\n\nYou can now stream content onto any device that makes sense, you can get audio and video onto your TV via an Apple TV from any OS X or iOS device, and you can use anything except your Mac as an AppleTV remote. This definitely fills in some gaps and makes everything a little bit closer to seamless. (I hope Apple plans to allow Macs to control Apple TVs and, while it's at it, fixes the horrible Remote app, which is annoying on iPhones and positively horrible on iPads.)\n\nBut if you look at my earlier post on Apple's Broken Hub, I whine about the following deficiencies in Apple's model for consuming content (I've added corrections in red and changes in bold.) Aside from one item that Apple has partially addressed, and another issue that was inaccurate at the time (but represents a usability issue) none of these problems have been addressed.\n
\n\t- Why can’t we have an Apple remote that can power the TV set on/off, adjust volume, and select input source?
\n\t- Why can’t I stream content from iTunes (on a Mac) to iOS devices over the LAN? (Actually we can and could at the time, I hadn't figured out how to.) Why can’t an iPad act as an AirPlay receiver?
\n\t- Why can’t I buy something from my AppleTV and have it download to my Home Sharing server and then start streaming? You can do it (indeed, you can simply stream directly) for TV shows but not movies. I assume the problem with movies is negotiating the rights and not Apple.
\n\t- Why does Apple let me turn off Home Sharing on the AppleTV using the iOS Remote Control app without giving me a mechanism for turning it back on? (For that you need to use an IR remote, and if it’s lost and currently paired then you are in for a World of Hurt.)
\n\t- Why can’t a Mac act as an AirPlay receiver?
\n\t- Why does iTunes need to be running for everything to work? Or, why can’t it be launched automatically as needed? (Sure, I can launch it via a VNC client, but I shouldn’t have to.)
\n\t- Why can’t a Mac act as a remote control? (E.g. via iTunes when you’re currently streaming video from that Mac to an AppleTV.)
\n\t- Why doesn’t AppleTV respond instantly when powering on? Every other iOS device manages better response than the AppleTV. (And sometimes it’s crashed and you need to go cycle its power.)
\n\t- Why can’t an iPhone or iPod touch act as a remote for an iPad? (Remember, Apple is selling HDMI outputs for iPads.)
\n\t- For bonus points, why can’t airplay “hand over†sourcing of content to a server. E.g. if I have Cars half-way through on my iPad when I walk into the house, why can’t I “hand over†the playback to my AppleTV with my Mac server becoming the source?
\n
\niOS X: Peregrine
\nCorrect me if I'm wrong, but isn't \"Puma\" another name for a \"Mountain Lion\"? And haven't we had a Puma already? What happened to the Clouded Leopard and Sunda Clouded Leopard? Or the Lynx, Bobcat (a kind of Lynx), or Ocelot? (Perhaps Apple is reserving the latter for a stripped down unification OS X, or OS X for ARM.) Never mind, it's just a code name.\n\nIt occurs to me that Apple is entering the end-game for Mac OS X as a brand — it's going to plough through 10.8 and 10.9, and then there'll be another tectonic shift — perhaps to a reunified platform (iOS X?). This will also be the end of cat names, and possibly of animal-flavored names altogether. The naming theme before Mac OS X was composers. (I'd say the only other kind of animal that has a real shot would be birds of prey. Dogs have too many pejorative possibilities, dolphins would be great but the varieties have horrible names and no-one knows them, apes have the same issue as dogs, and so forth. I could see iOS X being code-named Peregrine or Bald Eagle or Raptor or Redtail or something.)\n\n(As pointless as this speculation might be, I predicted Rhapsody would be marketed as Mac OS X (long before Mac OS 9 came out) and also predicted Apple accelerate the numbering of Mac OS releases so it seemed like a natural progression. I didn't predict Apple would be pedantic about pronouncing it \"Mac OS TEN\" — but I guess prudishness won out.)\nPresskit Weirdness
\nHere's an odd thing. I downloaded the above image from Apple's press release. It's a ginormous TIFF. I tried to open, resize, and convert it to JPEG using Preview and Preview wouldn't let me do it (it wouldn't let me copy and paste it into a new document). I assume there's some kind of weird copy protection built into the document — I believe that there is some facility for protecting the content in TIFF files — that Preview respects. But surprising Photoshop was only too happy to let me do the exact same thing.","$updatedAt":"2024-06-05T09:10:30.277+00:00",path:"random-observations-of-mountain-lion",_created:"2024-07-09T20:29:43.184Z",id:"4679",_modified:"2024-07-09T20:29:43.184Z","$id":"4679",_path:"post/path=random-observations-of-mountain-lion"},"page/path=blog":{path:"blog",css:"",imageUrl:"",prefetch:[{regexp:"^\\/(([\\w\\d]+\\/)*)([\\w-]+)\\/?$",path:"post/path=[3]"}],tags:["public"],source:"",title:"",description:"",_path:"page/path=blog"}}