To ask that every piece of modern electronics is designed to allow the tiny fraction of hackers to upgrade is the height of hubris, unreasonable, and a huge imposition on everyone else that has no desire to ever crack the case. All that ‘upgradability’ ends up making the product cost more and be more susceptible to failure. Catering to the fringe is not the way to make good products. Making the best product you can for a low price is the way to make good products, even if it means eliminating upgradability and home repair.

MacBook Pro: The Next Generation

Apple SVP Worldwide Marketing Phil Schiller took to the stage at Worldwide Developer Conference earlier today to introduce the new MacBooks with Intel’s latest processors. The MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro received the usual and expected regular internal upgrades, but Apple’s biggest notebook announcement was the next generation MacBook Pro.

The new MacBook Pro is a 15.4 inch notebook weighing only 4.5 pounds and only 0.71 inch thick. The screen is a retina display with 2880 * 1800 pixels for 220 ppi, roughly double the sharpness of the screens on the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. 

The next generation MacBook Pro is powered by a 2.3 GHz quad core i7 Intel processor, 8GB of RAM, GeForce GT 650M with 1GB of video RAM, 256 GB of flash storage, upgradable to 768GB. As far as ports are concerned, it has MagSafe 2, HDMI out, USB 2 and USB 3 ports, and two Thunderbolt ports. Firewire 800 and Ethernet ports have been relegated to dongle status. With this update it looks like Apple is quietly discontinuing the 17-inch MacBook Pro.

As expected, there is no longer an optical drive and since this is the next generation MacBook Pro, don’t expect optical drives in future MacBook Pro updates. Apple has been known to keep legacy models though, such as the white MacBook which Apple quietly discontinued earlier this year but it remains to be seen if Apple will keep selling MacBook Pros with optical drive once the next generation model become the standard, and if so, for how long.

To support the new MacBook Pro’s retina display, Apple has updated its built in Mac OS X Lion, the iWork and iLife suites as well as its professional apps. Adobe and AutoDesk are also updating their apps to support the retina display.

This introduction of the new MacBook Pro marks the end of the monstrous 17" model. The next generation MacBook Pro starts from $2199.

Indonesia to curb sales of personal vehicles

Car sales in Indonesia jumped by 17% from 2010 to 2011, to nearly 900,000 new vehicles, and by 11% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2012, despite global economic gloom.

Indonesia’s market is growing faster than China’s much bigger one: car sales rose by only 2.6% in China between 2010 and 2011. Indonesians now buy more cars than any other south-east Asian nation, having overtaken Thailand last year. They also bought 8m motorcycles in 2011, a number that could rise to 9m this year.

This worries the government. From June 15th Indonesia’s central bank says it will require those who borrow money from a bank to buy a car to make a minimum downpayment of 30%. For motorbikes, the figure will be 25%. Housebuyers will also have to make a minimum deposit of 30%. The new rules are intended to prevent a potential bubble in consumer credit.

Indonesia to curb sales of personal vehicles

May the 4th be with you

Rock Band for iOS’s cancelation canceled?

EA sent a notice to all owners of Rock Band for iOS that the company was going to shut down the game on May 31st and thanked them for having been part of it. This naturally drew the fury of hundreds, perhaps thousands of Rock Band players on Twitter even though many are less likely to be still playing the game after years after it was released. Rock Band has been a successful franchise for EA. The series featured additional songs that gamers can acquire through in-app purchases.

When an online game becomes too much of a burden to support or has too few players, it’s natural to expect the company behind it to discontinue the game. Unfortunately for EA, the game apparently still has its fans and they flooded EA’s Twitter accounts in protest.

These players have paid for both the game and the additional content and the decision to pull support for the game when it was still on sale on the App Store was certainly baffling. As it turned out, EA later turned the decision around in a statement released to the public. The company isn’t shutting down Rock Band for iOS after all.

Despite the reversal, this highlights the peril of online games. In the past, video games that have been purchased can still be played years, or even decades later provided that the console set and the game cartridge are still operational. With online games, players are at the mercy of the publishers or the operators of the games’ networks. When the network is retired, so is the game.

On the other hand, most online games have offline elements as well that should still be playable long after the online component had been turned off and Rock Band is one of them. Having yanked support for the entire game when the offline part should still be playable is an odd choice to make.

Touch Arcade pointed out that EA’s support page does list Rock Band to be among the discontinued games but only for the online features. Polygon, The Verge’s Gaming blog even went further to highlight a part of the licensing agreement for the game which states that those who purchase the game only licenses the game and all elements contained within and if EA terminates the game, all licensed elements would cease to function. In other words, if EA decides to shut down the game, it is within its rights to shut down the entire game, not just parts of it.

As pointed out by Guardian, another online game publisher, ngmoco, is shutting down its own online game, Eliminate, which was one of the company’s first online games with in-app purchase elements.

All these simply serve to point out that online games are different from video games of old, which are isolated in nature from the rest of the world, not just in game play and enjoyment but also in its operation. Players of online games no longer own copies of the games that they have spent money on, instead, they only own a license to play them.

Tweet of the day

dailylicious2:

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Google Drive terms and conditions lets Google use your files even if you stop using Google’s services

From the terms and conditions:

The rights that you grant in this licence are for the limited purpose of operating, promoting and improving our Services, and to develop new ones. This licence continues even if you stop using our Services (for example, for a business listing that you have added to Google Maps)

Zack Whittaker on ZDNet takes this paragraph to mean that Google may own your files. I don’t quite agree on that, but of course, terms of service documents can be as clear or vague as the reader makes it out to be. I think the key in the last sentence is the word stop. Does stop simply mean ceasing to login or does it mean after you delete the account? Even further, does it mean Google can use your files even after you delete them from Google Drive?

A statement from Google doesn’t exactly answer my questions.

Google Drive terms and conditions lets Google use your files even if you stop using Google’s services

dailylicious2:

Comparing costs of popular cloud storage services as per today