Jonas Lekevicius

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask me anything

App Store updates

Firstly, read Wil Shipley’s piece on this. It’s great, and the issue is very real. Remember Tweetie 2? Here’s a MacWorld article from 2009 about the same “no paid upgrades” policy.

What I want to share is a couple of screenshots I took more than a year ago. iPhone screenshot makes it especially clear that paid upgrades is (or was) being worked on.

However, as with many things with Apple, developers probably won’t be able to do upgrade pricing before Apple itself needs that.

  • 1 year ago
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

The new iPad

For me, the most mind-blowing thing wasn’t the retina display, or 4G LTE, or even iPhoto (although it was far better than I expected). It was the name of the new iPad.

Simply “The new iPad”. Everyone naturally expected that it will be called iPad 3. Then there were predictions that it will carry HD moniker. Turns out, neither is true. Apple never, ever mentioned the name of the new iPad.

The new iPad

Again, simple The new iPad

Or you can just go all Cmd+F’ing on the pages. iPad’s name is nowhere to be found.

“Have you seen the new iPad yet?”

“Apple’s newly released iPad”

That is absolutely amazing. When competitors compete for the craziest name, Apple drops out of the whole game. Their well-established release pattern makes it immediately clear which iPad is being talked about. And they can still refer to this particular generation as “iPad, 3rd gen.”, if there is a need (and I am sure tech journalists will still call it iPad 3, even though Apple never called it this way).

Just as with no-words logo, Apple pushes the boundaries with what is possible in branding.

And here’s a prediction: the next iPhone will simply be “The new iPhone”.

  • 1 year ago
  • 13
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Temporary

This tumblr shall serve as a temporary space for my writing, while I do the following:

  1. Decide what blogging platform to use
  2. Install or implement it.
  3. Add support for MarsEdit (quite important, I like this tool)
  4. Design the blog
  5. Hope that I do not change my mind about 1. before completing the design.

Knowing my technical requirements (blog system must be absolutely reliable, preferably static, should support both text posts and links, maybe even post-specific stylesheets, so on and so forth), this will take a while.

This playground is to begin exploring my voice, what and how I want to write; how often, about what topics, and to whom; using what tools and having what requirements for content.

Let’s see how this goes.

  • 1 year ago
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

About

I am Jonas Lekevicius, web designer and developer.

Top

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask me anything
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union