, is really fiddly, and I don’t know what on earth I could use it for. As one entertaining iRiver fanboy told me in the comments once:

your [sic] a twat… the [iRiver] h340 now plays videos aswell (full length movies to watch) … hmm why would you want that you will probably say… and you dont even deserve to know why it has picture and text capabilities, READ YOUR MANUAL!

Translation: “I don’t have the foggiest either!”

If there ever is a decent device that can be used as an MP3 player, a games console and a mobile phone all in one, I’d love to see it — but I’ll have to see it to believe it. In the meantime, I’d use an iRiver for listening to music, a PSP for playing games and, er, my phone to use as a phone.

So Apple’s new combination of the mobile phone and MP3 player (only years after everybody else got in on the act) is called the Rokr.

The new version of HitMaps is called ClustrMaps.

Damn you Flickr!

Because of the dazzlingly successful photo sharing website’s success there is now a ridiculous trend to ditch the ‘e’ in any ‘er’ combination. It’s like the opposite of the ‘magic e’. Instead of the ‘e’ being silent, you now pronounce the ‘e’ but ditch it from the spelling. And now Apple are using this as an excuse to ditch the ‘c’ before a ‘k’, so ‘rocker’ has become ‘rokr’.

(Update: Having read into this a bit more I reckon Motorola are actually more to blame for this rather than Apple, but that doesn’t make it any better.)

I think when people look back on all of this we will all just hold our heads in our hands. Because who doesn’t look back and think Sinead O’Connor’s hit single is completely ruined by the spelling — Nothing Compares 2 U? Even O’Connor herself knew that it was so bad, it made her cry.

C U latr.

(Am I becoming old?)