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My name is Tyler Ball and this is where I put things.

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I’ll bet Matt Bellamy has three or four of these things already.

Last night my housemates were watching the pilot of Star Trek: The Next Generation when I got home from the bar. Glad to have something to make fun of, I indulged myself. Those silly costumes and thousand mile stares are perfect fodder for comedy.

However in my moment of jest I came to somewhat of a revelation. When the asian court officer midget hands over a list of charges for Picard to read, he does so on a gold coloured slate-like device. It appears to be easily readable, with red text and very little controls, as if meant to be operated by touch. A bold red on gold colour scheme could only be the work of one company.

This is what the new Apple Tablet will look like.

Last night my housemates were watching the pilot of Star Trek: The Next Generation when I got home from the bar. Glad to have something to make fun of, I indulged myself. Those silly costumes and thousand mile stares are perfect fodder for comedy.

However in my moment of jest I came to somewhat of a revelation. When the asian court officer midget hands over a list of charges for Picard to read, he does so on a gold coloured slate-like device. It appears to be easily readable, with red text and very little controls, as if meant to be operated by touch. A bold red on gold colour scheme could only be the work of one company.

This is what the new Apple Tablet will look like.

The Internet and Storytelling

Whenever I happen upon an article like this one—that seems to happen more often these days—I sigh and hope for a valid argument. Luckily, Ben Macintyre has some great points.

I agree with him that the average length of each “piece” of knowledge we consume may be shortening. People are getting their information in smaller bursts from Wikipedia pages, link-blogs and tweets. Is this any different than the millions of people who skim through the morning paper everyday?

Macintyre is also correct that the computer is not the place for reading. For me it is impossible to do long form reading on a computer of the traditional sense. Look at that page the article appears on. There are three external ads, classifieds, comments, tags and countless links to other Times content. How tragic his piece becomes, placed in this context.

Herein lies the problem with Macintyre’s observation. He views the internet from the perspective of the old media and sees the internet as a web-browser that goes to Twitter, YouTube and Facebook.

I feel we’re in a transitional period in reading. The internet’s trend for the past 15 years has been the gradual distillation and concentration of information. This a natural byproduct of computers that multitask and compile information so easily. I’m hoping the advent of single purpose devices like the Kindle and applications like Instapaper will make it easier for everyone to read on a screen again. The internet has not replaced the book because we are only now reaching a similar form factor, mobility and ease of use. The devices that are close are still expensive and hard to use in comparison.

As a personal aside, I’ve been doing much more long-form reading with Instapaper than I have in the past few years without it. At the end of the day I crawl into bed and dig into some truly enlightening and informative material.

I know you’re saying that nobody knows what Instapaper is, or a Kindle for that matter, but when the Egyptians figured out how to make papyrus nobody knew how to read. These technologies are only growing in use.

Macintyre is crying over the lowest common denominator. The people that receive their information on facebook statuses and have twitter pages full of meaningless hashtags aren’t the type that ever read a novel outside of Oprah’s Book Club anyway. It’s unfortunate, but nobody can make an argument that the internet is making it harder for them to find writing and storytelling. They will continue to find narratives in Macintyre’s examples of reality TV the news media. At least they are literate.

I’m not going to argue that the internet is replacing old forms of expression, or whether that’s even possible or worth worrying about. Because it isn’t. The point is that the internet is still so young. The average joe is still very far from understanding how it all works, but trust me, the edges of a storytelling revolution on the internet are starting to show. As soon as the television stops barking the word Twitter at us as the main form of expression on the internet, the better off we’ll be. Macintyre isn’t helping by falling behind the mainstream cry over our shortening attention spans.

marco:

Until we know why the panel is so cheap, I bet we’re going to see a lot of Mac Pro owners buying 27” monitors for $1700 and trying to figure out what to do with the free computer stuck to the back. For new-computer shopping, a lot of people are going to abandon whichever laptop or Mac Pro they were considering and get this instead.

That helps answer the “why” question: Maybe Apple wants to push more buyers away from today’s default system-type choice — laptops — and show them why they should consider getting a fast, spacious desktop instead. And, for the time being, it’s a desktop with absolutely no equivalent in the PC world.

I agree with some others that this is gunning for people to replace their TVs. I think Apple is working on some software that would be added to Front Row and the Apple TV to make them more useful, like a Boxee or a XBMC. They already have the content creators on the iTunes store, is streaming next?

Keep in mind the 27-inch iMac is also VESA mountable. Could the next Apple TV be a television? I’m not sure Apple wants to get into that business, but it’s essentially the iPod equivalent of the home entertainment market.

However, I can’t help but think of Sony and what happens to companies when they try to do everything. Think Different?

Snow Leopard.

Snow Leopard.