Showing posts with label better. Show all posts
Showing posts with label better. Show all posts

Thursday, December 1, 2011

With iOS 5 and iCloud, more memory is better than less for your iPhone, iPad

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Summary: The common wisdom is that the arrival of iCloud and iOS 5 will let us store our stuff on the cloud and buy an iPhone and iPad with less memory. However, a recent developer blog post warns that more memory is the better choice.

The common wisdom is that the arrival of iCloud and iOS 5 will let us store our stuff on the cloud and buy an iPhone and iPad with less memory. However, a recent developer blog post warns that more memory is the better choice.

The issue was presented by developer Marco Arment, the maker of the useful Instapaper, the off-line content reading service and application.  The post says the problem arrived with iOS 5 and its automatic backups to iCloud.

It happens that developers have stored data in several temporary caches. This was data that was useful to the application (and for the user experience) but wasn’t backed up in the iTunes sync cycle.

Now the data could be redownloaded, but that might take a long time depending on the available bandwidth (think Wifi vs. Edge) as well as the size of the cached files (the very reason that this data is not included in the usual backup and sync). Apple didn’t flush the caches so everything was fine and developers began to rely on storing their data in the caches.

However, now with iOS 5 and iCloud, Apple wants developers to reduce the amount of data overhead for their apps. If data can be redownloaded, it should be. Arment quotes some developer notes and memos:

1. Only documents and other data that is user-generated, or that cannot otherwise be recreated by your application, should be stored in the /Documents directory and will be automatically backed up by iCloud.

2. Data that can be downloaded again or regenerated should be stored in the /Library/Caches directory. Examples of files you should put in the Caches directory include database cache files and downloadable content, such as that used by magazine, newspaper, and map applications.

The problem as Arment explains it is that the cached data is now cleared when capacity falls to some low point. For Instapaper, this means content stored for offline reading, but it could effect apps that deal with map data, e-books and podcasts. If the user fills up the device with content, the caches with the content might be flushed.

He reports that one of his customers recently packed her iPad full of games, video and materials to read for a long-distance flight — a natural action — only to discover that her actions had triggered the cache cleaning routine. No reading for her.

Of course, downloading large amounts of data in the wild may not be practical or possible.

But even with available, fast, unlimited internet connectivity, randomly deleting an app’s data is still a problem:

When customers save an article with Instapaper, get a book in iBooks, or download a podcast with Instacast, they expect it to be there next time they launch the app. Even though it’s technically redownloadable, customers see that as their data — they put it there, and it’s theirs to remove if and when they see fit.

When the cleaner wipes it out, it appears that the app has failed and deleted their data. And customers won’t know that it’s an iOS 5 behavior — they’ll understandably blame the app developers. Even though it’s not our fault, it’s certainly going to become our problem.

There needs to be a file storage location that behaves the way Caches did before iOS 5: it’s not backed up to iTunes or iCloud, it’s not synced, but it’s also never deleted unless the app is deleted.

My guess is that Apple will fix this issue for developers shortly. Still, buying the iPhone and iPad SKU with more memory appears to be the best choice for performance and productivity.

David Morgenstern has covered the Mac market and other technology segments for 20 years.


View the original article here

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Apple's Black Friday prices leaked; slightly better than last year

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
By Jason D. O'Grady | November 23, 2011, 5:10pm PST

Summary: Apple’s Black Friday discounts are modest as usual but slightly better than last year on higher capacity iPads and iPods.

Why do Apple’s discounts usually suck?

It’s simple really: Apple’s products are so popular that it doesn’t have to discount them. Heck, people still line up to buy the limited allotment of iPhone 4Ses at my local Apple shoppe, and it was announced almost two months ago.

Yesterday the Internet was aflutter that Apple’s Black Friday deals were leaked, but the discounts are pretty anemic as usual. 9to5Mac got the scoop and promptly posted photos of what appears to be a printed sales circular (which is rare for Apple).

While pretty much in line with last year’s discounts, 9to5Mac notes that Apple is offering better discounts on its higher capacity iPads and iPods than last year. The deals range from $11 off the iPod nano to $101 off the MacBook Air, MacBook Pro and iMac. Here’s the short list:

$11 off iPod nano$21-$41 off iPod Touch$41-$61 off iPad 2$101 off MacBook Air, MacBook Pro and iMac

The best deal of lot is the $898 MacBook Air 11-inch which is a cool hundred of the normal $999 price and darned great entry point for a new Mac.

As a “Mac guy” I’m constantly asked about where to find Apple discounts, especially at this time of year. My default response is that Apple doesn’t really discount its products, but there are some options worth exploring:

Black Friday - one of the few (only?) official Apple sales.Apple Educational Pricing - gives students, teachers and staff members up to $200 off.Apple Special Deals (below) - code for “refurbished” Macs, iPods and iPads and a clearance section with a whopping two items in it.(Occasionally) Big Box chains - Best Buy is currently offering $200 off the 13-inch MacBook Air.Catalogers - online retailers like MacMall and MacConnection will sometimes offer modest discounts, free shipping and bundle options.

Apple's Black Friday deals leaked - Jason O'Grady

After that, the only way to get Apple gear without paying retail is to buy it used on sites like eBay and Craigslist.

Are you buying any Apple gear for the holidays? What’s your discount strategy?

Jason O'Grady+ is a journalist and author specializing in mobile technology. He has published six books on Apple and mobile gadgets and his PowerPage blog has been publishing for over 15 years.


View the original article here