Macworld 2009: Interview with David Pogue

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Filed under: Macworld, Cult of Mac
One of the highlights of every Macworld is the Macworld Live session with New York Times columnist, musician extraordinaire and Missing Manual author David Pogue. Featuring trivia, parody songs and amusing guests, it's the perfect way to start your Expo day.Filed under: Retail, Reviews, Found Footage, iPhone

Filed under: Reviews, iPhone, App Store
While most people are waiting in line for their soon-to-be new friend, pal and everyday communications device, the world's top tech reviewers have already been playing with the long awaited device. Below is a summary of their findings along with links to their full reviews of the iPhone 3G. Filed under: Software, Odds and ends
NY Times tech columnist David Pogue has done it again. I'll admit that more than once I've wondered about David after watching one of his whimsical video reports for the Times, but then he offers up a gem like the one in his latest column and I realize why he is a powerful tech columnist and I'm a lowly blogger.Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, iLife, Software
The venerable David Pogue has worked his relentless magic yet again to conjure up yet another manual that apparently should have been in the box with iPhone: The Missing Manual (though one could certainly argue that there would have been no way to fit a typical book in the iPhone's impressively compact packaging anyway). As the promo email that I just received states, Pogue's iPhone coverage is summarized into four primary categories: the phone and organizer, the iPod, the Internet, and the hardware and software. Pogue even tackles such issues as synching an iPhone with multiple machines and ways to solve the iPhone's lack of a spam filter. Heck, Mr. Pogue is so into the iPhone, he even sang about switching to it.Filed under: Books and Blogs, iPhone
David Pogue, is there anything you can't do? He has had an iPhone for a few weeks now (one of the perks of being the New York Times tech columnist, I would imagine) and now there is news of the pending release of iPhone: The Missing Manual (it'll set ya back $20). This latest addition to the Missing Manual covers, what esle, the iPhone and will be jam packed full of tips and tricks for the iPhoner in your life.Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Software
David Pogue, the NY Times' answer to Walt Mossberg (as distinct from "This WSJ writer, nicknamed Uncle Walt, hosted two technology legends at a 2007 conference" -- that's the Jeopardy answer to Walt Mossberg) hasn't reviewed Parallels 3.0 yet, at least not in print. On his blog, however, Pogue has given the new version an enthusiastic thumbs up.
In today's New York Times, friend to Mac users and finder of lost loves, David Pogue does a nice user-focused job of reviewing four 802.11n wireless routers (story, video), evaluating performance and ease of setup for the Apple, Belkin, Netgear & Linksys offerings. His conclusion: the Airport Extreme, while slightly more expensive than the other units and lacking Gigabit support on the Ethernet side, is far and away the best performer (up to 90mbit transfer speeds, almost double the best results with the other three routers, testing details in his video) and certainly the easiest to configure and control. He also points out that current Macs are firmware-updatable to 802.11n, while most other PC manufacturers will make you buy a new card to get your speedy on.Filed under: Odds and ends, iPhone
New York Times columnist and Mac-celebrity David Pogue has a great iPhone FAQ. It answers a number of outstanding questions about Apple's new toy that I haven't seen answered anywhere else. For instance, he reports it does not connect to iChat, the iPhone version of Safari does not support Flash or Java, and it has no way to open Word or Excel files. Going down the list is, unfortunately, something of an exercise in frustration. The more I see about what the iPhone cannot do makes me more and more concerned about what it can.Filed under: Macworld, Steve Jobs

Filed under: Productivity, Odds and ends, TUAW Tips

Filed under: Humor, Cult of Mac, Other Events
David Pogue has put together another goofy video for
the New York Times -- Town
Hall: The OS Wars. Pogue answers questions from the "public" about running Windows on a Mac with
Boot Camp and Parallels. Pogue's "public" includes shills like Andy Ihnatko, asking questions the masses are
likely to have, like: Why would anyone want to run Windows anyway? Am I going to catch all those Windows viruses? Mr.
Pogue, is running Boot Camp like having a real Windows PC in your office? (The response in typical Pogue style:
"Let me answer your question in two parts: Yes and No.")Holding the Command key (aka the Apple key) and pressing Tab will cycle through your open applications. It's easier to Cmd-Tab if you are Copy (Cmd-C) and Pasting (Cmd-V) to and from various applications.
| # | Blogger | Posts | Cmts |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Steven Sande | 52 | 4 |
| 2 | Dave Caolo | 36 | 1 |
| 3 | Mike Schramm | 32 | 0 |
| 4 | Mel Martin | 31 | 0 |
| 5 | TJ Luoma | 25 | 28 |
| 6 | Joachim Bean | 19 | 2 |
| 7 | Victor Agreda, Jr. | 17 | 7 |
| 8 | Michael Rose | 16 | 15 |
| 9 | Erica Sadun | 16 | 2 |
| 10 | Josh Carr | 13 | 22 |
| 11 | David Winograd | 12 | 17 |
| 12 | Sang Tang | 11 | 1 |
| 13 | Ken Ray | 11 | 2 |
| 14 | Brett Terpstra | 9 | 8 |
| 15 | Megan Lavey | 5 | 9 |
| 16 | Tim Wasson | 4 | 1 |
| 17 | John Burke | 4 | 3 |
| 18 | Kent Pribbernow | 4 | 0 |
| 19 | Chris Ullrich | 4 | 1 |
| 20 | Chris Rawson | 3 | 0 |
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