Posts Tagged ‘Apple iPhone’

Jobs passes; a generation reels

Steve Jobs with the Apple II

Steve Jobs: 1955-2011

The national media was ready for this; Apple’s founder Steve Jobs didn’t have much time left so the news agencies prepared for it.

But the nation wasn’t.

When Apple’s website made this simple announcement Wednesday evening, it came as a world-wide shock:

Apple has lost a visionary and creative genius, and the world has lost an amazing human being. Those of us who have been fortunate to know and work with Steve have lost a dear friend and an inspiring mentor. Steve leaves behind a company that only he could have built, and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple.

The phenomenon of social media that has flourished under Jobs-inspired platforms like the iPhone and iPad came alive over the news. Techies and average Joes expressed their feeling of loss, posted and tweeted quotes from Jobs, changed their status and profile pictures.

It occurs to me that the loss of Steve Jobs has a huge impact on Generation X in the way losing John Lennon was to the baby boomers. Think about it.

Let’s say you are a 40-year-old, born in 1971:

  • All throughout elementary school, you had an Apple II in your classroom
  • Your high school had a lab full of Macs
  • You were writing term papers on a color Mac in college
  • You may have heard “You’ve Got Mail!” from that original America Online dial-up account on a Mac
  • You bought your first iMac to surf the web before you were 30
  • About seven years ago you dumped all of your CD’s into iTunes and started walking around with your iPod.
  • You waited in line four years ago for the first iPhone
  • Last night you commiserated with your high school classmates on Facebook using your iPad.
Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs: 1955-2011

By putting technology into everyday people’s hands that is so simple to use, Jobs rose to be a cultural Pied Piper. “What’s the next insanely great thing you thought of, Steve? We want it!”

For media folks, Apple is ubiquitous. From the video editing suite, to print and web layout, to viewer video from iPhones, and reporter’s copy on iPads, our industry’s productivity and quality have been revolutionized because of these products.

Some of us have never known a world that didn’t have Steve Jobs rolling out a new life-altering gadget on an 18-month product cycle.

So we mourn.

Cheeseman: paywall, iPhone app coming

UPDATED: More details on the paywall for GoErie.com: “The cost for non-newspaper subscribers will be $6.95 per month, and Sunday-only customers and others who subscribe in increments less than the full seven days will be offered a discounted price of $2.95 per month.”

The paper is putting the “whoa!” on GoErie.com.

In a publisher’s column in Sunday’s Erie Times-News, President and Publisher Rosanne Cheeseman dropped the other shoe in her realignment of the Erie area’s largest news operation from a “ink and paper” based outlet to a multi-stream digital enterprise that is fighting to find a model where consumers will help subsidize the work of professional producers.

The first shoe of course is getting the Times Publishing Co. out of the newsprint publishing business. The transition to outsourcing the production of the newsprint version of their content to the Butler Eagle is expected to occur in the next few weeks, along with the loss of 40 jobs. Now the paper has their sights on the thousands of readers who consume it’s product without plunking down the obligatory six bits. Cheeseman explains:

GoErie.com will also soon launch a digital subscription program. Print subscribers will continue to have unlimited access to our website. However, nonsubscribers will be required to pay a fee for extended access to what we consider premium content — notably most of the bylined work of our professional reporters.

She goes on to say that GoErie.com will remain the community’s portal, with breaking news, obits, and blogs still free. If you take the Monday, July 25th morning version of GoErie as an example, on the five featured posts on the image rotator, one was a bylined news story, one a bylined sports story, one a link to a photo gallery (which would be free), and two were internal promos.

In her post Cheeseman announced that an GoErie app for the iPhone and iPad has been submitted for approval by Apple. It will allow the reader to view stories as if published on paper or in a story list, along with layers of video and additional content, including a voice function that will read the paper to you.

Several questions remain, with the biggest being will people who gladly fork over $80 per month for cable TV pay for a digital subscription of $8, $10 or $12 $7 or $3 a month? How will the inevitable loss of eyeballs affect display ad rates at GoErie? If print subscribers get unlimited access to GoErie, then why aren’t they getting automatic GoErie “Insider” subscriptions and the ability to make comments on stories right now (ETN circulation and GoErie are currently totally separate profit centers)?

And what about the aggregators?

Poll: do you have the media tools to weather a storm?

Last month, our P&T poll asked if readers would use more local news if it were available on a mobile app. A plurality said, that they definitely would, and half indicated that they would at least give it a shot.

In the aftermath of devastating tornadoes in Tuscaloosa, AL and Joplin, MO, the role of over-the-air broadcast has been greatly reenforced as the first line for warnings and emergency response. In our own neck-of-the-woods we have had three tornado warnings in Erie County over recent days, and Doppler radar and the expertise of our TV meteorologists has been key.

The dilemma comes when your favorite weather personality says to take cover in your basement. In this era of DTV, what do you do to stay informed? Will Erie radio’s automatic EAS triggers be enough information to last out a storm using your transistor radio? Or should you go out and buy a battery-operated portable digital TV, not knowing if a signal will come in down in the basement?

An important question for our poll.

Do you have the media tools ready for a major storm? (multiple answers accepted)

  • I have a portable radio (66%, 19 Votes)
  • I have a smart phone (48%, 14 Votes)
  • I have a TV connected to cable in my basement (24%, 7 Votes)
  • I have a TV connected to a home antenna in my basement (21%, 6 Votes)
  • I have a regular cell phone which can receive weather alert SMS texts (17%, 5 Votes)
  • I have a portable digital TV (14%, 4 Votes)
  • I am not ready for a storm (10%, 3 Votes)

Total Voters: 29

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Poll: is a new smartphone in your future?

When we asked P&T readers about the most likely headlines they might see as the close of 2011, a plurality said that they didn’t think local news in high definition would be a reality this year. Almost one-fourth predicted a single-branded newscast coming out of 35th & State.

Well the big announcement for Verizon Wireless subscribers finally came last week: the new iPhone for Verizon will be released February 10th. My feeling is that with Verizon’s market share in this area, the iPhone will be a big winner in the Erie market. It might even turn the heads of local late adopters who have been holding out. How about you? Are you thinking about going smartphone in 2011?

Will you be buying a new smartphone in 2011?

  • No...I already have a smartphone (44%, 16 Votes)
  • No...I don't want a smartphone (42%, 15 Votes)
  • Yes...I will be buying an Android OS phone (11%, 4 Votes)
  • Yes...I will be buying an iPhone (3%, 1 Votes)
  • Yes...I will be buying a BlackBerry (0%, 0 Votes)
  • Yes...I will be buying a Windows Mobile phone (0%, 0 Votes)

Total Voters: 36

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Poll: where do you go online for Erie news?

Folks who responded to our P&T poll about the potential Hamot merger with UPMC were split, with over 40% feeling that the health system was dropping the ball when it comes to the public relations and communications efforts over the merger. About another third said that it was too early to tell, with a quarter saying that Hamot was doing just fine with getting its message out there.

This week we want to know where you get your news online. So many of us now have iPhones, Androids, and Blackberrys and never have to wait until the morning paper or the 6 o’clock news to get up to date on what’s happening in Erie. However, the quality of the websites for those who originate local news content vary greatly, from quite good to downright poor. And I would add that smartphone compatibility for Erie’s news sites is quite lacking, with only ErieBlogs providing a mobile version of their site at all (along with Press and Tower, of course).

So, what say you?

Which online Erie news site do you use most?

  • ErieBlogs.com (50%, 32 Votes)
  • GoErie.com (27%, 17 Votes)
  • YourErie.com (14%, 9 Votes)
  • WICU12.com (6%, 4 Votes)
  • WSEE.tv (3%, 2 Votes)

Total Voters: 64

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Deep Background for December 6-12, 2009

I’ve doing a lot of reading about the state of wireless technology and the impact that the Apple iPhone has had on that space. The advent of the Steve Jobs’ brainchild was the first time subscribers switched carriers to signup for a particular phone brand.

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The current Verizon Wireless campaign touting their 3G network vs. that of AT&T’s is a strong example of harsh yet smart comparative advertising. AT&T is answering with their own maps saying that they indeed have coverage available to 97% of Americans, although the fine print begins “3G not available in all areas.”

For me, as much as I desire an iPhone, there’s no way that I can leave Verizon and their free “in” calling, because so many in my sphere of influence are in the network. Also, with four phones on our family plan, I’m paying as much of a wireless bill as I wish to carry.

You can make a connection talking about any media related topic on this open forum. As always, a private message can be e-mailed to joel@nataliemedia.com or tweet @pressandtower.

Embrace the chaos!

Poll: are you watching video on your phone?

Last week’s poll results regarding the readiness of Erie viewers for DTV were kind of shocking. A full 25% of respondents said that they knew someone or a workplace that will be without any TV service after next Friday, June 12th. I guess education doesn’t always cure procrastination.

This week we are asking if you are using some of the new capabilities of mobile devices. This comes on the news that Ford is planning to have internet access in their new cars in the next 9 to 12 months. If you have a iPhone or smartphone with data package, or an iPod touch, have you listened to live streaming audio, or watched video on demand on your small screen? Let us know if you are with me, still only using my phone as, uhmmm, a phone.

Have you listened to live audio or watched any video on your mobile device in the past month?

  • No - I'm still limited to voice and text on my phone (60%, 12 Votes)
  • Yes - I'm one of those early adopter types (30%, 6 Votes)
  • No - even though I have a data package on my smartphone (10%, 2 Votes)

Total Voters: 20

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