Saturday, October 30, 2010

Japanese on a Mobile Phone?

Did you know that the vast majority of mobile phones sold in the world cannot even display Japanese characters, never mind allow Japanese text input? It's shocking, really, that devices built to foster communication cannot cope with most Asian languages without some serious hacking at best. You cannot even read Japanese or Korean text messages! This serious shortcoming applies to Blackberries, Symbian devices (Nokias), Android, and even the latest Windows Phone devices.

There's one notable exception: the iPhone. The iPhone has fantastic Asian language support, out of the box. Bravo, Apple.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Back to the Mac

If the rumor sites are to be believed, Apple is going to introduce a new MacBook Air next week. I was quite interested in the first MacBook Air, but Apple compromised that system in ways I didn't like. There isn't enough hard disk space (or equivalent) available, the single USB port is too limiting, and the 2GB RAM limit is also a big problem. But it's thin. So what?

I'm still a good candidate for a lighter, easier to carry Mac. But I don't want to see too many compromises. Here's what I'd like to see in this baby Mac:

1. At least 200GB of hard disk space (or equivalent);
2. At least 2GB of RAM standard, expandable to at least 6GB;
3. A pair of USB ports, one of which is USB 3.0;
4. Mini DisplayPort;
5. 12.1 inch screen preferred;
6. A lock slot (to secure the machine to a desk);
7. Under 3 pounds.

Almost goes without saying: Bluetooth, 802.11n wireless, iSight, and fixing the headphone jack so that there's an iPhone-style microphone-in channel in the same connector. Nice to have: a memory card slot and a built-in ethernet port. (Road warriors still use ethernet.) Maybe Apple can do something funky-but-smart like put the ethernet port on the power brick. I'd also like to see Apple add a little functionality to the Air's bootstrap code to allow installing Mac OS X from Apple's cloud in addition to installation from a local shared network drive.

Apple could use SSD, but it's still expensive. How about the new 7mm high 2.5 inch hard disks from Hitachi and/or Seagate? Those are available up to 320GB in size, and they would allow Apple to keep the costs down and the machine profile thin.

UPDATE: So how did Apple do? Not well enough, so I'm not going to be buying one of the new MacBook Air machines:

1. A 256GB flash drive is an option only on the 13.3 inch model, and it's expensive. The 11.6 inch model tops out at 128GB.
2. Memory is only expandable to 4GB, and only at the factory.
3. No USB 3.0 yet.
4. Yes.
5. Apple bracketed the 12.1 inch screen size with 13.3 and 11.6 inch screen models.
6. Still no lock slot.
7. Yes, under 3 pounds.

The "almost goes without saying" parts are all there. The 13.3 inch model got a memory card slot, but neither model got a built-in ethernet port (or ethernet on the power brick). Both models come with a flash card containing Mac OS X for recovery.

Then there's price. To buy a MacBook Air with the attributes I want (if I could tolerate 4GB RAM maximum) would be $1699 list price (and another $29 for the ethernet dongle cable). That's quite steep. Too steep.