I’m sure I’m not the only one left distinctly underwhelmed by today’s Apple announcement of their revamped notebook line. There’s no question the new MacBooks look gorgeous, are faster and are marvellously engineered (check out designer Jony Ive and others on Apple.com talking about the remarkable unibody construction). And yes, they announced a sub-$1000 laptop (albeit $999 for the old MacBook, big deal). But when you thought that Apple were going to deliver on a truly revolutionary touchscreen machine (the multi-touch trackpad only hints at what may come next) and filling that niche for a $900-range sub-notebook, it was hard not to feel a little ho-hum about the whole thing. I’ll reserve final judgement until I get to play with one but if my ancient PowerBook wasn’t about to give up the ghost I probably wouldn’t even be looking. For more details on the event, check out MacLife.
Archive for the ‘Mac’ Category
Over the past year I have become a big fan of cloud computing — or more specifically Google’s cloud — as it is seemingly provided easy access from anywhere and from any computer to my mail contacts calendar and other information. As with anything there is always a risk — especially when something is free like Google — but my recent experiences with Google calendar have me wondering whether my faith in “the cloud” is misplaced.
This is now my third day without access to Google calendar — I can’t create anything, delete anything or sync it with my Blackberry. Now, if you use any technology you accept that from time to time things will go wrong. What irks me is that Google seems completely indifferent to user problems. There is absolutely nowhere on their so-called help pages where I can call or e-mail someone directly about my issue. I have to take my chances on the help forums and hope that someone can come up with a fix.(By the way if you’re a Google user and have seen a similar message to the one shown below, let me know.)
In the meantime it means my Google calendar — on which my personal and business life has come to depend — is completely useless. Naturally this has me thinking whether cloud computing is worth the risk. If I can’t trust Google with my calendar should I be trusting my mail, documents and other information with them? Maybe I’m expecting too much from a free — albeit profitable — service but I am particularly pissed because Google seemed to offer a real solution to malfunctioning desktop software. (Don’t even get me started on iCal! Apple’s customer support leaves a lot to be desired — and they have had thousands of my dollars!)
Fortunately I have my information backed up so nothing is lost but it’s proving very inconvenient to say the least. Up to now I have been a big advocate of Google’s services. However any recommendations I give in the future will be preceded by a very pronounced “BUT….”
Here endeth today’s rant ….
FOOTNOTE: As of this morning (Oct 3), Google Calendar magically started working again after three days (maybe someone there reads Breezeblog!). It would have been nice to have some notification of what was obviously an issue at Google HQ and I still stand by my post that their customer service leaves a lot to be desired.
I’m beginning to think there’s a curse on my Calendar apps. First my iCal freezes everytime I open it and has failed to respond to every known cure – reinstalling, clearing out app support files, uninstalling sync software. Not the end of the world I thought, as I had my trusty Google calendar. But now even this has stopped working — it won’t let me create an event or edit anything, no matter which browser I use. As a result I have discovered that customer support at Google is virtually non-existent, you have to rely on their help groups. So far I have been unable to find any solutions to either my Google or iCal problems so if anyone has any ideas please let you know. Thank God I have my trusty blackberry… at least for now!
