Ha, I'm here.

I just have so much to say I don't even know where to begin.

Mostly I'm excited because this is a HUGE leap forward for not just
the mobile web... the extension of network neutrality principles to
the mobile web.

But also because it illustrates apple REALLY, REALLY get's mobile computing.

Specifically mobile computing is ALL about communications.

This device is heavily hevily focused on personal / inter-personal
communications.

voice, IM, SMS, picture sharing and so much more

it also supports audio and video podcasting but apple hasn't yet cut
the sync cable.

This is to say... it makes no sense... that you should be walking
around or sitting at your desk at work with this marelous piece of
tech with wifi and GSM in your pocket or sitting on your desktop with
the same old podcasts and videos from when you left home in the
morning.  Why should it be teathered to one desktop computer with a
sync cable.

Why should such a marvelous piece of tech NOT aggregate your latest
audio or video podcasts directly from the web so that anytime you pick
it up it has "new stuff".

And for that matter why when you buy anything from the itunes store
why should it not be automatically delivered to the device.

Why should you have to carry it home each night to sync it?  And what
if you go out of town for a few days... why should you not have access
to your latest podcasts, videos and media wherever you are?

These are the same questions people have asked of email and I expect
they will come to the same conclusions... building both webservices
for audio and video podcast management... and building support onto
hardware devices much like the blackberry.

In fact, I dare say, that much like mobile email. Mobile podcast
aggregation will one day be a killer app on the mobile computing
platform.

At this point... do to the questions the new iPhone asks... though the
answers have not yet been given.... this vision that media should flow
directly from the web to your device is pretty much inevitable.  It is
inevitable because it is where the questions lead, and have been
leading since Microsoft put wifi in the Zune, though they did nothing
with it.  Indeed, the editors of the Chicago suntimes, the Wall Street
Journal, and the NYTimes even asked such questions.  Why should I have
to sync the such a device when it has wifi built in?   The answer is
you shouldn't. The answer is... there's no reason why you such a
device should ever be teathered to a single desktop computer again.

That said, direct to device aggregation of podcasts and purchases
probably wasn't an extremely high priority with apple given the
tremendous amount of features in this new iPhone device... but I
suspect that one way or another aggregation will be coming to this
device soon.   Especially since it appears to be running some basic
version of Mac OSX. I would hope in fact that Fireant or Democracy
will be ported to it soon.  I think i'll be a SUPERB platform for
Democracy in particular. The Democracy interface was made to run on
the iPhone over wifi.

One last thing... people keep bitching about cellular data and
aggregation.  They keep saying... cellular networks aren't fast
enough... even if they were they'd never allow it... Well screw the
cellular networks... if they're not fast enough or too closed who
cares. Podcasting and videoblogging does NOT require always on
connectivity... all it requires is that when you go to pick up your
iphone there's something new.

One final thing. One reason I'm so obsessed with bringing audio and
video podcasting to the mobile web is because moving them beyond the
desktop will not only enhance the power and ubiquity of open access
media... think digital divide... think one laptop per child.... think
limited portable computing droping in price and becoming ubiquitous
all aroudn the world...    but also they will enhance video
podcasting, video sharing, and audio podcasting's value as means of
inter-personal communications in much the same way the blackberry and
so called "mobile email" enhances the communications value of email.

Ubiquity, ease of use, and in the future a constant drop in the price
of hardware and connectivity are the key.

Oh, and speaking of connectivity, apple talked about a new focus on
wimax with some partnership. If wimax ever pans out we'll be talking
about a ubiquitous broadband network that's easier and cheaper to
install and maintain than todays cellular networks... which is pretty
interestng because cellular networks have already penetrated some of
the farthest corners of the planet.

It all ads up to a completely new and very distruptive communications paradigm.

Peace,

-Mike
mmeiser.com/blog
mefeedia.com
intermediated.com
evilvlog.com

On 1/9/07, Nathan Freitas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> sull wrote:
> >
> > do you think osx is open to users or confined to approved applications?
> >
> I feel like they will push widgets as the primary application model for
> developers. Just my guy instinct based on issues around deployment,
> updating, and a networked application model.
>
> +n
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>

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