I’m sorry Apple, I love you and all…

Posted in Articles, Computer by Andrew Hosgood on Saturday, 30th January 2010 at 03:33

First up, let’s get something straight – I love Apple. I own an iPhone, I bought a MacMini when I began Uni and I love my old white MacBook, but I can’t figure out what Apple have done with their latest offering, the iPad.

http://www.apple.com/ipad/gallery/

I love my iPhone. It does all that you expect from a phone plus loads more. I am the type of person that has an app for everything. Some call me an Apple Tart, or Mac Tart; I can never remember. The reason that the iPhone is such an incredible device is because it does so much with for such a small payload. I can make calls, send and receive emails, check my Google-synchronised calendar, browse the web and of course, play games. I don’t care that I can’t view Flash movies, I don’t want a full OS and I’m not particularly worried about expandability because after all…it’s a mobile phone.

If I buy a ‘tablet’ with a 10-inch screen, I expect to get not what I pay for, but functionality for what I have to carry around. Let me put things into perspective.

Netbooks (which I must admit; I thought would never catch on!) are about the same size and similar in weight, but have a fully-fledged OS with plenty of expandability options. I don’t want what is essentially a large iPhone, restricted to apps that are approved by Apple. I want something that I can use Photoshop on. Yes, the iPhone is too small because it’s a phone, but I’d expect something with a 10-inch screen to be able to perform tasks a bit better than a glorified phone. I think the iPad is just an iPhone for poor-sighted people. I’d like to save Microsoft Word documents on it once in a while, run background apps, install Cyberduck or maybe even run an Apache webserver.

I know my MacMini isn’t built for expandability; I had to take the thing apart with wallpaper scrapers when I upgraded the hard drive, but that is because the MacMini is simple and cheap, but even so, if I really wanted to, I could upgrade the hard drive, the RAM and the processor, albeit a bit difficult. I know I shouldn’t expect the iPhone to be upgradeable, but a tablet ‘computer’? Come on – think of the future Apple!

It’s nearly impossible to scratch the glass on the iPhone and the iPad uses even better stuff, but still; do you want to be worrying constantly about the condition of your tablet? Laptops solved this problem 20-odd years ago with this clever folding screen/keyboard thing. Why reinvent the wheel? Tablets have never caught on before and based on the iPad, I hope they don’t now.

There has been a recent trend in many companies following in Apples footsteps like every mobile phone nowadays that wants to be the iPhone and every MP3 player that wants to be an iPod and I can only hope that other companies move away from Apples ideas and start coming up with their own unique ideas!

As far as I can see, there is nothing new and amazing that the iPad can do that the iPhone can’t already. Give me a iPad-sized device with a fully-fledged copy of Mac OS X and I’ll be laughing…

5 Apple Mac shortcuts that I couldn't live without

Posted in Lists by Andrew Hosgood on Sunday, 15th February 2009 at 18:29

Excluding application-specific shortcuts, these are the Mac OS X shortcuts I would be lost without:

1. CTRL+OPT+CMD+8 – Invert screen
This is useful for 2 reasons. Firstly, it reduces the brightness of the screen, making it easier on the eyes at night and secondly, because it reduces the amount of power needed to run the screen because black pixels take up less energy than white ones. This is helpful when writing word documents or viewing web pages with lots of white-space. Also, it makes people go:
“Wow! How’d you do that?”

2. CMD+OPT+EJECT – Sleep mode
I use this all the time when I run out of the room. Some people set up a hot corner on their desktop, but I prefer the keyboard shortcut because my hot corners are set up for the screensaver functions (now/never), the expose, and the show desktop functions.

3. CMD+OPT+ESC – Force quit program
Not many Mac users know of this shortcut, purely because Mac users don’t have to force quit applications even half as much as the rest have to CTRL+ALT+DELETE them. From here, you can also restart the Finder in the rare case that the dock stops responding. The force quit dialogue also has a lot lower chance of crashing compared to the task manager in Windows.

4. CMD+SHIFT+3 – Screengrab
Windows users have a ‘Print Screen’ button which copies the screengrab to the clipboard. Not very clever when you have to do 10 in a row. The Mac shortcut takes the screengrab and saves it to the desktop in a lovely PNG format for you. Derivations of this shortcut include CMD+SHIFT+4 where you can drag out an area of the screen to capture and CMD+SHIFT+4+SPACE BAR which (quite ingeniously) allows you to capture a single window.

5. CMD+D – Go to desktop
If you are in a ‘Save’ or ‘Save as…’ dialogue box and the default folder is several levels into your computer, simply hit CMD+D and bingo! Your desktop folder becomes active to save onto. This is something I use more than I realise and I get frustrated when I use this on a Windows machine and nothing happens!

If you can think of any more that I haven’t mentioned, or you have something to add, please leave a comment to let me know!

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