Wozniak Nitpicks, Apple's latest offerings.

wozniak_co-founder-of_apple.jpg Wozniak, who created the Apple I and Apple II computers in the mid-1970s but ended his full-time employment with the company in the late '80s, said he was puzzled by the lack of 3G support on the iPhone and that he didn't believe the MacBook Air would be a hit."To tell you the truth I was really disappointed when the iPhone was introduced ... half the phones in the AT&T store at the time were 3G phones," Mr. Wozniak said during a press conference following his keynote speech at the Broadband and Beyond Conference this morning. "I was shocked because Apple is bringing the full internet [to mobiles] - a full web page with pictures and everything - and it's not 3G and I knew that would be a speed detriment." Wozniak, who has moved on to new ventures since Apple but is still an employee and shareholder, said he did not know when a faster 3G iPhone would be released, although it had "sort of been known since day one that it would be here [eventually]". The current iPhone model supports fast EDGE networks operated by Telstra and regular 2G networks, but both aren't as fast as 3G. At the UK launch of the iPhone, CEO Steve Jobs said Apple left out 3G support because it would have a detrimental effect on battery life. "I don't understand why it would be a battery issue - I get as much life on my 3G phones as I get on my non-3G phones." Wozniak agreed with those criticisms on the Mac book AIR, he didn't think the AIR is going to be a hit. He said he liked to burn a lot of DVDs for friends and watched movies on planes, and so needed the ability to swap batteries mid-flight. "I'm trying to figure out a way to make the Air a part of my life because I'm a one-laptop-only person," he said. "I don't feel it's a benefit if you have to carry the Air plus a DVD player plus a couple of extra dongles to connect to Ethernet things and also maybe an extra hard disk to carry your music - but still there's a pureness about it and really I like it."

Wozniak said he believed Apple TV, but he criticized the 24-hour time limit given to users who rent shows via the device and said the quality of YouTube videos played on it was poor. The rental feature is not yet available on the Australian version of Apple TV, as the local iTunes store only offers music. "My life is way too global and unpredictable for that [24-hour time limit] - I'll get interrupted by something and I won't finish it; I don't want to have to pay again," Wozniak said. Wozniak, who is still good friends with Jobs, is known for his frank and honest opinions, even when asked about topics as close to home as Apple. He said Jobs "very seldom" calls him to complain about something he has said about Apple in public. The most recent case was when Wozniak criticized Apple for lowering the iPhone's price by $US200 within 10 weeks of its introduction, burning early adopters. "We're really good friends - never argued over these things - but once in a while he [Jobs] will just have a comment, 'thanks a lot'." This clearly shows how important it is to have a good friend who doesn't mind speaking his mind against his best friend and yet maintain a healthy friendship.

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