Sunday, January 10, 2010

TUAW – Dear Apple: What we want to see


for iPhone 4.0,


Part 1


A week ago we asked you, the TUAW reader, to help us tell Apple what you want in the next iPhone: the OS, the apps, the hardware. Within two hours, I had over two hundred emails in my inbox. Within four days, the email total topped 1,100. As I was shifting and sorting through all your suggestions, one thing became clear: you love the iPhone, but you want to see it better, more intuitive, and more versatile – and you know how the iPhone can accomplish those goals.

This is the first of a series of letters to Apple on your behalf, telling the gang in Cupertino what would make their wonder-phone even more wondrous. This letter strictly focuses on the iPhone OS in general – the home screen, navigation, and settings. Future letters will deal with hardware and applications.

There were so many suggestions, I needed to whittle them down. To do that, I tabulated how many times a feature request was made. If more than 50% of you mentioned it, it made it into the letter. If you guys want to see the others (most were one-offs or had less that 15% of you requesting it), perhaps I'll add an extra letter onto the series at the end of its run.



Remember, if you made suggestions about any of Apple's built-in apps (Mail, Maps, Stocks, Calendar, etc) or hardware, you won't see those here, but in an upcoming letter dealing specifically with those areas.

I hope Apple is listening, because the readers of TUAW have spoken, and this is what they have to say:

Dear Apple,

While it's clear the iPhone is the best smartphone on the market right now, you have a lot of
competition creeping up. We want to help you blow them out of the water with the iPhone OS 4.0. Here are our suggestions:

1. The lock screen needs to change.

90% of us want a new lock screen. We think the current screen that only shows the date and time, and only the most recent missed call or SMS, is not particularly helpful. If you get a text message, then a calendar alert, and then a push notification, the only one you see is the push notification message. Being able to swipe through them or have a table list would be far more useful. But even then, we still have to enter our four-digit unlock code to see if we've received any new emails. From the new lock screen we want to see all the calls we've missed and the number of new emails and texts we have. We want to see which apps have sent us push notifications, and what appointments are coming up. We want a brief overview of all the new data we've received to be presented to us before we have to enter our unlock code.

Let's extend the features of that new lock screen to ...

2. A new home screen. The iPhone is the smartest phone on the market. Make is smarter. Introduce a location-aware home screen.

Over 90% of us also want a new home screen – and we want it location aware. Let's say we live in London, but travel to continental Europe many times a month. We'd love to turn on our iPhones in the country we just landed in and see the local weather, currency, transit maps, and news displayed right on our home screens. Not only would it save us time and money, it would save something just as valuable to an iPhone owner – battery life. If all these things were displayed on the home screen the first time you turn on your phone, you wouldn't have to open five different applications to get what you want.

Imagine a 'Genius Location' feature as well: the iPhone would show you (through an app like Yelp – or a new Apple-branded app) what restaurants or businesses are around based on your 'likes' in your home town. We know you were granted a 'Transitional Data Sets' patent for a location-based home screen back in February 2008 - let's hope this sees the light of day in iPhone OS 4.0.


3. That new home screen? Let us access it by vertically swiping.


Imagine this: no matter what home screen page you're on, if you swipe up you are presented with a 'feeds screen' that works much like an RSS page. This feeds screen could be set based on in-app preferences so we could fully customize it. Ours might show our latest Facebook posts, last five emails received, our To Do notes, our Mint.com balance, missed calls, text messages, and upcoming iCal events. The guys at teehan+lax have a pretty cool mock-up of this feeds screen, but the killer feature would be how you could access it from any app page – by vertically swiping.

4. Overhaul app navigation.

85% of us think it takes too long to swipe through all our pages of apps. Even though iTunes 9 made a step in the right directionby allowing the user to organize apps and home screen pages visually, there has got to be a better way. Swiping through ten screens to get to the last apps page is tedious.

Wouldn't it be cool if you could press the home button and see all the home pages on one screen? The guys at Ocean Observationsthink so. Check out this concept video of what this feature would look like (their 'Cover Flow Multitasking' concept is quite cool as well). Don't want to do it their way? Give us stacks, give us folders, give us App Store-like category views. Just give us something that makes it easier to get around our deluge of apps.

5. 85% of us want multitasking and 3rd party background apps (but not at the cost of battery life).

There's not much more to say on this matter, but Palm does it, and if you can find a way around their battery drain, we want it!

6. Almost 80% of us want Flash, even if it's a bad idea.

No, not camera flash (we do, but that's for the next letter). We want Adobe's Flash Player, though Flash on the Mac is a giant performance and stability headache. Get your heads together with Adobe and make it happen (and fix the Mac version while you're about it, please).

7. We love that you introduced landscape mode across virtually all apps in iPhone OS 3.0, but 70% of us want the ability to selectively turn it off.

Give us a setting to switch off the automatic "turn to landscape mode" when the device is turning. Why? When we lay in bed on our side we can't read our mail. The app is always turning and that's really annoying. A system-wide 'ignore orientation' switch would be a good start; app-by-app options would be better.

8. When we leave an app, we want it to remember where we were.

If we click on a link in an app that takes us to Safari or if we switch apps to copy/paste, 70% of us want the app to remember where we were in it when we come back to it. Some apps do this, some don't. Make this an OS-level feature so they all do it.

9. 65% of us want the ability to remove Apple-branded apps.

That Stocks app? Cute, but the Yahoo! Finance [iTunes] app is so much better. We don't need both on our phones.

10. 60% of us want a universal "documents" folder.

We want one location, accessible to all apps, to store documents on the iPhone. Whether we need to send that PDF via IM through Nimbuzz or via email through the built-in Mail app, it's no problem. Either one can do it because the docs are all stored in one place, accessible to all apps. (We realize this breaks the sandboxing model that prevents one app from blowing away data belonging to another one, but we have every confidence you can make it work.)

11. Better Support for Codecs and Add-ons.

It's not just Flash, you know. WMV and AVI still rule on lots of sites. Let us see them (60%).

12. The iPhone is a hard drive with a screen, so....

Give us Disk mode in the OS. 50% of us want to use our iPhone as an external USB/Wi-Fi hard drive.

FYI, Apple, this is just the start. We've got so many more thoughts to share with you about the next iPhone's hardware and apps. So get ready, and thanks for listening. You'll soon be hearing from us again.

Sincerely,

The loyal readers and iPhone owners of TUAW.

Gizmodo's "The Best of CES"











CES week meant one thing: Absolute gadget overload. Here's the best of Gizmodo's dispatches from gadget hell, all in one place.

Monday—The Pre-Pre-Pre-Show











This is the day that the press starts to show up, and when the conference begins to assume its horrible shape. It's not really CES, but it's starting to feel that way.

• MSI's lineup semi-leaked, including a dual-screen ereader and a 3D laptop. These, nt coincidentally, will be concepts and words you'll be unbelievably tired of by the end of the week. GET READY FOR 3D EREADERS, Y'ALL.

• There was a washer/dryer with Android. Why? Why not? (But really, why?)

• And we did a little recon on the main CES building. What we found: 3D, 3D, 3D, 3D.

Tuesday—Day Zero












The show floor isn't open yet, but the press conferences are starting in full force. This means interesting announcements! And gadget spam. But mostly announcements.

• Lenovo dumped the first true banner products of the show, with the IdeaCenter 300a ultrathin AIO, the first Snapdragon smartbook, and a capacitive multitouchnetbook tablet.

• Iomega figured out how to make your entire PC portable.

• This is kind of inevitable: A 24-hour 3D channel is coming in 2011. It will show Avatar on loop, I think.

• Vizio's aiming upscale for once, with 480Hz, locally dimming LED 3D TVs. And abizarrely wide 21x9 TV, which is proportioned roughly like a billboard.

• A pico projector with a projection you can actually manipulate with your fingers.

• Asus confirmed their commitment to Bamboo-trimmed faux-eco-laptops, designer netbooks for the lay-deez, and ridiculous giant desktop replacements with dual trackpads. They also predicted the future, and gave it a stupid name:Waveface.

• We got to play with the Lenovo IdeaPad hybrid tablet...thing. It's got a ton of potential.

• An HDTV in a polar bear.

• I ran Spring Design's dual-screened Android ereader through its paces. It's a geekier Nook.

• We heard rumblings about a multitouch HP tablet, codeveloped with Microsoft. It sounds a little Courier-y, but almost definitely not the Courier.

Wednesday—Day One











The show floor still isn't open, but the new hardware is coming fast and hard.

• Sling unveiled three new ways to share your TV with yourself (it's what they do!), including a USB Slingbox. Their new remote control is supremely sexy, but also only available from your cable or sat provider.

• LG assured Plasma fans that they're still in the game, and put their LED TVs on adangerous crash diet. Then they threw a hard drive into their top-line Blu-ray player, because nobody stopped them. Meanwhile, set-top boxes inched closer to obsolescence.

• Netgear's new wireless-N routers can receive and share both 3G and WiMax. Meanwhile, dedicated 3G and WiMax sharing hardware inched closer to obsolescence.

• Philips' Research Labs is making good on the color ebook reader promise, one tech demo at a time.

• AT&T will finally get some Android phones, courtesy of HTC, Dell and Motorola. They're also getting two webOS (Palm) phones, which could mean a lot of things right now. Hopefully more that just the Pre and Pixi.

• Toshiba claims that their new cell TVs can convert 2D content into 3D in real time. It may or may not look terrible.

• Samsung's LED TV line is pornographically thin.

• Panasonic showed us their dual-eyed 3D camcorder. It'll be $22,000 when it comes out in Fall. Speaking of 3D!

• More Panny news, but this definitely earns its own bullet: They've released another mega TV, this time at 152 inches—the largest ever—and with 4x by 2k resolution and 3D support. Awesome.

• Microsoft's Project Natal is coming in time for Christmas! Which is basically as far away as it could be, in 2010.

• Sony's BDP-S770 Blu-ray player Has 3D, Wi-Fi and Netflix. And you can control it with an iPhone.

• We got a hands-on with with Sony's Dash, a slick 7" internet viewer.

• Sony—they got busy this year—also released GPS and Compass enabled cameras. So your pictures will know where you are, even if you don't.

• We checked out the first 3D DirecTV broadcast, and it looked as good as any home theater 3D we've seen.

• We got the chance to flip the Motorola Backflip, the first folding Android phone. It is..interesting.

• Steve Ballmer's keynote! The moment everyone was waiting for! There was aWindows 7 HP "slate," but no Courier.

• We got our paws on Nvidia's tablet, an as-of-yet unnamed, 7" Android-running affair.

• We tried out Kodak's Waterproof Playsport pocket cam. It might be our favorite one yet.

• Sprint is really, totally, officially launching WiMax with the Sprint Overdrive hub, allowing five people to suck down some serious bandwidth.

• We saw a laptop with a transparent OLED screen. We don't know how useful that is, but it sure is futuristic.

Samsung's 3D OLED display brings us ever closer to being actually, literally paper-thin.

Thursday—Day Two











• We got a hands-on with the Skiff reader. The verdict: Kindle and Nook, get scared.

• Alienware showed off the M11X, a sub-$1000 netbook, which is about as alien to their usual line-up as you can get. We got to try it out.

• We love the slate concept from Dell (even though it sort of looks like a big iPod Touch). We got a quick look in a dark corridor. Very cloak and dagger.

• Here's how Plastic Logic's Que Reader felt to our hands: tall, slender, and blissful. The price tag, however? Not so slender.

• We were the first to get touchy feely with the Sling Touch Control 100 DVR remote.

• The Else Emblaze is a touchscreen smartphone David in a industry packed with Goliaths. But the underdog always has a shot, and there was a lot to like about the Else.

• We oohed and ahhed over Intel's double multitouch, Tweet-displaying wall. Once we picked our jaw up off the floor, we shot some video.

• The new wood-bodied Polaroid PIC-1000 might give you splinters, but it works with Polaroid 1000 Instant film.

• We got the first hands on with Skype TV and it seems like it's going to be a great way to keep in touch with your family. Whether that's a good thing or not is up to you.

• The Palm Pixi Plus and Palm Pre Plus were announced! They're coming exclusively to Verizon on January 25. We tried out the Pre Plus and the Pixi Plus and found that the updates were welcome, if not as extensive as we might like.

• We got to peer through the transparent-screened Samsung IceTouch PMP and couldn't help but appreciate its utter weirdness.

• We also scoped out Samsung's C9000 Ultra-thin TV, as well as their Wi-Fi-enabled, touchscreen, video-playing remote. It was just about as cool as it sounds.

• Haier cut the wires—all of em—on a prototype wireless TV, thanks to MIT's WiTricity and WHDI wireless video. Freedom!

• There's a lot of sadness going on at CES, in many different forms, but thiskaraoke-singing Sisyphus was doomed to sing for eternity. Or at least all of CES.

• If you only watch one four minute recap video of CES this year, make it Joel Johnson's four minute recap video of CES.

• ioSafe burned, drowned and crushed a hard drive to show that it was tough as nails. Afterward, it worked!

• Hard drives weren't the only things that we tried to break this year at CES. Gorilla Glass showed off their unbreakable, unscratchable panels.

• We tried out the $199 Freescale tablet and thought the UI was decidedly last-gen. One insulting example: you have to flick the browser's scroll bar to move down a web site.

• The Lenovo Skylight smartbook, despite its frisbee form factor, showed some promise despite not being quite so smart, yet.

• With all these new 3D TVs being announced, everyone's rocking 3D specs. Our gallery shows that some wear them better than others.

Friday—Day Three










• The As Seen On TV Hat, as seen on TV, blocks out all that boring real life stuff going on around you so you can focus on watching video on your iPhone.

• We got a real hands on with the 5" Dell tablet, and while we're not sure why weneed it, we are sure that we like it.

• Pixel Qi's transflective LCD display gives you the best of both worlds: full LCD color and E-Ink-esque readability. E-Ink should be shaking in its boots.

• We saw some of Pixel Qi's promise realized in Notion Ink's Adam tablet/e-reader, one of the most exciting devices at this year's show.

• We took a look at Navteq's laser-based rig for 3D mapping. Suck it, street view.

• This year, mutant camcorder rigs popped up everywhere at the convention. We put together a gallery of the most mutantest we encountered.

• We put PR people on the spot by giving them 10 seconds to shill their product in a little segment we call Justify Your Gadget .

• We checked back in with the Saddest Man at CES on video and were happy to report that morale had improved at his karaoke stage.

• Fittingly, both being things that intrigue and disturb us, Taser and Sexting are now official enemies.

• Casio's Exilim EX-FH100, a slow-mo shooting point and shoot, is improving its tech and making us happy in the process.

• The meanest thing we did at CES this year wasn't very mean. The press room didn't have enough boxed lunch, so we ordered a bunch of pizza.