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I know I'm going to pick up one of those glucometers to monitor my blood sugar levels since I am mildly diabetic.
So, are you S&P TA, Apple fanboy, or your latest, "developer".
You may think of yourself as all three, but you're not. Your blog is not-- it can't be. Decide what your blog is and stick with it.
http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/17/apple-iphone-s...
Start with the App store, which is now packed with more than 25,000 applications. Now add the ability to sell subscriptions that regularly deliver fresh content, additional levels for games or new content, all announced Tuesday. Suddenly an iPhone app can be a digital bookstore, or a digital newspaper, or a game that doles out fresh content by the slice. More is more.
Another intriguing new twist: Apple will now let developers turn the iPhone into a control panel for practically any piece of electronics you can plug it into. That will allow users to, say, pair the phone with a set of speakers to turn the screen into a digital equalizer.
Another radical feature: the ability to automatically find and sync up wirelessly with software running on an iPhone or iPod touch. Suddenly, your kids will be able to compete to play a game in the back seat of the car. Or perform a complex duet with a pair of radical new digital instruments. The gizmo's Bluetooth wireless capability, standard on most smart phones, actually makes the thing a better gaming device.
Way off Zach. The new APIs for charging within the app will be huge. Developers will use them to charge for upgrades on the fly. No effort other than coding involved.
Along with the rumored Premium App Store, people will be downloading 1B apps/month within 3 years AND NO ONE IS GOING TO MATCH THAT, ANYTIME SOON.
Soon Lifetime will start airing Automotive repair shows, and I hear Fortune magazine is going to start a "Hot Chicks of the Big 8" issue. MTV is getting into financial analysis. Why? Because they can make their channels and magazines into whatever they choose.
Think it'll work?
Knowing you the answer is "yes"
Good luck, Zach-- you're going to need it.
Splintered focus is always SO successful
and a lot of people think you're a know nothing manipulator and no Apple fan or authority
"The peer-to-peer (P2P) communication with Bluetooth might be somewhat interesting, but didn’t we already have that capability with the built-in WiFi?" Think about it Maven.
If this is the depth of your review, people should look elsewhere for any sort of real guidance.
Although I appreciate skepticism when it's warranted, in this case, I think you may be a bit jaded to see the forest for the trees. You're looking at the SDK from a consumer's point of view-- not a developer. There are just tons of new APIs that a developer can call to now-- and you only highlighted the ones that a developer will probably use, but not be too excited about. For example, the fact that you can now interact via a USB cable opens up tons of things for both hardware and software developers to create-- and that's just ONE thing you've missed.
The connectivity feature alone will be a game changer. Now there are all sorts of sensors out there which include their own displays and storage and whatnot. Now all you need is a sensor and an iPhone app. Want to do environmental logging? Connect the sensors to an iPhone which will log the data, the time, date, location, store the results and send a copy to mothership. Want to make a postage meter, pH meter for the lab, various health monitors? Connect the sensor to the iPhone and write an app. The point is that anyone building a custom device will think long and hard about that as opposed to just connecting to an iPhone. Part of the goodness is the capabilities of the phone. The other part is that iPhones are ubiquitous. Need a replacement? Drop by the Apple store. Expect the customer to supply their own iPhone? Pretty good odds of that. It would not be surprising to see that three or four years all high school and university science labs will have some options to connect to an iPhone. The student comes in, sets up the experiment, collects data and walks away with the data. Possibly the iPhone never left their pocket and just connected by Bluetooth.
"if you're a developer like me".