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Review: It's not an iPhone 5, but so what?


SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — To some people, Apple's new iPhone 4S isn't the complete overhaul they have been hoping for. Its model number, which doesn't include a "5," reeks of the status quo.
That's ridiculous.
Sure, the 4S doesn't render the iPhone 4 hopelessly obsolete, and on the surface they're nearly identical. But with a faster processor, new software, a voice-activated personal assistant and a souped-up camera, it's a major improvement over the current iPhone.
The 4S will be available Friday in black or white. It will cost $199 to $399, depending on storage space. It requires a two-year service contract with Verizon Wireless, Sprint or AT&T.
If you have an older model such as the 3GS or are thinking of making the move to the iPhone, it's an excellent excuse to buy one.
The coolest new feature on the 4S is Siri, a software-based personal assistant who responds to your voice in a somewhat robotic, yet soothing female tone.
Siri can do all sorts of things, from setting your alarm clock to finding a good local sushi joint to playing DJ with your music. She can't bring up specific websites, but she can search the Web for pretty much anything.
Once you let her know who you are and where you live, she can even do complex tasks such as reminding you to call your boyfriend when you leave your house.
She can understand conversational English, which is great because it let me speak as I normally would (though I did have to enunciate well). This means you can say things like, "what's happening today?" or "what's going on today?" and she'll let you know what's on your calendar.
She's also a dictation dynamo, transcribing emails and texts much better than a phone running Google Inc.'s Android software. It would be awesome if she could intelligently insert punctuation marks, but she does get them if you tell her "period" or "exclamation point."
For a particularly difficult test, I read a random paragraph from a copy of "The New Yorker" to the 4S and to an Android smartphone. Siri didn't get all the words correct, but she overwhelmingly beat the competition.
Of course, after spending all this time together, I wanted to know all about Siri. I asked her a bunch of personal questions, with mixed results. Her favorite color is something she doesn't know how to say in English — "sort of greenish, but with more dimensions." She changed the subject when I asked if she was seeing anyone.
Note for foul-language fans: Siri understands profanities, but she may chastise you. She did this to me, so I asked whether she had a problem with my language. She told me to get back to work. I apologized.
Beyond Siri, I was happy to see a better camera on the 4S, which has an 8-megapixel lens compared with 5 megapixels on the iPhone 4. My shots had sharper details as a result. The new camera can also take pictures faster, and a new lens gathers more light so pictures shot in dim lighting look better.
The addition of a camera icon on the phone's lock screen makes it easier to start snapping. Just double tap on the "home" button when the phone is asleep to bring up the icon, and tap that to open up the camera. Also, there's finally a physical camera button on the iPhone as the 4S's volume-up button does double duty.
You can even record high-definition videos in 1080p on the 4S — the best resolution currently available on a consumer camera.
The iPhone 4S has the latest version of Apple's mobile software, iOS 5, which seems geared toward making the phone even easier to use.
One of the best additions here is iMessage, which lets you send texts, photos or videos to other Apple devices over Wi-Fi or your wireless carrier's data network. That makes it easier send texts to iPads and other devices that aren't phones. It also saves you texts, if you're not on an unlimited text plan.
With the iOS 5 upgrade, swiping the top of the screen now brings up a handy notification page, which shows you things such as appointments, reminders, weather and stock quotes.
IOS 5 also gets points for allowing you to step away from your computer: You can set up your iPhone and receive software updates on the device itself, without plugging it in.
In addition, it includes Apple's new iCloud content-syncing software, which can store your content online and push it wirelessly to your devices. If you buy lots of digital content from Apple, you'll like how it can automatically add songs, apps and e-books from Apple's iBookstore to all your iCloud-connected devices. Unfortunately, it doesn't do this with TV shows or movies, so you'll have to go into iTunes on the device to download them or sync the content from a computer.
The iPhone 4S's performance is helped by a new dual-core A5 chip, which is the same processor in the latest iPad. With this chip, the phone can process graphics and complete other tasks much faster. Web pages, especially graphics-heavy ones, loaded faster than they do on the iPhone 4.
Call quality was decent over Verizon Wireless' network, though it sounded a bit flat. Calls are supposed to be improved on the 4S with the inclusion of two antennas that it can use to receive or send data.
With location services on and using a combination of Wi-Fi and 3G cellular service, I got about six hours of copious texting, websurfing, video-watching and calling out of the 4S. Given this, it should hold up fine during a day of normal use.
If you're not on the market for the latest gadget, you're not entirely left out: iOS 5, which includes iCloud, will be available Wednesday as a free update for the iPhone 4 and 3GS, both iPad models and later versions of the iPod Touch.
If you are lusting after the iPhone, however, the 4S is a great one to get, even if its name doesn't include a "5."

Jobs mourners see burglary at Ark. Apple store


An Arkansas couple who went to an Apple store to lay down flowers for Steve Jobs spotted the tail end of a burglary instead of a makeshift memorial.
Robert Blake and his girlfriend, Amy Parker, told The Associated Press that when they showed up at the suburban Little Rock store Wednesday night, they didn't initially realize what they were witnessing.
Blake said he thought a man running away from the store was just a fellow mourner. Then, he watched the man hop in a getaway car with another man and speed off.
Parker said she thought she could see other flowers left in honor of the man who founded and ran Apple Inc. But she soon realized she was looking at broken glass.
So, Parker pulled out her iPhone and dialed 911.
Police say the two suspects made off with more than two dozen iPhones, plus iPads and laptops on Wednesday. Authorities had not made any arrests by Thursday evening.
Snapshots taken from surveillance tapes show a maroon car driving off from the store.
Parker and Blake said they own everything the suspects stole -- plus iPods and an Apple TV.
"We both not only use the products every day," she said, "but both of our jobs are influenced every day by what he's done, too."
Parker edits video for an education company and Blake is a web developer.
After the couple talked with police, they left a bouquet of white lilies at the store.

Finding Steve Jobs' funeral will not be easy for Westboro Baptist Church


Margie Phelps of the controversial Westboro Baptist Church says her members plan to be picketing at Steve Jobs funeral, but they may have run into a little problem. They might need to find it first.
Funeral arrangements for Jobs may not be released to the public, according to Politics and Computers, due to apparently legitimate fears that the event could turn into a media circus.
Phelps announced the Westboro group’s plans to protest through her iPhone. When people pointed out the irony in that on Twitter, she answered, “Irony is powerful way to publish. By iPhone iPad & iGrace Westboro warns you about hell!”
Jobs’ biological father John Jandali had no comment on the news of his son’s death yesterday. It is not known whether Jobs’ biological parents would be invited.

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Politics and Computers reported that when Jobs was born in San Francisco in 1955, his parents – Jandali and Joanne Schieble – gave him up for adoption. His adoptive parents, Paul and Clara Jobs, adopted the future Apple CEO, and Jobs has reportedly had little contact with Jandali.
The Supreme Court ruled earlier this year that the Westboro Church was protected from lawsuits from its protests by the First Amendment. But the Wall Street Journal reports that an appeals court is divided about picket restrictions at a funeral service.
This week a ruling by the St. Louis-based 8th Circuit opposed restrictions in Manchester, Missouri, which limited protests to within 300 feet of a cemetery, funeral home or church, based on the right to free speech being more important.

Oracle, Salesforce and the Brewing Cloud Wars


Ejected from Oracle's (Nasdaq: ORCL) Open World. An impromptu gathering at a nearby restaurant. Fulsome explanations from PR flacks and tweets galore. The relations between Oracle CEO Larry Ellison and Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM) chief Marc Benioff went from wary and grudging mutual admiration, to red hot rhetoric. How red hot? Well, for starters, Ellison referred to Salesforce.com as the "roach motel" of cloud services this week.
Not that Benioff made out badly. He was reportedly willing to pay US$1 million for the chance to deliver the OpenWorld keynote. He'll get that back -- plus all the free publicity he could ask for.
The two sides appear more than eager to give their spin on the keynote kerfuffle to any and all who will listen -- although neither company was able to produce a spokesperson to talk to the E-Commerce Times about its cloud computing services for this story.
Which is, after all, what the whole circus was really about: Oracle is encroaching on Salesforce.com's turf with its own public cloud service. Competition is seriously ramping up.
"It is important to recognize that Oracle Public Cloud is still very early -- and like any version 1.0 product, there is reason for customers to be cautious, Nucleus Research Vice President Rebecca Wettemann told the E-Commerce Times.
"However, the real winners are customers that now have more choices," she said.

A Look at Public Cloud

Oracle Public Cloud, as described by Ellison, provides customers access to Oracle Fusion Applications, Oracle Fusion Middleware and Oracle Database, all of which are managed, hosted and supported by Oracle.
Its cloud offering, which runs on Oracle systems, also includes Oracle Fusion CRM, HCM, Social Network, Java and Oracle Database Cloud service. In short, it offers several different business applications via the cloud.

The Drawbacks of Multitenancy

It is positioned as the answer for customers that do not like the drawbacks of multitenant Software as a Service applications.
"Virtualization is an effective approach -- one that Oracle is good at -- and Oracle is clearly taking advantage of that," said Wettemann.
Salesforce.com, for its part, put a stake in the ground years ago with its firm belief in the value of multitenancy, although lately it has relaxed its stance. Earlier this year, it announced a new Database.com Data Residency option that lets companies keep readable versions of data on premises.

A Java Shop

Other considerations that prospective users should factor in are the advantages and disadvantages of using a Java-based system versus a proprietary one, said Wettemann, and whether a company will need the myriad business applications Oracle has available.
Whether the system is Java-based or proprietary, in particular, will be an important distinction for a lot of customers, she said. "Certainly it raises questions about vendor lock-in."

The Hybrid Model

Oracle is also pushing its hybrid approach to computing -- that is, the ability to move users and workloads from the enterprise to the cloud and back seamlessly, noted Muneer Taskar, head of Persistent's cloud computing practice.
"This is ideal for customers that want to either test out the cloud or want to use the cloud in a limited manner," he told the E-Commerce Times.
However, only a small subset of users would be interested in this functionality, Wettemann pointed out.

Who's the Most Reliable?

Both vendors promise reliability, but this is a no-contest question, according to Taskar. "It is too early in the game to be able to speak to Oracle's reliability, whereas Salesforce is a proven platform -- multiple times over."

CRM vs. Oracle DB

Then there is the matter of a CRM-focused approach versus an ERP, database-oriented one.
"When [you] look at Oracle, you have hundreds of different modules for all areas of the business. Salesforce.com is more CRM and custom-app focused," Wettemann observed.
Here Oracle is the hands-down winner, said Taskar -- that is, if you want an Oracle DB and allied enterprise services in the cloud.
"That makes sense for enterprises that already have Oracle products installed. Salesforce has focused on the social enterprise and has the framework built in for feeds, sharing, collaboration and APIs to enable consumption via external app. Oracle has yet to elaborate on social networking support."

Opposite Directions, Same Goal

Basically, Oracle and Salesforce are heading to the same destination, Taskar concluded, but they are coming from opposite directions -- with completely different features to boot.
"Salesforce.com has been wildly successful with its flagship CRM product," he said. "With that success it is safe to say that they understand the cloud, and particularly SaaS, better than anyone else. This is Salesforce.com's edge. What remains to be seen is whether they can capitalize on this edge and replicate the success they have had in CRM as enterprises move other pieces of their IT pie to the cloud."
Oracle, on the other hand, is taking its success in enterprise IT -- and in some cases, complete dominance -- and trying to replicate it in the cloud, continued Taskar.
"The technology Oracle is moving to the cloud is already proven," he maintained, "and more importantly, widely entrenched. Not having to learn, or do, anything new or proprietary is a powerful pro in enterprise IT decision making, and this will work in Oracle's favor."