My Ten iOS Apps
Responding to Engadget’s editorial that the new Nokia N9 phone is dead on arrival because of its MeeGo platform, David Heinemeier Hansson wrote:
The pattern I’ve seen for many people new to iOS is a rush to try a bunch of apps and then never use most of them again. There’s a large market for people who just want the core ten apps executed even better. I’d be happy to trade my iPhone for a N9, if that core experience was stronger.
Although most people do exactly what DHH wrote after they purchase their smart phones, most people don’t think that way before they make the purchase. There are many factors that influence our purchasing decisions, including those outside of common sense — that’s why Apple has been so successful making advertisements that appeal to our emotions. One of the reasons I bought my iPhone is the large support the platform gets from the ecosystem (developers, retailers, etc.), which gives me a sense of security that the platform will last.
Having said that, going back to the “core ten apps” that DHH mentioned, mine are the following (alphabetically ordered):
- Camera+
- Evernote
- Feedly
- Foursquare
- GoTasks
- HackerNews
- Momento
- ReadItLater
While the telco operators are disrupting other industries (with digital content, online payment, etc.), they themselves are being disrupted by messaging apps and social network. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised by this news, but I sort of was. The SMS has been such a force — but now there are so many more ways to get your voice heard by a large number of people.
The WSJ Online article linked above also reports that Google is working on an Android messaging app — similar to RIM’s BlackBerry Messenger (which only works among BlackBerry devices) and Apple’s newly announced iMessage (which only works among Apple iOS devices). Remember 15 years ago when you can only send SMS to numbers from the same telco operator as you? Apparently we’ll be having the same problem again in the near future — except it will be with mobile platforms.
Rather than trying to block pornography on the internet (an impossible task), the Indonesian government should really be focusing more on this kind of problem.
This is great. My favorite TV show and one of my favorite pieces of art.
Promo Pic of the Day: From NBC’s Upfront presentation: The Office does Seurat’s “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte” (better known as that painting Cameron stares at in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off).
[insidetv / mbrendanaquitz.]
Infographic of the Day: What a difference two decades make.
[whenthewhat / cheatsheet.]
(Source: whenthewhat, via thenextweb)



