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Thursday, March 02, 2006 

Apple's New Products Are Rotten...

"Hype is the awkward and desperate attempt to convince journalists that what you've made is worth the misery of having to review it." -Federico Fellini Well, two days ago, Apple had a press conference to show off the new products. Lots of hype was circling the convention, and Apple flew people in from many parts of the country just to see these 'new' products. Images surfaced on the internet about 2 weeks ago that were supposedly leaked from the Apple factory showing a full sized iPod video. Later then, a video showing someone creating the 'image' with photography and Photoshop. However, there were discrepancies between the actual image and the image in the video, so this gave new hope to the image actually being a leak. Then the day before the Apple announcement, AOTS admitted to creating the video of the faked image, and I believe the original also... "Way too meta..." Well, the new products Apple did actually announce included the iPod HiFi, and the Leather iPod Case, and I suppose most importantly the Intel iMac and Intel Mac mini. For me, these didn't really live up to the hype (that was mostly created by rumors). Besides, Apple's jump into the iPod accessories market is about 3 years too late, and the products that were introduced, IMO are overpriced and not original. As of today however, Apple has filed for a wide laptop touchpad patent from the US Patent office, Apple has a way of filing for patents that have anything to do with touch or interface. All we can hope for is a touchable iPod... And for the last bit of Apple news the Mac II computer is 19 years old today. You could buy one of these in 1987 for $5,498 (1 MB of RAM, a floppy drive, and a 40MB SCSI hard disk). FOTP: Digg.com and Wikipedia.org Digg: "If you like tech news, you'll love Digg.com" Digg was created as an experiment in November 2004 by Kevin Rose, Owen Byrne, Ron Gorodetzky, and Jay Adelson (who serves as CEO), all of whom play an active role in the management of the site. This site is a where members choose what news stories belong on the front page by "Digg"ing a story. The more diggs, the story will stay on the front page. Wikipedia: "The Encyclopedia for the Internet, if you haven't used it, you need to." If you can think it, it's probably on here (Example: Digg). This is the definition of Wikipedia, from Wikipedia, hence all of the links. Wikipedia is a multilingualWeb-based free-contentencyclopedia. It exists as a wiki, written collaboratively by volunteers, allowing most articles to be changed by anyone with access to a web browser and an Internet connection. -Tom




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