Former RIM Boss Sought Strategy Shift Before He Quit

Posted April 13, 2012 by Elia Freedman
Categories: Mobile/Smartphone

As reported by Reuters:

[Jim] Balsillie [former co-CEO and co-Chariman] hoped to allow major wireless companies in North America and Europe to provide service for non-BlackBerry devices routed through RIM’s proprietary network, a major break with the BlackBerry-only strategy pursued by RIM since its inception.

The plan would have let the carriers use the RIM network to offer inexpensive data plans, limited to social media and instant messaging, to entice low-tier customers to upgrade from no-frills phones to smartphones.

I find this very interesting. Obviously the “hardware” portion of the company won out and maybe that was the right choice. We will know for certain in the next few years. But what an interesting turn of events this would have been.

Part of what I find amusing about this report is that RIM has never been able to, in my mind, take advantage of this carrier relationship in the past to do what Balsillie is advocating now, even when he was CEO and had control over the strategic direction. RIM always had two different systems in place. The first, called BlackBerry Enterprise Service (BES), was aimed at corporations, making it possible for them to sync Exchange and Lotus Notes calendars and contacts all over the place and allowed IT departments to control devices. The second was BlackBerry Internet Service (BIS), which is the piece sold through the carriers.

I always found BIS to be weak. Yes, it handled BlackBerry Messenger but I always thought it should do what iCloud does, sync individual’s contacts and calendars across devices, but do it across all devices and all carriers. I think that ship has sailed.

RIM continues to fascinate me like Apple did a decade and a half ago. It feels like a company with promise that just needs to find its way.

Apps to Apple: powerOne Version 3 Awaiting Review

Posted April 11, 2012 by Elia Freedman
Categories: Infinity Softworks

Back to my regular programming tomorrow but … we shipped version 3 of powerOne Finance Pro and Lite and powerOne Scientific Pro and Lite to Apple today. Hopefully we’ll get a speedy review and have it available for all of you next week. This will make a very exciting week next week as we have another long-term project shipping as well, which I’ll tell you about next Wednesday.

I wrote previously about all the cool stuff going into version 3 of powerOne. Here’s a quick summary:

  • Graph function equations, bar graphs and scatter plots. Zoom, pan, trace and evaluate. Implemented into many bundled and Library templates plus the ability to add graphing to your own custom templates.
  • Advanced math including programmer’s math, complex numbers, matrices, calculus, and more.
  • VoiceOver support (I was told we are the first calculator to do this.)
  • Designate templates as favorites.
  • Filter the template list on a category or your favorites.
  • Custom categories when creating your own templates.
  • iPad retina graphics
  • Finally, our Lite versions get In App purchase. We have bundled our most popular templates and are offering them for an introductory price of $0.99 per pack. Topics cover graphing, finance, conversions, mortgages, statistics, investing and more. The advanced math functions mentioned above are also available.

All of the upgrades are free to current customers.

Internet Freedom Is An Understatement

Posted April 10, 2012 by Elia Freedman
Categories: Technology (General)

The Internet is for everyone and the kids of the next generation see it as a right, not an option. That’s the basis of Fred Wilson’s post this morning, Life, Liberty and Blazing Broadband. I think it is an excellent article and worth the read, but I wanted to point out Aviah Laor’s comment, which could easily serve as a rallying cry for why SOPA, PIPA, ACTA and the like are bad for us:

Internet freedom is an understatement.

It’s the freedom to find better work. It’s the freedom to open your own gig. It’s the freedom to buy without intermediates that take 50% of the value. It’s the freedom to speak to a doctor and know what the hell he is talking about. It’s the freedom to talk to a lawyer and know what the hell he is talking about. It’s the freedom to get education without mortgaging your next 20 years for college fees and textbook publishers. It’s the freedom to follow politicians real actions and not their spin doctors.

It’s the freedom to exchange goods, services and needs instead of being milked for the next marketing driven nothing. It’s the freedom of artists to spread their art directly to fans, and to fans to get the art. It’s the freedom of never ending creativity.

It’s freedom. Period.

Right on!

The Tension Between Simple and Obvious

Posted April 9, 2012 by Elia Freedman
Categories: Theory

There is some great conversation going on right now about the role of obviousness in product design. A few products have touched off this debate, including a drawing and writing app called Paper, a task list app called Clear, a create your how-to guide called Snapguide, and Apple’s very own photo editing software iPhoto.

The basis of the debate is that products like Paper and Clear use very few buttons, toolbars and other visual guides for how to use the software. Instead they rely on gestures almost exclusively. All you get is the thing you are interacting with. This has been typical of games for a long time but productivity apps have generally used buttons as a guide post. A few articles, most I found via Daring Fireball, worth checking out on the subject if interested:

The argument for is that it creates a beautiful experience that focuses you exclusively on the task at hand. By learning a few gestures you get an extremely simple and elegant application. The argument against is that no chrome and too much reliance on gestures means a steep learning curve that is easy to forget if not using the app all the time.

It’s a good argument to have, I believe, and is at the heart of my Single Box Theory of design. The beauty of a single box is its simplicity. The problem is that it removes much of the obviousness. This means the box itself has to be smart enough to decipher whatever the user intended. Look at Google’s own search box. We all know it can search but did you also know it can calculate, convert and graph? How about get you flight information, sports scores, and stock quotes? It can do hundreds of things to get you real time results if only you know how to structure your query. And that’s the blessing and the curse. Would it have been more obvious for Google to add a list to the screen and ask you what you are looking for? Maybe but it wouldn’t have been as simple.

There is a constant creative tension between these two: simplicity and obviousness. Frankly, it is that tension that makes product design so much fun.

Announcing powerOne version 3

Posted April 6, 2012 by Elia Freedman
Categories: Infinity Softworks

I’m proud to announce that in the next two weeks we will release powerOne version 3. While the look and feel will remain the same we have added some key features for our iPhone, iPod touch and iPad customers. This is a free update and hope you find these improvements as exciting as I do!

Graphing

The biggest new feature is the introduction of graphing. We offer function graphs, scatter plots and bar graphs. Graphing will be added to a number of existing templates plus our Scientific Pro customers will get a Function Graphing template added to their product automatically. (Finance Pro customers will be able to download it from the Library and see In App Purchase below if you are a Lite customer.)

I played with some 15 or so graphing packages for the iPhone and iPad over the past few months and found most of them confusing and unintuitive. I believe we have done one better here. To zoom, pinch. To pan, drag a finger across the screen. Tracing is where we really shine. Hold down on the screen for a second and a function trace line appears and/or a scatter plot closest to your finger highlights with the appropriate information. Drag around the screen to see the data change or enter a specific ‘x’ point to evaluate a ‘y’.

I couldn’t be happier about the implementation and believe it was done in a way that will make Apple proud!

Filtering and Favorites

We added two new capabilities that should make it easier to find the template you are looking for. The first is that you can filter your template list by category. This makes it easy to see all your Finance templates or Engineering templates, for instance. The second is that you can now designate your often used templates as Favorites and filter just on this list.

Advanced Math

Not only did we add graphing but we also made advanced math functions available for our Pro customers (see In App Purchases for our Lite customers). The trig tab now is the advanced math tab. Choose from 7 keypads or select “More” for access to over 160 functions covering everything from programmer’s math, complex numbers, trig and hyperbolic, matrices, statistics, probability, calculus and more.

Template Creation

I already mentioned graphing. We added two new row types: an equation row for entering function graphs and a graph row for plotting the required data. Up to three data sets can be plotted at a time using the new graph() function call. We also added a new constants section, which is similar to macros but creates a constant result (rather than just substituting). This is particularly good for look-up tables where you don’t want to replicate the entire table over-and-over, or when you need results in more than one row.

In addition to new template creation features we also added the ability to create up to 10 custom categories and name them as desired.

VoiceOver

For our sight impaired customers we have added comprehensive VoiceOver support. Now buttons say their names and calculations are read out-loud upon touching equals. Templates are also supported. For instance, tap a row to have its contents read to you!

In App Purchase

For our powerOne Lite customers we have added the ability to purchase some add-on template bundles and features right within the app. Options include our advanced math package, graphing, finance, business, conversions and more.


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