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a few followups…

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“Apple will announce Sirius/XM satellite radio support on September 9th”, I wrote back on September 5th.

OK, I was throwing the long ball there and it didn’t work out that way (at least not yet…)  – my bad.

Instead,  Apple’s much anticipated press event was somewhat less earth-shattering: new iPod Nanos and Touches with marginal improvements:

  • New iPhone firmware.
  • The introduction of HD television content on iTunes (the increased data transfer required for HD being Less of an issue given Apple’s non-streaming service).
  • The return of NBC/Universal content to iStore (one prediction I did get right).

However, I remain convinced that since satellite radio is particularly well-suited to mobile users, an iPod/iPhone agreement (along the lines of Apple’s audio book partnership with Audible.com) remains an interesting possibility – and since Sirius/XM still needs a new way to grow quickly (new car sales are way down, the economy is affecting discretionary spending, and their stock price has been hammered), Apple would have substantial negotiating leverage.
Yahoo mail search broken”, I wrote back on August 8th.

Well, another month has gone by and still is.

Add to that the continued lack of IMAP support and the queasy feeling one gets reading about Andreas losing 5 years’ worth of Yahoo email, and I’m finally off the Yahoo reservation, for good. It’s actually a bit baffling to me – both how cavalier they’ve been about their technical shortcomings and also how little adverse press coverage they’ve received – still, I wonder if the brand is in the slow process of becoming the next AOL or Radio Shack…


Anyway – speaking of IMAP, if you have a smartphone/PDA and a Gmail account, that’s the way to get your email (for more on why it’s superior to POP3, read this).  While Gmail and the iPhone play very nicely via IMAP, I’ve always wanted Google calendar sync as well, though – and I’ve recently found a very nice way to do that: nuevasync.com, a new service (still in beta) that can sync Google contacts and calendars to mobile devices without requiring any client-side software.  It does this by making the Google (and Plaxo) services available via Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync.  In other words, nuevasync acts as the conduit between these two corporate rivals (in fact, the nuevasync.com home page avoids explicitly mentioning ActiveSync, referring only to using “synchronization protocols that are already built in”).  This begs the question: how does Microsoft feel about all this?  Since Nuevasync also makes the Google/Plaxo services available to Windows Mobile devices, to the extent there’s demand for that, it would tend to help drive sales of the Windows Mobile platform – and anything that makes Exchange compatible with more mobile devices could also be a net positive  – but these benefits come at the expense of letting Gmail users (such as myself) avail themselves of a Microsoft protocol.  For free.  For now, though, Microsoft seems to have no problem with Nuevasync, but that could change…

  



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The articles posted on digitalmissive.com reflect the personal views and opinions of Brian Ales and/or Andreas Wuerfel, and as such do not necessarily reflect the positions of our employers, clients or their affiliates. Furthermore, any views or opinions expressed by visitors commenting on articles posted on digitmissive.com are theirs and theirs alone, and do not necessarily reflect ours.