Josh Ferguson's Comments Josh Ferguson's Comments RSS Syndication from SeekingAlpha.com http://seekingalpha.comuser/43355/comments Why I'm Disappointed By The iPhone http://seekingalpha.com/article/23911-why-i-m-disappointed-by-the-iphone?source=feed#comment-79981 79981 Thu, 11 Jan 2007 20:07:09 -0500 Why I'm Disappointed By The iPhone http://seekingalpha.com/article/23911-why-i-m-disappointed-by-the-iphone?source=feed#comment-79910 79910
As far as opened in other ways though I think that's wrong. I develop web applications and also Mac applications on OS X. I can tell you the developer community is buzzing about the fact that this runs OS X as a platform. That means all of the experience that will be available from developing on TIger (10.4) and the upcoming Leopard (10.5), which Jobs said the phone will be running, will already be available. The fact that I can start coding something once they release the developer kit using my previous knowledge, and build it for the iPhone when it's available is not just a plus, it's a deal maker. This will attract a huge number of developers who can whip up good applications in a matter of a month or two. I'd look for the number of apps for this to explode through the rest of this year.

As far as Symbian, MS's Mobile OS, and all of those other crippled useless platforms, they will begin to lose even more traction with the development community. The stagnation in the market that these companies have caused is something they will have to figure out how to deal with as they begin to build competing products to slow down Apple's growth in market share, which admittedly will initially be small and not much of a worry for them for the first few years.]]>
Thu, 11 Jan 2007 04:37:21 -0500
As far as opened in other ways though I think that's wrong. I develop web applications and also Mac applications on OS X. I can tell you the developer community is buzzing about the fact that this runs OS X as a platform. That means all of the experience that will be available from developing on TIger (10.4) and the upcoming Leopard (10.5), which Jobs said the phone will be running, will already be available. The fact that I can start coding something once they release the developer kit using my previous knowledge, and build it for the iPhone when it's available is not just a plus, it's a deal maker. This will attract a huge number of developers who can whip up good applications in a matter of a month or two. I'd look for the number of apps for this to explode through the rest of this year.

As far as Symbian, MS's Mobile OS, and all of those other crippled useless platforms, they will begin to lose even more traction with the development community. The stagnation in the market that these companies have caused is something they will have to figure out how to deal with as they begin to build competing products to slow down Apple's growth in market share, which admittedly will initially be small and not much of a worry for them for the first few years.]]>
Apple TV: A Device We Don't Need? http://seekingalpha.com/article/23909-apple-tv-a-device-we-don-t-need?source=feed#comment-79909 79909
You're kidding right? You'd have to be living under a rock to think that is even remotely true. Video is revolutionizing the web. Every major content creator offers some form of video broadcasting, podcasting, or videocasting. Youtube is the #6 visited site on the internet and you can already get desktop clients to manage your videos from many different sites (look at Democracy Player). Apple has been selling TV shows and movies hand over fist in their iTunes media store. Yahoo, Google, and Microsoft are all scrambling to get into the video arena for a reason. On-demand for-pay video over IP networks is going to crush bundled television services, the same way iTunes and other online music services have been running rampant selling music for the past few years.

"Giving people the option of watching "Lost" on their PCs after paying $1.99 to download it from the iTunes Music Store isn't much given that the free broadcast is so available on TV, cable, satellite and on-demand on the Net."

Someone gives you these services for free? Most people are shelling out $60-$70 a month for these services, a substantial amount when you could spend that on buying shows you cared about and have a netflix account for movies.

It's pretty easy to figure out why this product is important. This is to television and movies on iTunes what the iPod was to music on iTunes. It unchains you from your computer to live your life and multiplies the utility you can derive from your purchases on iTunes. No normal person wants to fight with format issues, networking issues, etc. to try and get their content to some PC with a TV-out card or whatever. They just want it to work, and I think that's what this will do.]]>
Thu, 11 Jan 2007 04:19:05 -0500
You're kidding right? You'd have to be living under a rock to think that is even remotely true. Video is revolutionizing the web. Every major content creator offers some form of video broadcasting, podcasting, or videocasting. Youtube is the #6 visited site on the internet and you can already get desktop clients to manage your videos from many different sites (look at Democracy Player). Apple has been selling TV shows and movies hand over fist in their iTunes media store. Yahoo, Google, and Microsoft are all scrambling to get into the video arena for a reason. On-demand for-pay video over IP networks is going to crush bundled television services, the same way iTunes and other online music services have been running rampant selling music for the past few years.

"Giving people the option of watching "Lost" on their PCs after paying $1.99 to download it from the iTunes Music Store isn't much given that the free broadcast is so available on TV, cable, satellite and on-demand on the Net."

Someone gives you these services for free? Most people are shelling out $60-$70 a month for these services, a substantial amount when you could spend that on buying shows you cared about and have a netflix account for movies.

It's pretty easy to figure out why this product is important. This is to television and movies on iTunes what the iPod was to music on iTunes. It unchains you from your computer to live your life and multiplies the utility you can derive from your purchases on iTunes. No normal person wants to fight with format issues, networking issues, etc. to try and get their content to some PC with a TV-out card or whatever. They just want it to work, and I think that's what this will do.]]>