Monday, October 24, 2011

A Visionary Untouched #3

I remember that car ride home.  My water polo team had just destroyed Mercer Island’s team 17 to 6.  It was an awesome game I probably had 7 goals 3 or 4 steals and a couple field-blocks, I was on cloud nine after the game.  It was late in the evening, freezing cold, and pouring down rain. The last thing I wanted to do after a win like that was get out of the cozy pool into the frigid air wearing nothing but a speedo.  Full of adrenalin I hopped out, grabbed my towel, dried off, and jumped into my deck coat.  After a quick meeting with my coach I scurried to my car, cranked up the heat, and turned on some tunes. That was the first time I heard the news.  Steve Jobs was dead. 

It had been six hours since the news broke out, and I was just hearing it for the first time.  I sat there for a few minutes reflecting on how his innovations change the world of technology forever.  He was a visionary who revolutionized the music industry, the cell phone industry, and the personal computer industry. 
 
Along with Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne, Steve Jobs pioneered the first personal computer in 1976.  Apple I was the first product of Apple Inc.  In the following years Apple released the Apple II, Apple III, and the Apple Lisa.  After much success with the Apple II and Apple III, Apple hired John Sculley as CEO for his business background to improve advertising and profit margins.  In 1985 Jobs was ousted by the board of directors and sold his share of Apple.  Years later he started a new computer company called NeXT.  Apple eventually bought the company bringing Jobs back into Apple’s management. After a decade of poor management and the company turning to a multibillion-dollar loss, Steve Jobs became the CEO. Thus began the “Steve Jobs Era.”  Jobs began restructuring the company.  Just before the company almost went under, Jobs struck an investment deal with Microsoft.  The Apple revolution has begun. 

We all love our music.  I remember getting my first iPod. It was the coolest thing ever.  It could hold 1,000 songs at one time. This was a big step up from my SONY Walkman.  The iPod had a color screen and it even had games.  This great piece of technology revolutionized the music experience.  People didn’t have to use CD’s anymore.  I could just go to iTunes and buy any song I wanted.  For better or worse Steve Jobs revolutionized the music industry.  The iPod was one of a kind and everyone had to have one. It’s what put Apple on the technology map.  People started to take notice of Apple, and eventually the iMac became the best selling PC on the market. Apple continued to remodel the iMac with the newest technology, but computers weren’t the focus of Apple anymore.  In January of 2007, Apple introduced one of it’s most famous of products.  There was no phone like the iPhone.  Nobody could match its capabilities. I sat at my computer jaw dropped as I watched the keynote speech from Jobs.  I though it was the coolest thing ever!! 

Steve Jobs was a visionary, and no one can argue with that statement.  Today there are many products competing with Apple products, but these followers can’t say they were the first.  Steve Jobs was the first.  On October 5th, 2011 at 3:00pm in his home Steve lost his last battle with pancreatic cancer.  He was such an iconic person in the modern world.  I guess I thought he would live forever.  I released my parking brake, popped my truck into first gear, and silently drove home.   

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Hello This is Your iPhone Talking #2

What is Apple referring to with the “S” in iPhone 4S? Some could argue that the S stands for the iPhone’s awesome new A5 chip, a 1ghz dual core processor allowing the phone to run at lightning “speed.”  Along with the speed, the phone has a Sony built 8-mega-pixel 1080p HD video recording camera. However, most associate the “S” with the revolutionary voice control system “Siri.”  Siri is why people justify the upgrade.  “When I step out of my house today, a reminder will pop up on my iPhone 4S to deposit checks at the bank.” Or “Siri… remind me to do my homework after water polo practice.” Siri will know that I am leaving the pool and remind me when I pull up to my house. Now I can forget about forgetting to do something because Siri has my back.

Everything can be done with Siri. Apple began their launch of voice activation with the iPhone 3GS. Although you were limited to voice dialing and song selection, it jump started what was to come from apple in the near future. Apple didn’t do it alone however. The advanced voice recognition technology was an acquisition when Apple bought the 2010 start-up company Siri Inc. 

Siri brings efficiency to your life.  It takes about 3 seconds to ask Siri to set a reminder, as opposed to opening up the calendar app and manually adding a reminder for a certain day at a certain time. More often than not I am too lazy to take out a planner and write down a reminder. Instead I try to remember it in my head, - this never turns out well.-  I am hopeful that Siri will help me get from a “forgot about list” to an “accomplished list.”  Consider Siri like a personal assistant who you don’t have to pay. 

Voice recognition software like Siri and Google Voice is making its way to be the next big thing. The first generation iPhone revolutionized how we interacted with our phones. The capacitive touch-screen from Apple was untouched for quite awhile as other cellular phone companies could not match the same technology. However today the majority of our phones and electronics are touch-screen. Even my 3 year-old cousin can work an iPad better than me.

It makes sense that voice control is the next step in a user interface. Its like “how can I make it even easier?” At birth we begin our introduction to talking. Therefore controlling the new iPhone should be easier than figuring how to control a touch-screen interface. This innovation will be the most efficient way to utilize our phones until Apple or Google master telekinesis. 

To most of us, voice recognition software is a luxury on our phones, but this luxury has the ability to change a person’s life forever.  People who are visually impaired now have the ability to utilize key features of a smartphone. Without help from another, a blind man can search restaurants, lookup meaningless facts, and even send a text message or email.  Apple truly has expanded their target audience.

As of now, Siri is beta software and only has minimal features.  It’s partnered with Yelp to utilize restaurant searches and reviews and Wolfram Alpha to solve meaningless calculations. Other than these two third party applications Siri is only designed to work with iPhone’s innate applications. But who is to say that having your phone trade stocks or set a facebook status is too far away.



http://www.wired.com/reviews/2011/10/iphone4s/all/1