Time to upgrade to Galaxy Note 3 from Galaxy Note 1, the power of the pen

In Feb 2012 I bought a Galaxy Note 1. Why because I was and still working on mobile services and we needed something different than what was the solutions for consumers.  I have no regrets with the Galaxy Note 1, but it is getting slower with SW updates.  The battery is worn down.  I have convinced others to get the Galaxy Note 2 which has better performance and battery life.

I bought a Galaxy Note 8 for Tablet experience and now rarely use the iPad.  Being able to write and replace paper notebooks feels better for the way I work and think.  The Wacom Bamboo stylus is a nice pen device.

Today Samsung announced the Galaxy Note 3 and I am ready to replace the Galaxy Note 1.

The press is pro-Phablet now.  Whereas at the beginning the media made fun of the Phablet.

Here is one review of the Galaxy Note 3.

Samsung Galaxy Note III preview

Two years ago, at a consumer electronics show in Berlin, Samsung took to the stage and unveiled the introduction to what is now a booming smartphone genre. The 5.3-inch monstrosity, called the Galaxy Note, has blossomed into one of the Korean manufacturer's biggest brands. Today the same company is unveiling the Galaxy Note 3, the second sequel in a series of supersized stylus-smitten smartphones, which is even taller, narrower and thinner than the first two of its kind. As expected, the new 5.7-inch Note not only utilizes a S-Pen but enhances its functionality and adds better hardware and components to ensure it's able to handle anything you can throw at it.

The Samsung marketing group is pushing the Note harder.

GALAXY Note 3 makes your everyday life amazing

"We introduced the original GALAXY Note in 2011 and launched a whole new smart device category. The undeniable success of the GALAXY Note strengthened our conviction that consumers want higher quality features for smart devices and they want those new features to make their lives better," said JK Shin, CEO and President of IT & Mobile Division at Samsung Electronics. "Samsung GALAXY Note 3 is a powerful, original approach that enables users to tell the stories of their lives through dynamic and seamless expressions of their passions across work, play and life experiences. With a simple click of the S Pen button, users can unlock opportunities for self-expression, features that transform everyday activities into extraordinary events and access to new experiences delivered to them on Note 3's larger screen."

Now I don't look so silly saying the ideal device for a revolutionary mobile service is the Galaxy Note.  The Note 3 looks awesome.

Kindle is winning with an Integrated solution - Latest win in Japan

I have used the Kindle since the 1 and i am getting ready to upgrade my 2-3 year old devices to the latest that will get announced this month. I use Kindle on Android more often than the Kindle devices, but that may change with the new devices.  I used to buy lots of kindle books.  But, recently have switched to just checking out kindle books from the King County Library System for free.  Well it is not free as my property taxes support the library.  I don't have to pay per book to rent the Kindle e-books, and if I can't read it in 21 days, there is a good chance I wasn't going to read it.

Om Malik has a post on the success of the Kindle in Japan.

Kindle is big in Japan — some lessons for hardware’s future

 

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kindle paperwhite
SUMMARY:

The future of hardware is a tight symbiosis of hardware, software and connectivity and content as a service. Whether it is apps, books, movies or anything else — the more you engage with a platform, the more likely it will beat rivals. Amazon is a good example.

Jeff Bezos had a vision to change book purchasing and he is succeeding.

Their ongoing battle, as highlighted by the New York Times story, reminded me of an essay I wrote in March 2011: Why the future of hardware is services.

Back then, I pointed that the future of hardware was a tight symbiosis of hardware, software and connectivity and content as a service. It was vital to ensure that we are constantly engaging with the devices. For instance, there’s Sonos, a wireless audio system that allows you to listen to Spotify and other music services and as a result finds constant usage. Without those services, the hardware becomes just dumb hardware and ends up in the back of the drawer.

The reason why Amazon wins is because it has coupled a service (books/content) to the device and made it dead simple to buy. There is a network connection built into the service as well and to purchase a book is simply a click because it has a pre-existing commercial relationship with customers. I for certain am not going to sign up for Kobo or Barnes & Noble — and I think this is the crucial difference. Amazon has a much deeper (and longer) relationship with consumers who use it to shop for more than just books.

Amazon has won the ebook reader battle.  Microsoft threw in the towel in 2012 after 12 years of attempting to participate with its  Reader Technology.

In August 2011, Microsoft announced they were discontinuing both Microsoft Reader and the use of the .lit format for ebooks at the end of August 2012, and ending sales of the format on November 8, 2011.[2]

Amazon won this battle vs. competition based on its integrated solution and its business model of giving away readers for other platforms and selling the Kindle hardware for as low as they could justify to gain market share.  I have ordered the latest 2nd gen paper white device.

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What is the next kindle device?  They were smart enough to get in early enough with the Kindle Fire.  Phones?  You know there are dozens if not hundreds of people along with Bezos dreaming of what could be the next hardware. watches, phones, cars.  What is the Amazon brand going after next?

Their Deceptive Mind, understanding how others non-critical thinking

We all pride ourselves on our critical thinking.  I have been researching Brain Functionality and one of the audio books I picked up is Your Deceptive Mind, a guide to critical thinking.

Your Deceptive Mind: A Scientific Guide to Critical Thinking Skills | [The Great Courses]
Play Your Deceptive Mind: A Scientific Guide to Critical Thinking Skills

Your Deceptive Mind: A Scientific Guide to Critical Thinking Skills

No skill is more important in today's world than being able to think about, understand, and act on information in an effective and responsible way. What's more, at no point in human history have we had access to so much information, with such relative ease, as we do in the 21st century. But because misinformation out there has increased as well, critical thinking is more important than ever.

These 24 rewarding lectures equip you with the knowledge and techniques you need to become a savvier, sharper critical thinker in your professional and personal life. By immersing yourself in the science of cognitive biases and critical thinking, and by learning how to think about thinking (a practice known as metacognition), you'll gain concrete lessons for doing so more critically, more intelligently, and more successfully.

The key to successful critical thinking lies in understanding the neuroscience behind how our thinking works - and goes wrong; avoiding common pitfalls and errors in thinking, such as logical fallacies and biases; and knowing how to distinguish good science from pseudoscience. Professor Novella tackles these issues and more, exploring how the (often unfamiliar) ways in which our brains are hardwired can distract and prevent us from getting to the truth of a particular matter.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What I have found most beneficial is thinking about the people I have met , worked with, or tried to have intelligent conversations who have a Deceptive Mind, and think they are critical thinkers.  

Understanding how the mind can be deceived is useful to understand why others may not agree with you.  and, sometimes you are the one who has been deceived. We all make mistakes and some of the mistakes we make is being deceived.  Think you are immune?  If you are, then Magic tricks never work on you.

 

Critique of the Microsoft-Nokia deal

GigaOm's Om Malik has a post on the Microsoft-Nokia deal that will give you a critical view.  One nugget that Om has dug up is what some of the Nokia insiders think.

In theory, Microsoft is getting a great engineering team, a great product design team and a great brand (well, better than Windows Phone). However in reality what it is not getting are the intangibles. In the course of my seven odd years of reporting on Nokia, I have met many talented people and many of them had a lot of pride in working for the company. It was the shining achievement of Nokia and its engineering culture. Even when things got bad over past few years, many believed that Nokia had the talent to help things around. I made a few phone calls this evening, and all I hear is a sense of quiet despondency and loss of hope. Working for Microsoft isn’t working for Nokia, is a common refrain.

The zinger comment is referencing Google's Vic Gundotra.

Vic Gundotra, Google’s sharp-elbowed senior executive who, like Android co-creator Andy Rubin, wanted to win over Nokia and bring it into the Android camp about two years ago, put it best when he tweeted: “Two turkeys don’t make an Eagle.” And while he might have ruffled some feathers in Microsoft and Nokia offices, his observation wasn’t that off the mark. Microsoft makes a mobile OS, that the market doesn’t seem to want. Nokia smartphones sales make drying paint seem like a John Woo thriller. It doesn’t matter from which angle you look, the combination of these two companies into a single entity doesn’t add up.

Om finishes with an upside to the deal.

If there is one upside, then I do believe that this just might be the best thing to happen to Finland and the Finnish startup scene. A lot of the talent draining out of Nokia will look for new opportunities in their areas of expertise — radio engineering, manipulating sensors and embedded systems. If anything, this is Finland’s big opportunity to become the epicenter of the Internet of Things.

Disclosure: I work part-time as an analyst for GigaOm and have watched Om in action first hand.  He knows what he is talking about.