2010's iPhone 4 vs 2000's iMac


iMac (2000) iPhone 4 (2010)
CPU Speed 500MHz 1GHz
RAM 128MB 512MB
Graphics ATI Rage 128 Pro
(8 million triangles)
PowerVR SGX 535
(28 milltion triangles)
Display 786,000 pixels 614,000 pixels
Storage 30GB Hard disk 32GB solid state
Weight 15.7Kg 137g

An interesting comparison! Specs from this blog.

Tagged Apple Link Mac

The Cost of Apple Products Over The Years - Accounting For Inflation

Interesting...

Tagged Apple Link Mac

Microsoft Admits Windows 7 Copies MacOS X (And that bears sometimes shit in woods)

One of the things that people say an awful lot about the Apple Mac is that the OS is fantastic, that it’s very graphical and easy to use. What we’ve tried to do with Windows 7 – whether it’s traditional format or in a touch format – is create a Mac look and feel in terms of graphics.

Interesting to see Microasoft's Simon Aldous admit this so explicitly in black and white. Yet while Windows 7 is a big step forward, I'm not sure they yet understand the relationship of "easy to use" and "graphical". Pretty doesn't automatically mean easy to use, Apple try (often successfully, though not always) to make their software meet both criteria. I often wonder if Microsoft think that making something pretty makes it easier to use.

(Also, don't get me started on him claiming that Vista is "far more stable than the current Mac platform". You're telling me Vista, the most derided OS in history, is more stable than a modern UNIX OS? I think both Mac fans and users of various other UNIX/Linux operating systems would love to challenge you on that.)

Microsoft's grinning robots or the Brotherhood of the Mac. Which is worse?

Windows 7 party

The most nauseating advert in history? The Windows 7 ‘launch party’

I admit it: I'm a bigot. A hopeless bigot at that: I know my particular prejudice is absurd, but I just can't control it. It's Apple. I don't like Apple products. And the better-designed and more ubiquitous they become, the more I dislike them. I blame the customers. Awful people. Awful. Stop showing me your iPhone. Stop stroking your Macbook. Stop telling me to get one.

Seriously, stop it. I don't care if Mac stuff is better. I don't care if Mac stuff is cool. I don't care if every Mac product comes equipped a magic button on the side that causes it to piddle gold coins and resurrect the dead and make holographic unicorns dance inside your head. I'm not buying one, so shut up and go home. Go back to your house. I know, you've got an iHouse. The walls are brushed aluminum. There's a glowing Apple logo on the roof. And you love it there. You absolute MONSTER.

Of course, it's safe to assume Mac products are indeed as brilliant as their owners make out. Why else would they spend so much time trying to convert non-believers? They're not getting paid. They simply want to spread their happiness, like religious crusaders.

Consequently, nothing pleases them more than watching a PC owner struggle with a slab of non-Mac machinery. It validates their spiritual choice. Recently I sat in a room trying to write something on a Sony Vaio PC laptop which seemed to be running a special slow-motion edition of Windows Vista specifically designed to infuriate human beings as much as possible. Trying to get it to do anything was like issuing instructions to a depressed employee over a sluggish satellite feed. When I clicked on an application it spent a small eternity contemplating the philosophical implications of opening it, begrudgingly complying with my request several months later. It drove me up the wall. I called it a bastard and worse. At one point I punched a table.

This drew the attention of two nearby Mac owners. They hovered over and stood beside me, like placid monks.

"Ah: the delights of Vista," said one.

"It really is time you got a Mac," said the other.

"They're just better," sang monk number one.

"You won't regret it," whispered the second.

I scowled and returned to my infernal machine, like a dishevelled park-bench boozer shrugging away two pious AA recruiters by pulling a grubby, dented hip flask from his pocket and pointedly taking an extra deep swig. Leave me alone, I thought. I don't care if you're right. I just want you to die.

I know Windows is awful. Everyone knows Windows is awful. Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it. OK, OK: I know other operating systems are available. But their advocates seem even creepier, snootier and more insistent than Mac owners. The harder they try to convince me, the more I'm repelled. To them, I'm a sheep. And they're right. I'm a helpless, stupid, lazy sheep. I'm also a masochist. And that's why I continue to use Windows – horrible Windows – even though I hate every second of it. It's grim, it's slow, everything's badly designed and nothing really works properly: using Windows is like living in a communist bloc nation circa 1981. And I wouldn't change it for the world, because I'm an abject bloody idiot and I hate myself, and this is what I deserve: to be sentenced to Windows for life.

That's why Windows works for me. But I'd never recommend it to anybody else, ever. This puts me in line with roughly everybody else in the world. No one has ever earnestly turned to a fellow human being and said, "Hey, have you considered Windows?" Not in the real world at any rate.

Until now. Microsoft, hellbent on tackling the conspicuous lack of word-of-mouth recommendation, is encouraging people – real people – to host "Windows 7 launch parties" to celebrate the 22 October release of, er, Windows 7. The idea is that you invite a group of friends – your real friends – to your home – your real home – and entertain them with a series of Windows 7 tutorials. So you show them how to burn a CD, how to make a little video, how to change the wallpaper, and how to, oh no, hang on it's not supposed to do that, oh, I think it's frozen, um, er, let me just, um, no that's not it, um, er, um, er, so how's it going with you and Kathy anyway, um, er, OK well see you around I guess.

To assist the party-hosting massive, they've also uploaded a series of spectacularly cringeworthy videos to YouTube, in which the four most desperate actors in the world stand around in a kitchen sharing tips on how best to indoctrinate guests in the wonder of Windows. If they were staring straight down the lens reading hints off a card it might be acceptable; instead they have been instructed to pretend to be friends. The result is the most nauseating display of artificial camaraderie since the horrific Doritos "Friendchips" TV campaign (which caused 50,000 people to kill themselves in 2003, or should have done).

It's so terrible, it induces an entirely new emotion: a blend of vertigo, disgust, anger and embarrassment which I like to call "shitasmia". It not only creates this emotion: it defines it. It's the most shitasmic cultural artefact in history. Watch it for yourself.

Still, bad though it is, I vaguely prefer the clumping, clueless, uncool, crappiness of Microsoft's bland Stepford gang to the creepy assurance of the average Mac evangelist. At least the grinning dildos in the Windows video are fictional, whereas eerie replicant Mac monks really are everywhere, standing over your shoulder in their charcoal pullovers, smirking with amusement at your hopelessly inferior OS, knowing they're better than you because they use Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard.

Snow Leopard. SNOW LEOPARD.

I don't care if you're right. I just want you to die.

Charlie Brooker being a legend. As always. Even if he does want me to die.

Tagged Apple Link Mac Video

Microsoft's latest ad attacks Mac aesthetics, computing power

Easy or Simple? Why I Like Windows 7 More Than Windows Fans

Microsoft recently released a public beta of Windows 7, which means you or I can go and download the next version of Windows right now and give it a try. This seems like a great opportunity to see what they're up to, so I've had a quick play and I've read some reviews and articles around the web. Now we all know I'm a big Mac fan, so of course I have a habit of noticing the new features which bear a striking resemblence to existing MacOS features. And there are a lot. I thought about writing a post about that, but there were too many to mention, plus it would be pointless; good ideas are worth using, and Apple has certainly 'borrowed' features from Windows over the years too. Sometimes it just makes sense. So rather than moan about Microsoft stealing ideas, I thought I'd celebrate one idea in particular which they've stolen, because it leads to a big improvement in the usability of Windows. The feature I'm referring to is the task bar, which has undergone quite a radical overhaul in Windows 7. The thing is, some of the more vocal and established Windows fans seem to hate the new design - where I rejoice that it's much more similar to Apple's superior Dock interface, they complain that it's too similar to Apple's rubbish Dock interface. Hmmm... it seems this could be one for personal preference. Here's why I like the Dock, and (mostly) Windows' new taskbar.

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MacOS : Not Quite As Stupid As You Think

This is very sad, but something just brought a little smile to my face. There I was, saving some files with numbers in the filenames. Something along the lines of 1.txt, 2.txt ... 8.txt, 9.txt and then I thought, "Oh Bugger. There's more than 10 files. I should have used 2-digit numbers. D'oh!" For I had expected that the old computers-are-dumb problem would leave me with a folder of files in the order 1.txt 10.txt 11.txt 2.txt 3.txt and so on. Usually, these things get ordered by first character first, then by the second character and so on. So 10 comes before 2.

But hallelujah! It seems that MacOS 10.5 has some basic intelligence! My files get listed 1 to 11 in proper order :-) I've even attached a screenshot to prove it...

Now this could have been around for years and I just didn't notice it. It could even work in (shudder...) Windows too. But as someone who spends his life working with technology and having to deal with it continually disappointing me, it's nice when it works and you didn't expect it to!

My Mobile Life (or, The Post Where Rowan Criticises Apple For Once)

These days I use a frightening array of Apple products. Every weekday I use an iPhone, an iMac, a Mac Mini and usually a MacBook. Occasionally at work I have the misfortune to use a Windows PC, and once in a while I have to use a computer which doesn't know who I am. Hoping to address this sort of problem, Apple announced Mobile Me at their WWDC conference earlier this week. Let's get the trivial stuff out of the way first. Yes, it's a pretty rubbish name, and some have described the logo as Apple's worst ever. But what interests me is how it can help my life by reducing the complexity of accessing my information anywhere.

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The Revolution: 10 Years On

This week, after consulting an expert in the field, my friend Helen bought an iMac. Coincidentally, the same week saw the 10th Anniversary of the little blue-and-white box that changed the face of computing, so I thought it time to look back on how things have changed...

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