So what’s so great about the 3G S?
It’s the latest version of Apple’s much-hyped iPhone, with a faster processor, more storage, a better camera and the ability to bring your ancestors back from the dead.
Category: Technology
Shiny gadgets and clever computers
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iPhone 3GS: everything you need to know about buying, upgrading or deciding not to bother
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Would UK bloggers get the same support as Iranian ones?
Web freedom is easy to support when it doesn’t affect your bottom line…
God bless the internet. As shocking events in Iran continue to unfold, bloggers, Twitter users and social networkers are helping oppressed Iranians fight the power.
Even Google is helping… But if the bloggers were in the UK, the newspapers and tech firms wouldn’t be on their side. If there’s money to be made, new media and old media alike will happily help Goliath give David a battering.
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iPhone 3.0 hands-on
Is the upgrade enough to make the 3GS upgrade unnecessary? I think so…
Until third party developers really start to take advantage of the new APIs it’s evolution rather than revolution, but it does keep your phone current without forcing you to shell out any more cash.
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Digital Britain: what you need to know, and what it means
The long-awaited Digital Britain report is out, and I’ve taken a look at it twice. First up, the key points:
We won’t be paying for a copyright quango, but our phones will be taxed to finance next-generation broadband – and while the government isn’t keen on criminalising file sharers, ISPs might have no choice but to throttle offenders’ connections.
Then, my take on it:
Digital Britain may not be as revolutionary as some people might have liked – but it’s nowhere near as bad as many of us feared.
If reports are true and Lord Carter’s off to the private sector as soon as Digital Britain’s PDF is posted, he’s not going to be leaving with an angry mob in hot pursuit.
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Opera Unite: very cool
Opera Unite puts a web server inside your browser. It’s really very clever.
When Opera promised to “reinvent the web” this morning, we were cynical – and when it started talking about inventing “Web 5.0” we set our word-guns to maximum mockery.
Then it showed us Unite. We’re not sure about Web 5.0, but we’re convinced that Unite really is worth getting excited about.
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Windows 7: How do you get a browser without a browser?
How do you install a browser when you don’t have a browser? The news that Windows 7 won’t include Internet Explorer in Europe has caused an outbreak of head-scratching – especially among those of us whose routers need a browser window to configure our connections in the first place.
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Google quick search vs Quicksilver (Mac)
The new Google Quick Search Box (QSB) for Mac is designed to make things easier.
Summon it with a quick key combination and you can use it to find and launch applications, track down elusive files, dig up contacts or search the web.
It sounds very familiar, with good reason: apps such as Quicksilver have been doing much the same for years. So is QSB a Quicksilver killer? The short answer is probably – but not quite yet.
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The iPhone killer is… O2
We’re told that it costs between four and eight times more money to get a new customer than to retain an existing one, and that the way to make big piles of cash in the long term is to keep your customers sweet.
So why is O2 waving its corporate arse at its iPhone customers?
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Hyperlinks to memories
Another .net column has made its way online. This one’s about attention and the way that gadgets can remove you from the moment you’re filming, photographing or tweeting about.
Photos and videos are hyperlinks to memories, icons that your brain double-clicks to bring back the full experience – the sights, sounds, smells and sensations of a happy day or a crappy one.
Increasingly, though, we’re using gadgets to record the whole experience. That makes us passive observers, not active participants.
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Opera 10 is too good to ignore
I thought I’d say something constructive in an op/ed for once, so I’ve written about Opera 10. It’s moved from alpha to beta, and it’s really rather good.
Internet Explorer 6, the gurning half-wit of the browser world, has nearly 17 per cent of the market. Opera, a truly great browser, has 0.72 per cent.
That’s lower than Netscape (0.74 per cent), which was shot and turned into glue months ago.
To say that Opera is better than Netscape or IE6 is like saying having sex with the love of your life is better than being boiled in oil while being stabbed with knives, or living in Doncaster.