Archive for the ‘Gadgets’ tag
MacUser limps on
The Beatles preserved their legacy when they broke up. The Rolling Stones didn’t and carried on sliding down from the dizzy heights of 1972 to prove they could go even lower than 1987. Good things do come to an end; some, often painfully, more slowly than others. Prompted this week by a coincidental comparison, I’d begun to realise that MacUser was just such an example.
Earlier this week I found a post recalling an American issue of MacUser from 1996. Almost as soon as I had read the post the latest MacBook 17″ unibody issue of MacUser (UK) arrived. The Geek Out New York article was an affectionate remembrance of the now-defunct enthusiast magazine (whose target audience is, hopefully, obvious).
At first I was tempted to tell them that MacUser was alive and well. The British title has been publishing for many years (think Macintosh Quadra and before) and has been a fairly good, well subscribed magazine. But then as read my new, redesigned MacUser I realised that the rumours of its death, as it seems, were not so greatly exaggerated.
With an opening, if not apologetic word, from the editor, MacUser does now look every bit the defunct enthusiast magazine. The design has changed considerably – arguably style is subjective and we’re not all going to agree here. Gone is the slick appeal and generally good art direction. In its place are bright iPhone/Android/Palm Pre styled boxes with nostalgic Web 2.0 fades and drop shadows. It is all very readable but also un-special.
The editorial and opinion is largely the same (good), but the rest of the content has been strangely reduced (vacant). And in the reduction process it has lost something – perhaps the qualities Geek Out New York sentimentally recalls of its overseas cousin. Popularity is never assured with middle-of-the-road reporting. Lucky then that the dogmatic comments of Howard Oakley haven’t been lost in the transition.
This change begs the question, what’s the purpose? A question you could apply to many newstand gadget/computer-related magazines. The answer probably should be, because websites are killing specialist titles like MacUser.
Increasingly MacUser’s editorial has been days, if not weeks behind the news websites, blogs and online experts. The magazine’s strength had perviously been in large pictures and smart editorial – perfect fanboy fodder accentuated by a mix of good lighting, clever illustration and subtle art direction. The new version dispenses with these devices, missing even the opportunity to make the award system (Editor’s Choice, Labs Winner and Best Value) colour-coded for ease-of-use.
If enthusiast magazines are to survive they need offer more for the fanboys and loyal readers – gadget-porn, less about news and more about hardware add-ons and software reviews. Up-to-date news has been the currency of nightly reports and blogging. Magazines like MacUser can’t compete with this kind of immediacy. Where they can compete is in presentation, the slickness of high-resolution photos, and portability. A magazine can travel – on the beach, on the underground, on buses and in airplanes. The joys of reading, the allure of the latest model, thinnest curves and fastest gadget don’t have to be had in front of screen.
As a friend said debating this issue, “You might have a tough choice, or an argument, with Let It Be or Let It Bleed but would who really choose Bridges to Babylon first?” Change is only good where strengths remain. Goodbye MacUser we’ll miss you.
Gotta like touch

No need for fanboys… the touch is alright
Two months ago, and annoyingly before the newest release, I upgraded my ageing 20GB iPod 3G. The short Nano was a possibility and a lot of consideration went to the Classic for its massive storage. Against more reasoned judgement I opted for the 8GB iPod touch. The Apple Store Trafford Centre, Manchester, had quite few out on display, and, like many, I couldn’t get enough.
The transition from iPod 3G to iPod touch was almost easy. My old iPod had buttons so I wasn’t a scroll wheel die-hard. What really took time to get use to was rationing my music – 20GB does not divide easily to 8GB. When I finally got to grips with smart playlists my listening habits completely changed. Now I listen to a lot more tracks than I did; those lost, buried or overlooked songs are now more available using Genius, shuffle and random playlist placement.
What wasn’t so easy, and look a lot of time were movies. There is a big investment in ripping DVDs to mp4, luckily Handbrake is very helpful. Music might be the main staple of an iPod, but having a few video podcasts, movies and the odd bit of TV make a train journey much more pleasant.
The biggest transition came not from trading one iPod for another, but in the (declining) use of my MacBook. With WiFi access my touch time is spent checking my email, the latest points haul of my fantasy football team and applications from the App Store*. My MacBook is now relegated to meetings (away from the office) or writing documents.
Leaving impressions: the iPod touch is certainly worth attention. The interface and your interaction with it feels right, considered and useful. I don’t care about the virtual keyboard. Typing on the touch is as important as texting on a phone – occasionally useful, but not paramount to use. It might not be a phone (there are better phones on the market – those meant to be phone and nothing else) but it is a great media player, a lean email and web access device and not bad with games.