The new Shaw internet reality–Bandwidth caps

Editor's note: This is part 1 of a three part series about Shaw's new bandwidth caps. For part 2 click here, for part 3 click here

As of January 1, 2011, Shaw is implementing a pretty significant change into how it charges for  internet service.  The company is going to begin enforcing bandwidth caps on all of it’s customers.  What does this mean? Your account has a limit on how much data you can use per billing cycle. If you go over that limit, they will charge you for every gigabyte you go over the limit.  For the two Shaw plans that would be most common, High Speed, and High Speed Extreme, these limits are 60GB and 100GB respectively. On the High Speed plan, the overage cost is $2/GB, and on the High Speed Extreme plan, the overage costs are $1/GB

So What’s The Big Deal?

Several things, actually, so bear with me.  Shaw has actually had caps on their plans for a long time, they have just never actively enforced them.  They have been used in the past only to act against the users who abuse the network the absolute most; users that go over the cap by several hundred gigabytes.  Until now they have never charged anyone any kind of overage fees on their accounts.  Why now? Shaw is reading the tea leaves, and it doesn’t like what it sees.  Did you know that as of 1 month ago, Shaw’s caps were actually 75GB and 125GB?  The caps were actually raised to that level several months ago, and Shaw was very proud of it.  Near the end of December, the caps were lowered back to their current levels.  People have asked Shaw about why that happened, and they say that the limits were raised as part of a pilot project, and that they showed that only 2% of their customers went over that limit.  The limit was dropped back to current levels, where about 10% go over the limit.

Speaking of trials: if you live in Edmonton, did you know that you were lucky enough to be part of the trial program for this new system, running from October through December?  Neither did I, until near the end of December.  Edmonton was chosen as the test ground for it.  Thankfully we are not being charged right away, and are being reset back to the first notification level so no one in Edmonton will be charged in January.

Who Cares if Only 10% Go Over The Cap? They Should be Charged then.

Those are *current* usage levels.  With the current path that media and entertainment is going, that level is going to go up, and go up fast in the very near future.  A few months ago, Netflix launched in Canada.  For those who do not know, Netflix is a streaming video service available that allows you to stream movies and TV shows to your TV, or other device.  This service is $8/month for all you can eat video, meaning you can watch as much Netflix video you want for $8/month.  Admittedly, the selection in Canada right now is not fantastic, but new content is being added literally every day, and much of it is in HD.  You can watch Netflix right now on your PC, iPhone, iPod, iPad, Apple TV, Playstation 3, Xbox 360, and Nintendo Wii.  More devices will be added in Canada in 2011, including blu-ray players, TV’s, and many other internet enabled set top boxes.  This means that this functionality will simply come built in to at least one new device that people buy within the next year or two.  That type of market penetration means that Netflix will see increased use simply because almost everyone has access to it.  I have measured how much data Netflix uses, and 1 hour of Netflix streaming in HD via my Playstation 3 came in to be about 2GB.  With the average movie being 2 hours long, that is 4GB per movie.  Two movies a week over the course of a billing cycle will work out to 8 movies x 4GB/movie.  That is 32GB, or just over half of your monthly bandwidth cap alone.  If you are already over your cap, it will cost $8 to watch a single move on Netflix, beyond the $8/month you pay to use the service.

Netflix is not the only service that will be affected.  Cineplex Odeon just announced a program to allow people to purchase movies online. Apple has had this service for years with it’s iTunes store, where the average HD movie is close to 2GB.

Each TV network in Canada (Global TV, CityTV, CTV, and CBC) offer free streaming of their TV shows online, which is very helpful if you miss an episode of your favorite TV shows, or want to watch a part of the news again.  At least two of the networks, Global TV and CityTV, offer apps for the iPad specifically designed for this.  While not as high quality as Netflix, watching a TV episode on those websites will be a few hundred megabytes each that counts against your cap.

The other big entertainment venue that will be affected by this is gaming.  There are many services that allow games to be purchased and downloaded online.  The more popular ones include Steam and Direct2Drive, along with the Xbox Live store and Playstation Network Store.  Many new games run in the 10-15GB range, each.  World of Warcraft, for example, is currently 19.9GB.  That is 1/3 of my cap to buy and download a single game, or almost $40 if I am already over that limit.

The last service I will mention is online backup services. I personally use Carbonite for online backups primarily for off site backup of my pictures.  It is not a huge deal right now, since I don’t add much to my Carbonite backup, but first time users who might have 10GB of pictures to upload to back up, that counts against your cap that month.  If you go on a holiday and take 4GB of pictures that you want backed up with those services, that counts against your cap.

These services are only going to become more popular, not less as time goes on.  And these new caps put in place by Shaw are going to severely limit what people can do with this content.

Will This Affect Most People Today?

In a word, probably not.  Okay, that was two words.  The average family of 4 will probably have issues, but one average person, especially on 100GB, might not have any issues with this at all, today.  But within a year, maybe two, this will become a significant issue for many more people.  This issue, while still affecting people today, will only become bigger over time, and will catch people unaware 6 months, 9 months, or 12 months from now, as their usage naturally increases over time as the internet gets used for more and more services.

What Does Shaw Say?

Sadly, not a lot.  They do offer several ways to lessen the blow of this. First off, let me emphasize:  SHAW WILL NOT BE CHARGING YOU THE FIRST TIME YOU GO OVER YOUR LIMIT. You will receive two notices on page two of your bill the first two times you go over the limit on your plan.  Shaw *will* begin charging the 3rd time you go over your limit.  Shaw’s High Speed Extreme package is probably their best bang for the buck deal right now.  For only $10/month more than High Speed, you do get 40GB more data and the overage costs drop in half.  They also offer “data packs” which allow you to add bandwidth to your account for a reduced rate.  Those packs are $5 for 10GB extra, $20 for 60GB extra, or $50 for 250GB extra. Those can be added to your account at any point up to 3 days before the end of your billing cycle to reduce the overage costs, but will remain on your account unless you remove them manually.  Shaw will also provide you with a tool to monitor your bandwidth on your account page at secure.shaw.ca.  However, Shaw will not turn this tool on until after you have already exceeded your bandwidth once.  So the average user will use up one of their two strikes without even realizing it.

So Why is Shaw Doing This, Exactly?

Shaw’s statement says that they are doing this to ensure better management of their network, and to ensure that all users have equal access on their network. They say that the minority of the users use the majority of the bandwidth on the network, and they have the right to manage that.  Now, I will fully admit that that is true.  The minority of users right now do use the majority of the bandwidth on their network. One Shaw rep has said that 9% of users use 50%.  Is that a problem? In many ways, yes.  However, I personally believe that will even out over time as more users discover things like Netflix, or other similar streaming services.

However, this has been the case for years, and it’s only now that they have chosen to start enforcing their limits.  There are several possible reasons for this. Now, these are mostly my personal opinions. I have no proof of this, but this is what I think makes sense.

Shaw sees the coming threat of those online services to it’s cable TV service.  Shaw Video on Demand movies are in the $5/each range, where Netflix is $8/month for unlimited video.  Why would people want to pay/rent a Shaw DVR when you can watch TV shows that are missed online legally for free with ads, or pay $2 to watch them on iTunes.  Of course Shaw would rather you pay to use their service than pay someone else to get that same content.  The goal here seems to be making all of the other services so expensive to use that the majority of people will have no choice but to use the Shaw services.  That seems the most likely explanation.

Another possibility, one which I have no real proof at all, is that Shaw is in the middle of two very expensive endeavours.  They just purchased the Global TV network for $2 Billion.  Shaw is also building out a wireless network, and will be launching a Cell Phone service in Western Canada in 2011.  These are very expensive programs, and Shaw probably needs ways to recoup that cost.

You Sound Like You’re Totally Against Capped Internet.

As much as I’ve hated on Shaw so far here, I’m actually not.  My problems lay mainly with a couple things.  First off, Shaw’s limits are very low.  As stated above as usage naturally increases, users will have a very difficult time staying under the 60GB cap on the High Speed plan.  Think of the average family of four, all of whom use computers and the internet.  Restricting each user to 15GB/month, or even 25GB a month when a single Netflix movie is 4GB, and a single game might be 15GB, is practically impossible.  The internet with Shaw may become like cell phone plans, where a teenager who downloads a large amount of content without knowing that there are limits, or a household just having an above average month, can have a Shaw bill significantly larger than normal, placing a burden on that family.  Buying 3 large games and watching 4-5 movies over the limit would take a $37 bill on 60GB up to $137.  And those months can easily happen. Someone could get sick and just want to watch movies on Netflix for two straight days (as recently happened to me, actually), someone could buy 3x20GB games in a month.  That can easily happen in real life.

However, I do believe that the true abusers of the system should be penalized.  If your use is 10x the average, I do believe that they should have to pay overage charges. But the average person who just has a month where they watch 5 more movies than normal should not be penalized.  In 2008, Comcast, an internet service provider in the United States, became among the first large ISP’s to place a cap on their internet bandwidth in that country.  Their limit on all of their plans is 250GB, slightly over three times more than Shaw’s limit on High Speed.  That limit, in my opinion is more than fair, and only punishes those who truly use significantly more than the average.  Some people with disagree with me on this, that the internet should be truly unlimited forever, but the internet is becoming like a utility, and no utility is an “all you can eat” plan.  I completely disagree with Shaw, but I’m also fair.

The second thing that really frustrates me and upsets me as a Shaw user is the complete secrecy in which Shaw has started this program.  The pilot project in Edmonton started without anyone’s knowledge.  The only indication that this was happening was for people who went over their limits for the billing cycle who received a two line notice on page two of their Shaw bill.  Shaw also has not notified the entire customer base of these limits, choosing only to send letters to users who have gone over the limit at some point in the past.  I am not sure how far back they are going to notify people. I know for a fact that I was over my 60GB limit in either August or September, and I did not receive any notification.  Shaw should at the very least be notifying, in plain text, it’s entire customer base that this new program is going into place. The number of people that this could affect is staggering.  Shaw has about 1.5 Million customers.  If 10% of their customers go over, that is 125,000 customers that will be affected by this system, and that number will only go up in time as more users discover more internet services.  The fact that Shaw has kept the vast majority of it’s users completely in the dark about so many of it’s services is a very bad thing, and something that I as a consumer do not appreciate.  My absolute favorite thing to say about this is something that I sadly have no physical proof of, yet I have seen with my own eyes.  Shaw’s Terms of use page currently lists a last modified date of May 13, 2010.  I know for a fact that in mid December that Terms of use had the higher 75GB and 125GB limits in the document.  By the end of December, the Terms of use now reference the 60GB and 100GB limits., while still stating a modified date of May 13, 2010, while they clearly have been modified since then.  I do not have a screenshot from before this, so I sadly cannot prove this to be true, but I looked, and I know what I saw.  That kind of practice does not leave me with a good feeling about Shaw.

EDIT: Note that as of January 13th, the Shaw Terms of Service have been updated to reflect a modified date of December 15, 2010, and that is no longer reads at July 20th.

So What Are The Options?

There aren’t very many good ones, honestly.  If Telus has the Optik TV service in your area, switching to Telus is something that is a possibility.  Telus’ Optik TV and internet packages actually provide better service and value for a very comparable price to Shaw’s offerings, and a Telus representative has stated on camera that they will not be capping and charging for overages on their network.

The only other real option is to call Shaw and voice your displeasure and concerns.  Talk to managers, not the front line staff.  Talk to the highest person you can get a hold of.  The best option is to get Shaw to either dramatically increase the limits to reasonable levels, or to remove them altogether. If there is enough of a customer backlash, anything is possible.

Are you done now?

Almost.  I just want to say a few quick things to close.  First off, much of the information I have put into this post comes from a series of forum posts.  So while I cannot confirm their accuracy 100%, many things that they have said have matched the few mainstream media reports, and the few official things that Shaw has published.  Other information I gathered from Wikipedia, Global TV, CTV, CityTV, the CBC and the Globe and Mail.

I asked that you call Shaw and provide your feedback against this new system, and the way it was implemented.  One thing that I do ask is for anyone calling to remember that the first person you talk to is likely a front line staff member who has absolutely nothing to do with the decisions that were made.  These are staff who do their best and take a lot of angry calls every day.  Please be kind to those people, your problem is not with them, it is with the decision makers.  If you do not have a positive experience with the front line staff you speak with, ask to talk to their manager, and keep going up the chain until you get someone who is reasonable.

One thing that I ask of you, the person reading this, is to spread the word.  As I have stated, very few people have been notified of this, and fewer really know all of the issues with this change to Shaw’s services.  This is an issue that deserves more attention, and the more people that know about it, and ask questions, the better.

And lastly, You may have noticed that I have kept discussions on this article to services that are legal.  I know that there are perfectly legitimate uses for services like Bittorrent, but I also know what most people use it for the majority of the time.  I welcome discussion in comments, but please note that all comments are moderated before going up, and that any posts talking about illegal services and uses of internet service will not be approved.  Please keep all discussions civil.

Samsung Galaxy S Vibrant for Bell Review

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The Samsung Galaxy S Vibrant for Bell Mobility is the newest, and highest spec’d Android Phone in Canada, and I have it.  The Galaxy S has some of the best specs that can be found in the mobile market right now.  A 1GHz Hummingbird processor, a 4” Super AMOLED display with a 480x800 resolution, 512MB of ram, and 16GB of internal storage, which is divided about evenly between application storage and media storage. There is also a MicroSD card slot to accommodate an additional 32GB of storage.  There is a 5MP autofocus camera that takes 720p video, but sadly lacking flash.  The Galaxy S from Samsung is actually a line of phones.  The Bell variant of the phone is based on the European version, which also means that it has a front facing camera, and looks different than the Galaxy S Vibrant released on T-Mobile in the USA. The phones at their core are the same, with several small differences.  The phone is almost completely devoid of physical buttons.  Only a power/standby, volume rocker, and home button are mechanical. The back and menu buttons are capacitive touch, and while are easy to press and find are not 100% responsive, though that is partly android’s fault.  There is a 3.5mm jack on top as well as a MicroUSB port, which is covered not by a rubber or plastic flap but actually a sliding door, which is frankly genius and I’m amazed no one has thought of this method before.  Under the battery cover is the afore mentioned MicroSD slot, the SIM card, and a 1500 maH battery.  I’m not a huge fan of having the microSD slot under the battery cover, but with 16GB on board I don’t even have one in right now, and unlike some phones you don’t have to remove the battery to get at the slot, so it’s not terrible. The phone comes with the basic accessories.  A USB cable, power adapter (that you plug the USB cable into), a stereo headset that surprisingly doesn’t suck, and a small quick start guide and warranty info.

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To be frank, the Galaxy S is the best phone I have ever held and used.  I haven’t used an iPhone 4 yet, or one of the 4.3” phones (droid X and Evo 4G) that are currently US only.  The Galaxy S is very thin, thanks to the Super AMOLED display, which is 50% thinner than the previous generation.  That makes the phone, while large in the hand, still feel very small, which is appreciated.  The display itself is simply stunning.  Colours are extremely bright and vibrant, to the point where they almost pop out of the screen.  Video looks amazing, and I have watched several movies on the screen and am very impressed.  The screen is visible, if not stellar in direct sunlight. It’s certainly good enough to make a phone call, but I wouldn’t try to read a novel.

This phone is, in a word, fast.  That is largely thanks to it’s 1 GHz processor.  It is leaps and bounds beyond any phone I have ever used, including the Palm Pre, and the BlackBerry Tour 9630 I currently use for work.  In my limited experience using an iPhone 3GS, I can say that the Galaxy S is faster than that as well.  Apps launch nearly instantly, I encountered very little slowdown, and the phone was able to do everything I threw at it, including some gaming, without breaking much of a sweat at all.  When I stop and think about it it really blows my mind where technology is at.  The first computer I ever used at school had a 90 MHz Pentium processor, and 800MB HDD, and 32MB of ram.  the first computer my parents purchased was a Pentium Pro 200MHz with 32MB of ram and 4GB of storage.  Now I hold a phone in my pocket that surpasses that in every way, and then some.

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the Galaxy S currently runs Android 2.1 with Samsung’s TouchWiz 3.0 interface on top.  This is my first experience with Android, and I have never played with a stock install of Android, so I can’t really compare it to stock, but overall I do like Samsung’s interface on the phone.  It is plainly obvious that they went for an iPhone clone look, and it works well enough.  Instead of only a phone icon and app launcher on the bottom, there is a “home row” of icons like the iPhone, as well as the app directory, instead of being a vertical scrolling list, is a grid screen of 4x4 icons that scroll horizontally, just like the iPhone.  While it’s not a bad thing, I just wish the cloning wasn’t so obvious.  The home row of icons comes by default from left to right as Phone, messaging, contacts, and an “applications” button that brings up the application list.  The Phone and applications buttons are not customizable, but the messaging and contacts are.  I replaced the contacts icon with Twidroyd, my twitter client.  I completely understand making the app button static, but I really wish I could move the phone icon off the home row, as I rarely use the device to actually make calls.

On the Galaxy S I have 7 home screens, with the “main” screen being on the far left.  I wish I could make that the middle screen, but there doesn’t appear to be a way to do so.  I’m still learning how to mix having widgets and app shortcuts on my home screen, and while I do enjoy having a few widgets, am trying not to go overboard with them.  for example, I have a widget for Twidroyd that lets me put in a quit tweet, as well as one touch access to doing a twitter search, but I find myself out of habit opening the app normally first.  I figure I’ll either get used to having a widget for that or eventually just remove the widget altogether.  Overall I am very impressed with Android.  When comparing it to WebOS, I would put them about par.  WebOS handles multi-tasking and notifications better, but Android I believe overall has more customization options and features.  Samsung has said that a update to Android 2.2 is coming in September for all Galaxy S phones, I hope Bell is on board with that.  There are custom ROM’s floating around with 2.2 for the Galaxy S already, though I haven’t taken that leap yet.

The last comment I want to make software wise has to do with the Android Market.  the WebOS app catalog, as of a week ago when my pre died, had about 2500 apps available.  I was mostly happy with what was there, and about 80% of what I wanted was available, so I didn’t’ care so much.  After a week looking through the android store, I can say that the difference is night and day.  Not only are all the apps I was missing on WebOS there, there are even more I never even thought of.  I’m really enjoying discovering new functional apps and using my phone in ways I frankly couldn’t with WebOS.

New app discovery is also probably my biggest pain point with the Android Market though.  Unless you know exactly what you are searching for, looking through the directory is painful.  I imagine this was manageable when there were only a few thousand apps, but now that there are 70,000+, finding something that it outside of the top 50 in any category, or something not brand new, is very hard.  I hope that Google eventually addresses that issue.

That being said, this is still one of the best phones on the market, and in my opinion the best phone on Bell right now, unless you are really hell bent on getting an iPhone.  My opinion is that if you want an iPhone, you’ll end up with that.  And if you don’t, the Samsung Galaxy S Vibrant is the best phone that money can buy in Canada right now.  With Bell recently discontinuing the HTC Legend it is quite frankly a no brainer.  The closest competitors to the Galaxy S are the Motorola Milestone on Telus (already nearly a year old however, and the successor is already out in the USA), and the Xperia X10 on Rogers, which, while similarly spec’d, is only running Android 1.6 and it is not clear if Sony will be upgrading it to 2.1.  The X10 also lacks Multitouch.  Rumours are flying that Rogers will be releasing a version of the Galaxy S similar to the Captivate model on AT&T in the USA soon, but until then the Galaxy S Vibrant is simply without peer in Canada.

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Should you buy this phone?  In a word, yes.  It is that good.  Unless you really want an iPhone, or really don’t want to switch to Bell, the Galaxy S Vibrant is the phone to get in Canada.  If you are on Rogers and can wait a few more weeks, you’ll likely soon have your own Galaxy S option, and Telus right now does not have anything on the radar to match.  If you want the best phone today, this is the phone to get.

You can find more pictures of the Galaxy S Vibrant here.

You can see examples of pictures taken with the Galaxy S here, and here. Note that the low light photos are not fantastic, and I have taken some very good pictures with it, just none that I was able to put on flickr at time of publish

An example of a 720p video taken with the Galaxy S can be found here.

The best phone in the world, until it broke

I didn’t review it on the site, but for about the past 9 months I have been using the Palm Pre phone from Bell.  I loved that phone quite a bit.  It had the form factor I wanted, being a phone with a touch screen and a sliding keyboard, a portrait slider. It also had an innovative operating system, WebOS, that I really enjoy using.  I loved using that phone a lot. But, the Palm Pre had one fatal flaw that has proven too be too much.  The hardware had absolutely terrible quality. In a little over 9 months of use, I had 3 of them break.  On the first unit, the screen actually cracked from bottom to top, and not from being dropped. the headphone jack also stopped working.  Thankfully I purchased warranty on my plan, so I was able to take it into bell and get a different Pre.  The second one lasted another 3 months, and what happened to that was that the touch screen stopped working entirely, making the phone impossible to use.  The third problem, and this happened to me on Monday of this week, was that in the middle of the night the phone rebooted, and never turned back on.

I loved that phone so much, it did absolutely everything I wanted it to do, in the form factor that I wanted.  I’m a huge proponent of Palm’s WebOS operating system. I think it’s significantly better than the iPhone OS, or iOS as apple likes to call it, and I believe it has some great potential.  When I bought that phone I intended on it being a phone I would use for at least 2 years, maybe even 3. Palm was reliable on keeping the software updated, and adding new features, and while small, there were more and more apps being developed every day.

The Pre was plagued with hardware problems at launch. I had heard about this, but didn’t think it would be nearly as bad as it would be.  From what I understand, if you got a good unit, it was solid and never broke. Unfortunately there were far too few of those units that had no problems.  My hope with the first two broken units was that I would replace them with hardware that would not break, and unfortunately that did not happen.  I wanted to make it work, I wanted to keep using the Palm Pre

But the simple fact is that I cannot keep using a phone that dies on average every 3 months.  Especially when it breaks completely and I can’t get a replacement phone immediately. For me my phone is my central communication device. Phone calls, voicemail, email, twitter, Facebook, and pretty much any way possible to communicate with me get funneled through my phone.  I’ve become far too dependant on it to have something that breaks all the time. Whether that’s actually a good thing or not is an entire other issue for another time.

Monday afternoon I went to a bell store and purchased a Samsung Galaxy S Vibrant. This phone just came out on Bell, and is a 4” touch screen Android phone.  After 4 days of use I can say that I really love this phone. Is it as good as the Pre, I’m not sure yet.  There are a few things I miss about the Pre, and some things I really love that the Pre didn’t have.  I’m going to be doing a full review of the phone in the coming days.  The real test will be about 3 months from now. If it doesn’t break by then, it’ll be a success.

MacBook Pro - One year later

It has been about a year since I bought my first Apple Computer, a 13” MacBook Pro.  You can read my review here, and see my unboxing here.  What I want to do is revisit the MacBook Pro, and talk about my first year with it. First, the hardware.  I can say that even a year later the MBP is the best quality computer I have ever handled. It still feels solid, the hinge is still as good as it was when I first opened it, and nothing adverse has happened to the machine.  The build quality is seriously top notch, and I know that this computer will still be rocking like a tank long past it’s useful lifetime as an actual day to day computer.  The Battery life was advertised from Apple to be 7 hours.  When I first got the computer, under ideal circumstances I could get very close to that 7 hours, though around 6 was more realistic.  1 year later, and the battery is starting to degrade just a little bit, but nothing like other laptop batteries I have seen.  It does vary depending on use, but I am averaging around 5 hours of battery life, which is still very good, and battery life is rarely an issue for me.  A quick look at coconutbattery tells me I have discharged the battery about 175 times in the past year.

That being said, there are a couple of things I really wish the MBP had.  The screen resolution on my MBP is 1280x800, which is pretty low, even by 2009 standards.  Many 13” laptops come with 1366x768 displays now, which are capable of displaying 720p video full size.  Even the 2010 revision of the 13” MBP still only has a 1280x800 display.  This is one area where Apple really needs to step it up and catch up to it’s PC counterparts.  The other issue I have is with the limited USB ports on the computer. the 13” MBP only has 2 USB ports, and they are very close together.  For example, if I plug in my cruzer micro 16GB flash drive, it blocks the second USB port and I cannot use it.  the Cruzer Micro, despite it’s name, is not the smallest flash drive on the market, but it is definitely not large.  The casing is only about 1cm wider than the width of a USB port.  Apple really does need to space the USB ports out just a bit more.  I’d also really, really like a 3rd USB port.  9” netbooks have 3 USB ports, Apple really should put a 3rd USB port in.  There have been a few times where I really could have used it.

When it comes to the software side, I was really jumping into a new world. Sure, I’ve used OS X in the past, spent a couple semesters using Apple computers in school.  But beyond that, it was really my first foray into OS X.  I didn’t know much about the 3rd party software, and within a month of my computer purchase, OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard was released.

Long story Short, Snow Leopard is miles better than Windows XP, but that shouldn't be surprising, since Snow Leopard was released in 2009 and Windows XP was released in 2001.  Snow Leopard is also better than Windows Vista, but not by as much as people might think.  I’ve talked a lot about Windows Vista here, and won’t really rehash that.  Is Snow Leopard better than Windows 7?  No, it’s not.  Is Windows 7 better than Snow Leopard? The answer to that is also a no.  After a year of using both operating systems on a daily basis, I can honestly say that for the most part, they are pretty much comparable.  Sure, there are some things that Snow Leopard does better than Windows 7, and some things that Windows 7 does better than Snow Leopard, but at the end of the day, they are very comparable experiences.  I very much enjoy using Snow Leopard, but if someone took my MacBook Pro away from me and told me I had to use a Windows 7 laptop instead, I could do that without missing a step.  One of the main reasons I purchased an Apple laptop when I did is because I wanted to become proficient in both Windows ans OS X.  I am still better with Windows, I probably always will be, but I can also now switch between operating system environments without missing anything, or feeling like I’m lost, which really means that my goal has been accomplished.

One thing that I really have noticed in my time using both Windows and OS X, is that for probably 70% of what I do on a day to day basis, the platform I use doesn’t really matter.  Most of what I do regularily lives on the web. I use the gmail web interface, google docs, Facebook, and many more web applications.  I use desktop applications all the time as well, but some of them are even cross platform.  For the apps that aren’t, there are always equivalents on both platforms, and I have learned how to use most of them.  One of the only things I do now that I make a point of doing windows only is working with photos and videos, but the main reason for that is because my desktop computer is much more powerful and has much more screen space than my MacBook Pro.

The only applications I can honestly say that I was disappointed with has been the iWork suite.  Not so say the software itself isn’t good, but the fact that I work with word and excel documents all the time, and while Pages and Numbers support opening them, it is very hard to quickly work with and save .doc, .docx, .xls, and .xlsx files.  that was what actually finally pushed me to use google docs nearly full time.  I’m looking forward to trying Office 2011 for Mac, as I really do enjoy using the traditional Office suite.

Beyond that there really isn’t a whole bunch to say.  I love my MacBook Pro dearly, and really do think it is a wonderful computer, despite it’s few shortcomings.  Perhaps the biggest thing I have learned in the past year of using both platforms is that at the end of the day it really doesn’t matter what platform we use anymore.  Windows and OS X are each other’s peers, there is not one that is better than another, and so many people use the web so much now, that it truly doesn’t matter.  I know this is a tired argument, but I firmly believe that apple could hit a better market share if they simply lowered the price of their computers, but considering they just came out with their best quarter in the company’s history, I don’t see that happening.

Would I recommend an Apple Computer today?  Honestly, it’s not really a yes or a no answer.  If you are willing to spend more money for the computer, and don’t mind a couple weeks of a learning curve, by all means, go ahead.  But for most people, you don’t need to.  There will always be people who will buy only Apple Computers, and there is no problem with that.  If you really want to buy it, you will buy it.  If you don’t, I really don’t think anyone will miss a beat using Windows anymore.  Go with what you want, and what you are comfortable with.  You won’t be disappointed either way.

New Camera!

Up until a few months ago I used, and was very happy with, a Canon Powershot SD870IS camera.  I carried it with me pretty much everywhere, and used it quite a bit.  Then one day, I pulled it out of my pocket, turned it on, and my LCD was cracked.  I was presented with a small circular “hole” in the screen, right in the top center.  The camera still works fine, however the crack in the screen is growing, and with no viewfinder having part of the LCD being broken really means that the camera becomes harder to use, eventually becoming impossible.  I knew I’d need a replacement eventually.
As I slowly started to stop using the 870 I have been using my Palm Pre more and more for taking pictures.  the 3 Megapixel camera in the Pre takes good pictures for the most part, and I have found that I didn’t really miss carrying my 870 with me all the time anymore.  I knew I would eventually need a new camera, especially for when I am on holidays this year, but I waited until I absolutely needed it before buying, so I would know what kind of camera I would want, and waiting for new models to come out.
As much as I would love an SLR camera, they are very expensive, and quite frankly, I probably wouldn’t use it as much as I should because of the size.  There would be no point to me owning an SLR camera if I’d never take it with me anywhere.  So an SLR was out.  I had a few features I really wanted in a smaller camera.  They were

  • longer zoom, at least 8x
  • 720p video mode
  • good low light images (for the type of camera)
  • some kind of manual controls
  • Good image stabilization

There were several cameras that met at least those requirements, the last two that I was looking at were the Sony Cybershot DSC-HX5V and the Canon Powershot SX210IS.  I won’t break down all the features, but there are a few differences between them.  The Canon camera has a longer zoom (14 over 10), more megapixels (again, 14 instead of 10), overall better camera controls, and a slightly better flash than the Sony camera.  Where Sony’s camera excels is in it’s manual options, slightly better low light pictures, better video options (capable fo 1080i video, and more options for taking videos) as well as featuring a Compass and GPS for geotagging photos.  The rest of the features were similar.
After trying out the cameras, and reading several reviews, I picked the Sony Cybershot over the Canon camera.  There were a few reasons why, some of them more important than others.  The Sony camera has been regarded as generally having better image quality, especially in lower light conditions.  Sony pulls this off because their lens is a little shorter thanks to the smaller zoom and the sensor has a backlight that illuminates when the camera is in a low light situation to improve on the amount of light it can collect.  Having fewer megapixels also helps a great deal, as fewer megapixles on the same size sensor means that each pixel will be larger.  Because of that, each pixel can collect more detail.  I’m very happy that Sony decided that the mexapixel arms race is not as important to them anymore, and kept it to a reasonable 10.2 megapixels in an effort to increase image quality, and it worked.
The better video modes on the Sony camera also really tipped the scales.  the Sony Camera is capable of shooting 1080i AVCHD video, with full control of the zoom lens and the ability to focus while a video is shooting.  I will likely be shooting in the camera’s 720p H.264 mode, because the file sizes are considerably smaller (60 seconds of recorded 1080i AVCHD video from the camera came out to a whopping 167MB), and H.264 is a format that is easier to manipulate and compatible with more software.  Having a point and shoot with HD video, with full zoom and focus control, means that I can put my Flip Mino HD away, and can carry one camera to take images and video.
Having a GPS and compass was a nice little add on that I believe I will really appreciate over time.  With that feature I can tag exactly where in the world I was when I took a picture, as well as what direction I was pointing when I took it.  That info is built right into the EXIF data in the picture, so it will always be there.  I’m looking forward to going into software like iPhoto in a few months and looking at all the different locations I’ve taken pictures, especially when I’m on holidays or on the road for work.  My Palm Pre has geotagging on pictures thanks to it’s GPS, and while it doesn’t work 100% of the time thanks to a weak GPS in the phone, I really like looking at the map of the pictures I have taken, even around the city.
The last thing to say about this camera is that I didn’t buy it to take with me everywhere.  It is very solid and sturdy and could stand up to that no problem, and when I’m going somewhere and carrying a bag of some sort with me, I’ll probably toss it into the bag.  But when I’m just heading out, my Palm Pre does the job just fine.  My hope is that the DSC HX5V will be the last “pocket camera” I ever buy, and that by the time I’m looking for a new phone again, the quality of the cameras in them will be almost as good, or nearly as good, as the point and shoots we get now.  The iPhone 4 comes very close to this, and I look forward to others catching up.  Maybe when that happens I can look at getting an SLR, but until then the Sony Cybershot DSC-HX5V will be my camera of choice, and it does the job well.
I will be taking a ton of pictures with the HX5V on an upcoming trip. Some of them will end up on Flickr while I’m on the trip (though I will mostly be uploading pictures taken with my Pre direct).  After I’m back there will be a proper set on Flickr with the pictures taken with the camera.