All Articles Tagged blog vs blog

Blog vs. Blog: Is Steve Leaving Apple? Giz Says Yes! DF Says Nope!

During Tuesday’s “Spotlight on Notebooks” Keynote, Steve Jobs wasn’t the only jean-and-dark-shirt uniformed Apple exec on stage. COO Time Cook took an unusual turn, discussing Mac business. SVP of Design, Jonathan Ive, an even more unusual presence in front of the audience, introduced the new “brick” unibody concept. And Marketing VP Phil Schiller — who’s no stranger to Keynotes — took part in the Q&A at the end.

It wasn’t all Steve, all the time.

Because of this, Gizmodo’s Jesus Diaz says Steve may be thinking of leaving in the near future, to live out his days on the beach, content that he’s shown investors and customers that Team Apple will Boom! along quite nicely without him, much as Microsoft is… er… doing without Gates in the daily driver’s seat:

Steve Jobs is leaving Apple. Not tomorrow, but probably very soon. That’s why he started to say good bye today, doing something more important than just presenting new MacBooks, MacBook Pros, and an updated MacBook Air. Today’s event was a play in which he clearly told everyone that the company is more than himself. Since the very first minute, when he immediately sat down to let Tim Cook talk, he was saying: “Hey, look, Apple is more than Steve. These are The Guys, the Goodfellas, the A-Team. They share the same vision I have. And they are going to push the company forward when I change my office chair for a hammock and caipirinhas on my private beach in Hawaii”.

Daring Fireball’s John Gruber, however, says Steve isn’t going anywhere. He points out that Jobs has shared the stage before, often letting adepts take the more highly specialized presentations, like introducing Leopard at WWDC. Gruber says:

But so long as he’s healthy, working at Apple is exactly the thing Jobs wants to do. He’s consumed by his work, and I think it’s only in the last two or three years that Apple has gotten to the point where Jobs feels he has a decent set of crayons at his disposal. In Jobs’s mind, the iPhone is only the beginning of what a truly flourishing Apple can produce. Why would he leave now? “A hammock and caipirinhas on a private beach” would be living hell for Steve Jobs.

We’re with Gruber on this one. While Diaz is saying what many of us were likely thinking during the show, Jobs doesn’t strike us as the casual CEO. His investment in Apple is lifelong. He’s not Woz, he’s the Wizard, and they’ll have to pry his hand off Apple’s perfectly balanced, aluminum and gloss black steering wheel if that’s ever going to change.



iPhone 2G vs. Blackberry Bold(ish) Browser “Battle”

The iPhone 3G and the Blackberry Bold will certainly be pitted against each other in the days to come, so when we saw a so-called Browser battle between the two, we promptly grabbed our popcorn and got ready to watch the rumble

…Only to find out it was an original iPhone 2G vs. what looks like a pre-release, buggy-ROM’d, poorly connected Bold. Talk about going from showdown to letdown!

Fellas, it shouldn’t take Joe Silva to tell you what makes for good fights: top competitors in top shape. Take one or both, tranq them up, tie their arm (processors) behind their backs, and kidnap their girlfriends and you don’t have a real fight (though you could have yet another Nicolas Cage movie…)

The Bold debuts in North America this week on Rogers. Seems that very same provider already has the iPhone 3G. So here’s an idea: set them both up, in full release form, on the same network, under the same conditions, and then let’s get it on!

Blog vs. Blog: Thurrott/Dilger MobileMe Pundit-palooza!

What’s better than a couple of well versed, well argued technologists presenting deeply reasoned and sharply insightful, fundamentally different but equally challenging, views on a critical topic? Well… nothing. They’re just hard to find given the intertube collective’s penchant for rewarding punditry and link baiting. Sometimes, however, we’re lucky enough to find a mix of both knowledge and provocation.

Cases in point: here were have noted Windows Super-Siter, Paul Thurrott, and accomplished Roughly-Drafted Apple Insider Prince McLean each presenting their own unique, multi-part perspectives on MobileMe.

Ready for the blow-by-blow? Continued after the break!

Read the rest of this entry »

Blog vs. Blog: Chuq Sheds Light on Daring Fireball/GigaOm MobileMe-nia

Blog vs. Blog: Daring Fireball vs Gigaom

C’mon. A day without a MobileMe post is like a day without rain. Or something. So after yesterday’s John Gruber vs. Om Malik showdown, former Apple insider Chuq Von Rospach has strapped on the gloves and joined the fray — in impressive fashion.

Says Chuq, after joking that Jobs is likely walking the MobileMe halls with a flame thrower round about now:

Gruber nails this (see below). MobileMe is a tiny thing compared to iTunes. Apple gets it, and executes it amazingly well. That this release was botched isn’t about Apple not having a clue, but about the MobileMe people either blowing it (I can think of any number of scenarios — scaling it hard). The ultimate failure seemed to be more capacity planning mistakes than anything else, if I’m guessing right. but the ultimate failure was not being willing to tell Steve “we aren’t ready” and taking that heat. They thought they could release and make it work, and guessed very wrong (or thought they were in good shape, which is worse).

The entire post is a fascinating read — chock full of insights, especially about new Apple VP of Internet Services (iTunes + MobileMe + App Store) Eddy Cue, whom comes off looking like a boss just a little to the right of Darkseid


Blog vs. Blog: Daring Fireball/GigaOm MobileMe-nia!

Blog vs. Blog: Daring Fireball vs Gigaom

Om Malik says Apple is clueless about scaling MobileMe:

There is no-unified IT plan vis-a-vis applications; each has their own set of servers, IT practices and release scenarios. Developers do testing, load testing and infrastructure planning, all of which is implemented by someone else. There’s no unified monitoring system. They use Oracle on Sun servers for the databases and everything has its own SAN storage. They do not use active Oracle RAC; it is all single-instance, on one box, with a secondary failover. Apparently they are putting web servers and app servers on the same machines, which causes performance problems.

John Gruber retorts, with the US’ #1 online music retailer firmly in his corner:

But the iTunes Store does gangbuster traffic and has a terrific track record for uptime. The message I read from yesterday’s reorg that put MobileMe under Eddy Cue (Apple’s VP for iTunes) is that MobileMe could and should be as responsive and reliable as the iTunes Store.

The crazy thing is, MobileMe should have been an iTunes-learned breeze for Apple in terms of meeting service levels, given their pedigree. But then iTunes uses WebObjects (which I believe is old school Java-based) and MobileMe uses SproutCore (which is all dressed up in Ajax-y 2.0 objectivity), and the pretty much disastrous July 11th launch, which took down both iTunes iPhone activation, and slammed the MobileMe servers into weeks of problems, show something clearly is different with the new kit on the block.

Hopefully Cue will bring some of the iTunes luster to MobileMe, but only time will tell. What do you think? Which blog wins this round?