Notebooks.com Buys GottaBeMobile

By Kevin C. Tofel | Wednesday, February 18, 2009 | 2:40 PM CT | 3 comments |

gbm-logoCongratulations to Xavier of Notebooks.com as well as Rob, Warner and all of our good friends on the GottaBeMobile team. Today, both sites jointly announced that Notebooks.com has purchased GottaBeMobile. We’re obviously big fans of both sites, so we’re excited that the two have become one.

logoFrom the sounds of it, I wouldn’t expect to see much change on either site although there could be cross-posting opportunities. Both will continue to provide reviews and news of notebook, netbook and Tablet PCs while also offering great purchase deals on those devices as well. Congrats! :)

MobileDevicesToday: not just another mobile tech blog

By Kevin C. Tofel | Friday, August 22, 2008 | 2:35 PM CT | 1 comment |

Mobiledevicestoday

Late last month, news hit that Forrester Research had purchased Jupiter Research. My immediate thought was to reach out to Michael Gartenberg to see how this affected him, and at the time, he wasn’t sure. It didn’t take long to find out where he’d land, however. Soon after he announced that he wouldn’t be moving on to Forrester, he ended up as the Editor of MobileDevicesToday, another addition to my RSS feeds.

Michael brings his talented analyst skills to the MDT blog, not to mention the many mobile tech industry contacts he’s amassed over the years. With that combination, I don’t see MDT as "yet another mobile tech blog" because Michael adds solid analysis, opinion and commentary to what’s going on within the industry. Take a swing by MobileDevicesToday and see if you agree. Best of luck in the new gig, Michael!

Blog comments should be immediate and easy

By James Kendrick | Wednesday, August 20, 2008 | 8:26 AM CT | 31 comments |

Writer2121_012310This is just a mini-rant for something that has been bothering me for a while and since I just hit it again on a site it’s time to speak up.  I believe that one of the greatest values that a blog provides is the exchange of ideas with the readers.  For this to be effective it must be simple and quick for readers to enter a comment.  What bugs me are blogs that force readers to register before they can leave a comment.  Now before you go off on a tangent I understand why sites go this route, I truly do.  But I can’t tell you how many times I have read a post on a blog and had something important to add to the conversation, at least from my perspective yet was confronted with a registration process before I could do so.  If you’re like me you don’t have any free time to begin with and you certainly don’t have any to waste with a registration process just so you can add what very well might be the only comment on that blog you’ll ever post.  So you probably do what I usually do and in fact did just now.  You leave the site without adding to the conversation.  Somehow I don’t think that’s what the author wants to happen.

WordPress for iPhone sets blogs free

By James Kendrick | Tuesday, July 22, 2008 | 5:41 AM CT | 2 comments |

I have been enjoying blogging on my iPhone with the TypePad Mobile app that I picked up shortly after getting the iPhone.  There is something liberating about snapping a photo and posting it directly to jkOnTheRun from the phone.  A lot of folks that blog using WordPress have been hankering for the same ability and should be jumping for joy now that the iPhone WordPress app is available.  It looks like it has some additional features over the TypePad client so if you blog on WordPress and have an iPhone you probably want to snap up this app.  It’s free too, the best price.  :)

WordPressiphone

(via Digital Inspiration)

Winner announced for the BlackBerry TypePad Mobile contest!

By James Kendrick | Monday, May 19, 2008 | 3:26 PM CT | 8 comments |

Blackberry_pearlYou probably thought we forgot about announcing the winner of the BlackBerry TypePad Mobile contest, didn’t you?  The truth is we got some really good entries and we had to read through all of them several times as it was very hard to choose the one we thought was deserving of the awesome prize package:

  • Unlocked BlackBerry Pearl 8100
  • Two year TypePad Pro account ($300 value)

After much deliberation we are happy to announce that Vivek Gowri penned the winning post about the UMPC scene:

Significant Changes Coming for the Subnotebook Market
By Vivek Gowri

When the Asus EEE 701 debuted as the "$200 notebook" at Computex 07 last June, it sent a shock through not only the techblog community, but also mainstream media publications as well. In the intervening 5 months to its release, the EEE’s price steadily increased, finally going on sale at a $399 price point. (The $299 2G Surf would go on sale later on without some of the niceties, such as upgradable RAM and a webcam.) Now, the price has gone upwards once more, with the 9" 901 model going on sale last week at a price of $549.99 in either Linux or Windows XP flavors, and a Atom based 901 is expected to debut at Computex 08 next month at a price of around $650. To put that in perspective, that’s an increase of almost 250% from the original EEE concept. While the extra features are nice, the overall trend is somewhat disturbing, in light of the much increased competition from HP (MiniNote), Via (CloudBook), Intel (Classmate PC and Netbook) and, most recently, MSI.

Just this week, MSI released details and pictures of its new 10" Wind, which looks remarkably similar to the Apple MacBook. At $399, it packs a 1.6GHz Intel Atom processor that is substantially faster than the 900MHz Celeron M in the EEE, a 10" 1024×600 screen with a larger display featuring the same resolution as the 901, a 2.5" 80GB SATA hard drive, 512MB of RAM, 2.5 hour 3 cell battery, a webcam, and Linux. A version with XP, Bluetooth, and a 6 cell battery with 6 hours of runtime will go for $549. Due to the hard drive, the Wind weighs slightly more than the EEE (2.35 pounds as opposed to 2.18 for the 901), but given the extra prowess, it is easily forgiven.

As much as I love Asus, I am forced to admit at this point that the Wind is truly far superior to anything in the EEE range. The Atom processor in the Wind will eat the EEE’s Celeron M353 for lunch, and not even pause to spit out the bones, and with an 80GB hard drive, the Wind is far less stifling in terms of storage space, though it is not a solid state disk as in the Asus machines. While this is not optimal, it enabled MSI to keep the price lower and allows for easy upgrading to drives of much higher capacity (up to 250GB and 320GB hard drives, numbers unthinkable in an EEE). Though the mechanical hard drives are heavier, use more energy, and are more prone to failure, none of these are factors enough to change the fact that as of right now, solid state flash technology is simply not economically viable in a $400 device. Consider the fact that the Wind is a whopping 40% cheaper than the EEE 901, while having a much faster processor, four times the hard drive space, a larger screen, and better styling, and it is evident that MSI has a winning candidate on its hands. Even after the EEE gets the Atom processor later this year, it will be far too expensive to compete successfully with the Wind. The EEE 701 cannot be mentioned in the same sentence as the Wind, even though they share the same $400 price point. The MSI is so much more advanced in every way compared to the 701 that it’s comical to the point of tragedy. 150% higher clockspeed (the EEE 701 is underclocked to 630MHz), 20 times the hard drive space (!), 60% more screen real estate, you name it
.
So how should Asus combat the growth of its latest competitor? It should start by dropping prices drastically. Make the 701 4G as the lowest end model, at $250-300. Make a version of the 901 with 12GB flash and Linux and put it at $450, keep the 20GB Linux one at $550, and put XP on the Atom based 901 at $650. As flash prices continue to drop, keep lowering prices, and as Atom becomes more readily available, put it into the lesser models in the EEE range. Use the SSD factor to combat the fact that the Wind has much more storage space. This is only a short term fix, however. As the EEE continues its climb into the upper price echelons, it needs to become a more upmarket device in the manner of the HP MiniNote. However, at the same time, it needs to continue to dominate the lower price points, where people can impulsively throw out $400 for a notebook and not think twice about it. How can they accomplish this? Split the EEE into two lines. Make a polished model with good styling and some metal in its build for the higher end markets, and have a full plastic model like the current 901 at $400. I wish Asus luck in keeping its slice of this surging market. May the best subnotebook win.

Join me in congratulating Vivek on a very thoughtful blog post!  Vivek, please email either Kevin or I (click on our cartoon head in the right sidebar) with your shipping address so we can make sure your prize package gets on its way to you.  We’ll also make sure you have all the information you need to activate your two year TypePad account.  Let the blogging begin!

First post from my Blackberry

By James Kendrick | Wednesday, May 14, 2008 | 1:46 PM CT | 6 comments |

Now that the Blackberry client for TypePad is out I just had to try it. Now I really wish ny 8830 had a camera!

SixApart launches native TypePad application for BlackBerry devices

By Kevin C. Tofel | Wednesday, May 14, 2008 | 9:09 AM CT | 6 comments |

PublishOne of the ways we covered this year’s Consumer Electronics Show was to use a Windows Mobile client for TypePad, the blog platform we’ve used here at jkOnTheRun since day one. The application worked amazingly well as we took pictures of devices and added a brief description as time allowed. One button push later and you saw what we saw.Today, SixApart launched a native TypePad mobile client for BlackBerry devices. Hey, why should Windows Mobile folks have all the fun, right? The free application can be grabbed here for your Curve or Pearl and of course, you’ll need a TypePad account to use it (but you’re smart enough to have figured that part out on your own). With the mobile app, you can use your ‘Berry’s camera to capture an image, bang out a post, save the draft, edit it and BAM! you’re a mobile blogger! Seriously, it’s that easy.The full press release follows the jump but you’ll want to stay tuned for contest kickoff shortly here at jkOTR. Of course we couldn’t possibly be giving away a free application (and still have street-cred), but it could be a… oh, just read the press release first. By the time you’re done, we’ll either have the contest going or you’ll already have guessed what the giveaway is!
Continue reading »

CNN visits Mobile Tech Manor- how we do all this great content

By James Kendrick | Tuesday, April 22, 2008 | 11:05 AM CT | 6 comments |

How we do it.

Wow, it seems they visited Gear Diary too!

The power of blogging- reaching out and touching people

By James Kendrick | Monday, April 14, 2008 | 7:16 AM CT | 5 comments |

Blogging is a phenomenon of epic proportions, of that there can be little doubt.  A lot has been written about blogging and how it’s become the new form of journalism but to me it’s so much more than that.  I have done a lot of self-reflection lately and realize the power of blogging is in the platform it creates to reach out and touch folks.  Blogging is much more personal than journalism by design and it is astounding how it can allow bloggers to touch readers.  I have made it a personal goal to touch at least one person a day through my blogging and I can tell you when that happens it feels good.

Touching people is a fuzzy phrase that can mean a lot of different things.  It can be simple advice to improve someone’s ability to do their work or it can be something that truly affects someone’s life in a big way.  I am fortunate to have a big audience with the blogging that I do.  My blogging is read by millions of people over the course of a year which blows me away when I think of that.  That readership is bigger than the circulation of all but a handful of newspapers in the US I’ll bet.  Think about that for a moment, blogging has given me the potential to touch millions of lives over time.  The trick is to make the best of that legacy.

I hear from people all the time who describe how something I blogged has affected them.  Sometimes in a good way but sometimes not so good.  Either one is OK, it shows that something I blogged has touched them in such a way that made them think about it.  There’s nothing wrong with that.  I’ve heard from folks from all over the world who told me that something I blogged touched them deeply.  It doesn’t matter what was blogged if it touches someone that way.  There are very few things in this life better than the feeling I get when someone tells me they have been touched in a good way.  How many opportunities in life do we have to do that?  Blogging opens up this in a tremendous way and it’s a great thing for me. 

I heard from someone this past weekend who has a disability who shared that advice I blogged enabled him to put something together that has made a big impact in his ability to do things in life.  How much better can it get than that?  Knowing that something blogged has made such a big impact on someone who needs all the help they can get is priceless to me.  Blogging provides a platform to do good things and these deeds aren’t always obvious as such.  Those are the best kind, the simple blogging that makes someone’s life better.  It makes this all worthwhile so those of you who blog think about that.  You are appreciated.

Are bloggers journalists?

By James Kendrick | Friday, March 21, 2008 | 11:15 AM CT | 20 comments |

BloggerA topic has been discussed recently by a bunch of A-list bloggers that crops up from time to time as apparently these A-list bloggers are a bit obsessed by it.  The conversation deals with whether bloggers are journalists and how bloggers should act if so.  I know this is a bit off-topic for jkOnTheRun but it keeps coming up and I want to share my thoughts on it.  Now I know that these A-list bloggers will not even see this as they only read each other but here goes anyway.  First of all I understand why these bloggers are concerned about it as there comes a certain level of responsibility when a blogger gets outspoken enough to get a big audience.  With a public forum comes a level of awareness with what the blogger says that means the blogger should act with an appropriate deportment whether he/she likes it or not.

I don’t particularly worry about whether I should be considered a journalist or not.  I have been referred to as a journalist by main-stream media (MSM) for what that’s worth but I don’t really care.  You see the way I view it it doesn’t matter if the blogger thinks he/she is a journalist or not.  It also doesn’t matter if MSM thinks the blogger is a journalist or not either.  The only group that matters at all is the readers.  Yes, these bloggers should only worry what their readers think of them, not each other.  With a public forum comes a big responsibility in what bloggers say and do.  A few simple rules that I follow would go a long way to alleviating the concern in the minds of the A-listers.

  1. Always tell the truth.  It doesn’t matter how trivial the topic or how serious.  The truth will set you free and keep you that way.
  2. Opinions matter but only if they are clearly identified as such.  Don’t pass opinions off as fact and your readers will keep trusting what you say.
  3. Never quote a statistic without revealing the source.  Bloggers are starting to fall into the same pit that MSM journalists often fall into by quoting some arcane statistic that is meaningless.  Let the reader decide if the source means it’s a reliable statistic or not.

These rules may seem to be simple common sense as they are but they are violated so much every single day by bloggers and even MSM journalists.  Trust is earned and must be kept and these rules will help see that it lives.  Trust is the key ingredient in the relationship between bloggers and their readers and is not guaranteed nor should it be.  Earn it with the truth and you’ll keep it a long, long time.  Until you violate one of these rules and your intentions start getting questioned.  That’s my take on it, anyway.

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