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More Daily Fail Luddite drivel and worse…using some awful research to prop it up

July 30, 2010. Posted by kindleresearch in Consumer technology, Mobile technology, Research. Comments (0) so far.

iPad users ‘are the selfish elite’, claims survey

By Daniel Bates

Are you wealthy, sophisticated and smart but don’t care about anybody else?

The chances are you own an iPad.

A survey has revealed the typical person who has bought Apple’s latest gadget is unkind and has little empathy for others.

They have been branded the ‘selfish elite’ by a poll of 20,000 consumers carried out by an American research company.

The £429 device has become the most desired gadget in Britain since its launch in May and 600,000 are expected to be sold before the end of the year.

But the next time you see someone sitting on a train smugly using theirs, take comfort from the fact they are probably not a nice person.

According to Tim Koelkebeck of MyType, which carried out the survey, iPad owners are are six times more likely to be ‘wealthy, well-educated, power-hungry, over-achieving, sophisticated, unkind and non-altruistic 30-50-year-olds’.

They are self-centered workaholics with an overwhelming interest in business and finance who cherish ‘power and achievement’ and will not cross the street to help others, he added.

Mr Koelkebeck said that the high price was one reason why the iPad attracted such a specific clientele.

More…

  • Apple iPad already tipped to be top of Christmas wishlists
  • Amazon launches wireless-only Kindle e-reader in bid to take on Apple’s iPad
  • Porn industry hiring girls to make use of ‘Face Time’ video call feature on Apple iPhone 4
  • Consumer help: My iPad buyer is a thief! (thisismoney.co.uk)

It also appeals to people who spend all day working in front of a computer screen and enjoy interacting with new technology.

In their free time they are so used to computers they want another screen to ensure continuity in their lives.

Apple's iPad can be used to browse the internet, read books and watch TV showsApple’s iPad can be used to browse the internet, read books and watch TV shows

Apple founder Steve Jobs says it will revolutionise everything about our lives, from the way we travel to how we read books.

It sold out within hours of its launch in the UK and initial problems with the Wi-Fi connection have not diminished the relentless demand for the device, which costs up to £699 for better models.

Whilst those that own an iPad are uncaring and selfish go-getters, those who criticise the device are branded by the survey as ‘independent geeks’.

Attacking the device gives them an ‘identity statement’, said Mr Koelkebeck, that helps them cope with their own failings.

‘As a mainstream, closed-platform device whose major claim to fame is ease of use and sex appeal, the iPad is everything that they are not.’

Last week, it was ‘iDosing’ where our vulnerable youth were tripping out to repetitive beats on youtube (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1296282/I-dosing-How-teenagers… and this week it is slander of all iPad owners.

Just as irritating as the absurdity of their fear-mongering agenda is the use of research to support their claims.

OK, first off – a poll of 20,000 consumers? This is 20,000 users of MyType’s facebook community and that number is there to give us the impression of rigour. Despite MyType’s claims that the data has been normalised, it’s daft to suggest that this is a representative sample – it’s a sample of facebook users who completed a personality test, aged 13-59, 200 of which own an iPad.

Despite the author’s valiant attempts to defend the findings in the comments to his post, we need to take this with a massive pinch of salt.

We’re going to be doing something more rigorous.

(thanks @victoriajane)

Posted via email from Paul’s posterous

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Getting to the core of the Unibody

February 18, 2009. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

The lengths that some people will go to…Apple continues to attract huge passion and interest despite the price premium it places on its Laptops. With the enormous success of netbooks, the declining price of laptops generally and the obvious reluctance of consumers and businesses to invest in new hardware, it’s hard to see how they can maintain their position in the market unless they drop their prices.

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Predictions for 2009

January 9, 2009. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, Education sector, Information industry, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

This time of year is full of reviews of the last 12 months and predictions for the year to come. Actually I’d like to see more articles that compare last year’s predictions with this year’s reality. It’s in our nature and it’s part of our job to try and understand what will be but the strike rate can be low.

It’s been a time of enormous upheaval globally and personally so I’m a little reluctant to be so brave as to make any specific predictions for 2009. This article helps out by rounding up the tech and information trends to watch out for in 2009 with links to other organisations being a bit braver about what will happen over the next year. I think it is safe to assume that we will see growth in:

- Use of mobile devices to access the internet

- Open source software in businesses

- Rich media social networking tools as a means of communication (with a decline in, uh-oh… blogging)

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    Phones so sexy you want to touch

    September 24, 2008. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

    After a great deal of hype, the first phone – the G1 – with Google’s Android platform has been unveiled and will soon be available for avid techies. It will appear on an HTC phone from T-Mobile and BBC Technology has a video showing how it works together with some commentary. There are plenty of other videos out there including this one that compares it to its main competitor – the iPhone. While the G1 has a useful qwerty keyboard the consensus seems to be that the iPhone looks sexier.

    But it is not just the iPhone – there is also stiff competition from newly open-sourced Symbian which has the majority of the smartphone market and the deep-pocketed Windows Mobile.

    One of the things that leaps out from this period of mobile innovation is the vast improvement in touch-screen technology. We did some research testing touch-screen mobiles only a couple of years ago and they were clunky. And anyone who has had to thump one of those public screens to buy a train ticket or look up some tourist information will know what I’m talking about. This latest generation of phones are light years ahead of that.

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    Every cloud has a chrome lining

    September 3, 2008. Posted by admin in Consumer technology, IT, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

    In an age when we’re all increasingly obsessed with climate change it seems a new kind of cloud has emerged, or at least been re-imagined with appealing clarity.  Whether it suggests ecological disaster or not remains to be seen.

    Once upon a time, actually only a decade or so ago but it already feels like part of web folklore, horizon watchers forecast that the future of computing would be remote  thin clients utilising networked data storage. Or in plainspeak, we’d all be using basic terminals which plugged into the resources of vast central servers. Indeed IBM once said that in the future there will only be 4 computers.

    We can’t help but greet that particular vision with some ambivalence but the brave new paradigm is already here in a variety of guises from virtual computing, online apps, web 2.0 and of course Google apps. Perhaps the mother of all networks hasn’t yet fully coalesced but it may not be that far off.

    It’s been a recurring story for a long time but a number of issues such as excessive costs, security concerns, usability difficulties and limited reliability of access prevented it becoming a reality – especially because those who were asked to pay or demanded ‘mission critical’ usage couldn’t be certain of it’s reliability.   However, thanks in part to coding and technological advances and most importantly the dramatic fall in the cost of networking and hardware infrastructure these factors are now largely overcome.

    Computers and handheld devices such as the iPhone (and to be fair many, many other mobile devices) are increasingly used as an interface to access online resources and applications e.g. Facebook, streaming content, google maps, etc.

    What’s more this reliance on browser-based interfaces is reflected in the ongoing browser-type interface convergence we’ve been witnessing in the Windows, Apple, and Linux OS GUI’s over the last few years. There are clearly far-reaching usability implications behind that convergence. However, it is another development exploiting and developing that browser convergence that we think is even more interesting in terms of the likely long-term impact on the computing, mobile and software industries as a whole.

    Google’s new (and clearly still very much a beta) browser Chrome is the closest thing yet realised that begins to emulate the desktop experience, but in this instance imagine a desktop computer with all the information and processing power of Google and in time the portability of Android behind it.

    Whilst some may still be impressed by Microsoft and Apple’s domination of the confluence of the web, mobile and desktop arenas Google may be on the verge of breaking down the distinction between them all.

    Whether it’s just a matter of time before this coelescing of power into the hands of a few is investigated by the monopolies commission or not the rate of change in terms of in terms of the continuing structural shift that is ocurring in the online, computing and mobile world is truly incredible.

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    The ebook still doesn’t work for fiction

    May 15, 2008. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

    Just recently, I’ve had a few discussions with people about e-book readers, not least because of growing awareness of Amazon’s inappropriately named ‘Kindle’! Amazon has a nice video of how great the reader is but I’m still not convinced these things are going to take off.

    This article talks about the rather more attractive but also flawed Sony Reader. At least the Kindle has wireless connectivity to download books on the road and deliver your morning paper.

    They are going to be popular with the (wealthy) early, early adopters but it is going to be a long, long time before electronic technology can match paper for reading novels.

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    All charge

    February 12, 2008. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

    Consumers frequently complain about what a drag it is to remember, pack and carry around all the power chargers for their various gadgets. This offering from Ionhub has got to be a winner if it can keep up with all the different adapters.

    Ionhub

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    Kindle Research vs Kindle Reader

    October 12, 2007. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, IT, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

    Should I be worried that people are going to think I only do research on ebooks?

    The long awaited launch of Amazon’s ebook reader – also called Kindle – is apparently imminent.

    I don’t think I need to be too worried. For a start the picture filed with the FCC makes it look well ugly:
    Kindle device
    Also, sales of ebooks, while increasing are still minute. In addition, people are carrying around too many mobile electronic devices, these things aren’t cheap, there is no sign that publishers are going to start subsidising them, and there is no consensus on format.

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    iPhone browsing

    August 7, 2007. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

    I’ve resisted adding to the hype about the Apple iPhone because at one point it looked just like it was going to be any other phone with an army of Apple aficionados queuing up to buy it. But I tend to agree with this article that its WiFi internet browsing is a key differentiator. Browsing the internet on a 3G phone at the moment is slow, not very interesting and expensive while the other phones with WiFi are just too business.

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    “Regional” mobile phone charger

    March 15, 2007. Posted by Paul in Consumer technology, Mobile technology. Comments (0) so far.

    Anyone who has spent a few days away from home will know what a drag it is forgetting battery chargers. Cult designer Luigi Colani is launching a “universal” mobile phone charger at this year’s techfest CeBIT. I’m not sure a charger that can only do 80% of Europe’s mobile phones can be called universal but it’s sure to be a seller. Looks sexy as well.

    How long before we see a single gadget that can charge the mobile phone, iPod, digital camera, games console and laptop? I predict huge demand for that.

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