Posts Tagged ‘Apple’

Windows Vista Review

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Windows VistaAfter using Vista for almost a year I am now in a reasonable position to critique it. As with most software, time is needed to fix start-up kinks and iron out any small problems. Their time is up.

Many people have criticised Vista on many levels. The fact that a full hardware upgrade is often necessary, it was missing many critical drivers and it didn’t have full backwards compatibility, gave critics the ammunition they needed to destroy perceptions of Vista before it had really gotten off the ground.

After almost a years use I could not go back to XP. Vista is different but essentially simpler. Finding files and documents is quick and easy, the control panel is even easier to use after a while, and it looks very nice. On a fast enough computer Vista runs smoothly and easily, loading times over the year have become shorter and it adapts to my computer needs.

My favourite positive on Vista is that when something goes wrong, Vista not only reports the problem to Microsoft but it reports back when a solution is found. Something that simple makes a huge difference when faced with a problem that could take hours of research to fix. If there is an official fix, you will be notified almost immediately and be able to correct it.

Although Vista has gotten some undue criticism a lot of it is warranted. Visible bugs are still apparent; I always get errors with video drivers and .avi (video) files. And to add insult to injury my graphics card is supposedly Vista compatible. Just two days ago, after months of no major problems, I received a blue screen and the computer had to restart. I was surfing the internet when it happened which hardly drains any resources.

Although Vista does have some great updates and improvements over XP which I can no longer use a computer without, its continuous bugs and random crashes are unacceptable. This after a year on the market place and service pack one released. If Microsoft wants to keep its huge share from the seemingly always working, always better and simpler Apple, then it’s going to have to step up its game. If it wasn’t for their large XP following and people’s lack of Apple knowledge, they would not be doing very well right now.

iTouch Review

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

iTouchApple’s iPhone is a groundbreaking cell phone, but unfortunately many people can’t buy them in their countries. People resort to illegally importing and hacking into the phones to use them. If you aren’t the criminal type or feel you just don’t want another phone the iTouch is the best iPod ever made.

The iTouch sports the same design as the iPhone but sheds some weight and looses a few buttons. There are only two buttons on the iTouch. Everything else is controlled through touch on the beautiful 3.5-inch screen. I have heard people say the screen is not as good as the iPhone, I can’t really see how.

iPod Touch

From Apple: Flick through album covers and find your music. Download and watch your favorite movies, rentals, TV shows, and more from the iTunes Store. Tap into thousands of photos. All using incredible Multi-Touch touchscreen technology on a beautiful 3.5-inch display.

The iTouch comes in three versions. The only difference being the space. 8G, 16G and the latest 32G. Users have complained about the size of the hard-drives, which is the reason Apple later released a 32G version, but to be honest I think those people are being picky. On a 16G hard-drive you can comfortably fit 1.5 days worth of music and 8 full length movies and still have 2G left to play with. Most people plug their iPod into their computer regularly so I do not see how there is a need for more space. No normal person could watch 8 movies and listen to 1.5 days of music so quickly that they would not have time to go to the computer and put on new movies. The battery power lasts for 5 hours of video OR 22 hours of audio.

The iTouch interface is the same as the iPhone in most respects. Most people who play with one for the first time don’t even need to ask questions. The interface explains itself making it extremely easy to use. The best thing about the iTouch is not the music, the great 3.5-inch screen to watch movies or the cool sensor which flips the screen according to how you hold it. It’s the fact that it’s fun to use. And it never seems to wear out. The idea of using touch is just so natural.

I managed to embarrass myself the other day when looking at a friends normal iPod. I automatically touched the screen trying to navigate the menu. It was just so natural for me. That for me is the best proof of how this is the best iPod to ever grace our stores, and until we get the new iPhone in our countries it will be the best compromise you will ever have to make.

iPod Touch