Technology Survey, Part 2
My friends (and friends of friends) like iPhones. There you have it - Apple wins in my technology survey compared to Comscore's October 2013 market share report, and certainly compared to the Rulon household.
We could use this as a good example of how my survey sampling method is in fact biased. If you love Apple products, you may use this as an opportunity to say how smart my friends really are.
In terms of smartphone manufacturer, the Rulon household is way behind on Apple market share compared to both Comscore and my recent Technology Survey. Obviously, we make up the difference in this household in Samsung devices (3 Samsung Galaxy smartphones and one iPhone 4S). Samsung is a bigger player in Comscore's numbers than my Technology Survey of friends and friends of friends. Interestingly, it looks like Motorola has a bigger representation in my Technology Survey than in Comscore's market share estimates though.
In terms of smartphone operating system, Android is clearly on top in Comscore's market share estimates and in the Rulon household. However, iOS comes out on top among my friends and friends of friends who responded to the Technology Survey. Blackberry and Windows Phone have similarly tiny representation in both Comscore's numbers and the Technology Survey.
More exciting data to come, just as soon as I have more than a few spare minutes at a time to look at and compare the remaining results! Stay tuned.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Sunday, November 24, 2013
My friends are ahead of the tech curve
How cool is it that twice as many of us have a laptop, smartphone, AND tablet compared to the nation as a whole? Yep, that's right - over one-half of those 86 friends and friends-of-friends who took the time to answer my technology survey have all three, compared to only about one-quarter of the general US population (as measured in a 2012 Deloite State of the Media Democracy Survey).
You probably won't be surprised that more of us are rockin' a laptop (87%) than a desktop (63%) computer, but we aren't far from the rest of the nation there (75% have a laptop). I took the leap to think you may also be interested in how many of each technology type we have here in the Rulon household (remember there are just four of us). We have SIX laptops. Before you judge, one is downright vintage that I stopped using for a prior job in about 2003 (and it was several years old then), and another runs so slowly that you can go make a cup of coffee between what should be short tasks, so it is also out of use. Have I mentioned that my husband keeps everything that may be of some use, say 10 years in the future? Yes, that still means one fully-functioning laptop in the house for each person, including the 9-year-old who has a hand-me-down from me.
It starts to get more interesting for smartphones. I knew it would be a majority, but I was surprised that 8 out of 10 of us have smartphones. But then I tried to think of those I know with feature phones, and about all I came up with is my mom and my dad. Even my grandmother tried a smartphone for a while, although I think she did go back to a feature phone. I know you are anxiously awaiting the specific brands we're all carrying around, but you will have to wait for a future blog post for that.
Oh, what about the Rulon household? Yes, we are holding our own on smartphones as well. We have 7 in the house, and that's without the 9-year-old having one. But, only 4 are active, and one of those is just to test the service Ting (which I also plan to review in an upcoming blog post - I'll bet the two of my five blog readers actually interested in technology are really excited now ; )
Finally, almost as many of us have a tablet (71%). I'll bet most of those are iPads, but I haven't peeked at that data yet. Here in casa Rulon, we have four tablets, and we are just about as brand diverse as you can get - I personally have a Surface Pro (great personal laptop replacement) and a 7" Kindle Fire; my daughter has a 3rd generation iPad; and my son has an Asus Transformer.
Here's the statistic that most amazes me with this survey - I completely forgot to include eReaders. How did I do that when I've been such a personal fan of the category since the Kindle 2? The good news is that I forgot something like that on my fun, personal survey, rather than a survey I painstakingly developed for work.
Now, you can all marvel at my cute chart:

You probably won't be surprised that more of us are rockin' a laptop (87%) than a desktop (63%) computer, but we aren't far from the rest of the nation there (75% have a laptop). I took the leap to think you may also be interested in how many of each technology type we have here in the Rulon household (remember there are just four of us). We have SIX laptops. Before you judge, one is downright vintage that I stopped using for a prior job in about 2003 (and it was several years old then), and another runs so slowly that you can go make a cup of coffee between what should be short tasks, so it is also out of use. Have I mentioned that my husband keeps everything that may be of some use, say 10 years in the future? Yes, that still means one fully-functioning laptop in the house for each person, including the 9-year-old who has a hand-me-down from me.
It starts to get more interesting for smartphones. I knew it would be a majority, but I was surprised that 8 out of 10 of us have smartphones. But then I tried to think of those I know with feature phones, and about all I came up with is my mom and my dad. Even my grandmother tried a smartphone for a while, although I think she did go back to a feature phone. I know you are anxiously awaiting the specific brands we're all carrying around, but you will have to wait for a future blog post for that.
Oh, what about the Rulon household? Yes, we are holding our own on smartphones as well. We have 7 in the house, and that's without the 9-year-old having one. But, only 4 are active, and one of those is just to test the service Ting (which I also plan to review in an upcoming blog post - I'll bet the two of my five blog readers actually interested in technology are really excited now ; )
Finally, almost as many of us have a tablet (71%). I'll bet most of those are iPads, but I haven't peeked at that data yet. Here in casa Rulon, we have four tablets, and we are just about as brand diverse as you can get - I personally have a Surface Pro (great personal laptop replacement) and a 7" Kindle Fire; my daughter has a 3rd generation iPad; and my son has an Asus Transformer.
Here's the statistic that most amazes me with this survey - I completely forgot to include eReaders. How did I do that when I've been such a personal fan of the category since the Kindle 2? The good news is that I forgot something like that on my fun, personal survey, rather than a survey I painstakingly developed for work.
Now, you can all marvel at my cute chart:
Thursday, February 21, 2013
In search of the perfect tablet...
Despite being a die-hard techie, I still cannot see the real need for a tablet. But that doesn't stop me from wanting one. My daughter has had an iPad for a few years now, and at the same time, my son purchased his own Asus eee Pad Transformer tablet (the original one, updated to Ice Cream Sandwich). The first time I really saw a good use for a tablet was when following online recipes on my phone, but then trying it on my son's tablet and enjoying the larger screen. I imagine this will be even more useful in a few years when I need reading glasses.
Last spring, I fell in love with the retina display on the iPad 3, and it happened to come out just before my birthday. Having the awesome hubby that I do, he purchased one for me for my birthday. For a few months, I was in love with simply looking at pictures on the awesome screen, trying out the best Apple apps (this was actually my first personal Apple product, despite being in-home tech support for my kids' iPod Touches and our shared iTunes account), and just lounging on the couch browsing on it while my husband or the kids watched TV some evenings.
But, after a few months, the love affair died. I just stopped using my iPad, and it seemed silly to hold on to it for the rare occasions I did pull it out. I grew frustrated with the onscreen keyboard (I'm addicted to Swype-like keyboards on Android), found that there really aren't very many more useful apps on Apple now compared to Android, and just still didn't like the more closed-off Apple OS. This isn't the first time that I tried to be an Apple convert and failed. I'm really not an Apple hater, their products just don't seem to be for me.
But, I still want a tablet, and I'm honestly not all that crazy about Android offerings either. I have considered one of the Nexus tablets, and I like my son's tablet fine, but I find myself wanting to do most of what my laptop can on a tablet, and neither Apple nor Android really fits that bill for me. I have a small Kindle Fire right now (only because I got it on a great Cyber Monday deal), and I like the way it works so nicely with my Amazon Prime account. It also has the best speaker system of any tablet I've tried thus far. But, still, I can't quite seem to find that tablet that really feels like it's meant to be mine.
The funny thing is, I've behaved similarly with other electronics products, always wanting to upgrade to the latest and greatest until I finally find the ONE device that just totally seems to fit my wants.
I went through an almost-DSLR and an entry-level Nikon DSLR before I fell in love with the Nikon D90 (the first DSLR to have video recording as well, which I found was the feature I was missing with my other DSLR, while being disappointed in the picture quality from my "almost DSLR" before that). I still have my Nikon D90 four years later, the longest I have kept and consistently used ANY digital camera. And, amazingly, I don't have plans to replace it anytime soon.
Similarly, I was on a once a year upgrade streak with smartphones until my Galaxy S3. I bought a version of the original Galaxy S phone simply because I needed to upgrade from Windows Mobile and thought I would need a slide-out keyboard to live with a capacitive touch smartphone. Once I fell in love with Swype, I found I didn't need that and longed for a slimmer phone and a little larger screen. Enter the Galaxy S2. But, I had GPS signal issues with that phone and it just didn't have any features that "wowed" me. So, I upgraded as soon as I could to the Galaxy S3 and passed the S2 down to my husband. There are newer phones out now, but I still like my screen size better than the iPhone 5 (still too small, and despite what Apple claims, I CAN operate my Galaxy S3 with one hand, oh, yeah, and still no good keyboard customization options on Apple nor could I swap out a battery easily when needed if I had an iPhone), and better than the Note 2 (too big to fit my hand - I am a girl, after all). So, I am finally happy, which is good, because this time I really need to wait out my 2-year contract!
Back to my tablet dilemma. Which really isn't a huge dilemma of course, because I have yet to identify a real NEED in my life for a tablet. But, I want one, and another birthday is right around the corner. Plus, I've justified the expense by selling lots of stuff on eBay and recouping nearly all I've spent on said electronics products that I didn't keep. So, now I'm considering a Windows 8 tablet. I've only played with Windows 8 minimally. I decided not to upgrade my Windows 7 laptop. From my research, it really looks like Windows 8 is a great Tablet OS that has the added bonus of being able to run real desktop programs (so note that I am NOT considering Windows RT). I think that may be the puzzle piece that has been missing from my tablet experiences.
So, I've narrowed it down to two choices: the Microsoft Surface Pro and the Asus Vivatab Smart. I think the Microsoft Surface Pro could be an actual laptop replacement, but it is so expensive! The Asus Vivatab Smart seems like the perfect compromise on price versus performance, but I'm afraid I'm missing something and may be displeased.
So, any techies out there want to give me some advice? If so, thanks in advance!
Last spring, I fell in love with the retina display on the iPad 3, and it happened to come out just before my birthday. Having the awesome hubby that I do, he purchased one for me for my birthday. For a few months, I was in love with simply looking at pictures on the awesome screen, trying out the best Apple apps (this was actually my first personal Apple product, despite being in-home tech support for my kids' iPod Touches and our shared iTunes account), and just lounging on the couch browsing on it while my husband or the kids watched TV some evenings.
But, after a few months, the love affair died. I just stopped using my iPad, and it seemed silly to hold on to it for the rare occasions I did pull it out. I grew frustrated with the onscreen keyboard (I'm addicted to Swype-like keyboards on Android), found that there really aren't very many more useful apps on Apple now compared to Android, and just still didn't like the more closed-off Apple OS. This isn't the first time that I tried to be an Apple convert and failed. I'm really not an Apple hater, their products just don't seem to be for me.
But, I still want a tablet, and I'm honestly not all that crazy about Android offerings either. I have considered one of the Nexus tablets, and I like my son's tablet fine, but I find myself wanting to do most of what my laptop can on a tablet, and neither Apple nor Android really fits that bill for me. I have a small Kindle Fire right now (only because I got it on a great Cyber Monday deal), and I like the way it works so nicely with my Amazon Prime account. It also has the best speaker system of any tablet I've tried thus far. But, still, I can't quite seem to find that tablet that really feels like it's meant to be mine.
The funny thing is, I've behaved similarly with other electronics products, always wanting to upgrade to the latest and greatest until I finally find the ONE device that just totally seems to fit my wants.
I went through an almost-DSLR and an entry-level Nikon DSLR before I fell in love with the Nikon D90 (the first DSLR to have video recording as well, which I found was the feature I was missing with my other DSLR, while being disappointed in the picture quality from my "almost DSLR" before that). I still have my Nikon D90 four years later, the longest I have kept and consistently used ANY digital camera. And, amazingly, I don't have plans to replace it anytime soon.
Similarly, I was on a once a year upgrade streak with smartphones until my Galaxy S3. I bought a version of the original Galaxy S phone simply because I needed to upgrade from Windows Mobile and thought I would need a slide-out keyboard to live with a capacitive touch smartphone. Once I fell in love with Swype, I found I didn't need that and longed for a slimmer phone and a little larger screen. Enter the Galaxy S2. But, I had GPS signal issues with that phone and it just didn't have any features that "wowed" me. So, I upgraded as soon as I could to the Galaxy S3 and passed the S2 down to my husband. There are newer phones out now, but I still like my screen size better than the iPhone 5 (still too small, and despite what Apple claims, I CAN operate my Galaxy S3 with one hand, oh, yeah, and still no good keyboard customization options on Apple nor could I swap out a battery easily when needed if I had an iPhone), and better than the Note 2 (too big to fit my hand - I am a girl, after all). So, I am finally happy, which is good, because this time I really need to wait out my 2-year contract!
Back to my tablet dilemma. Which really isn't a huge dilemma of course, because I have yet to identify a real NEED in my life for a tablet. But, I want one, and another birthday is right around the corner. Plus, I've justified the expense by selling lots of stuff on eBay and recouping nearly all I've spent on said electronics products that I didn't keep. So, now I'm considering a Windows 8 tablet. I've only played with Windows 8 minimally. I decided not to upgrade my Windows 7 laptop. From my research, it really looks like Windows 8 is a great Tablet OS that has the added bonus of being able to run real desktop programs (so note that I am NOT considering Windows RT). I think that may be the puzzle piece that has been missing from my tablet experiences.
So, I've narrowed it down to two choices: the Microsoft Surface Pro and the Asus Vivatab Smart. I think the Microsoft Surface Pro could be an actual laptop replacement, but it is so expensive! The Asus Vivatab Smart seems like the perfect compromise on price versus performance, but I'm afraid I'm missing something and may be displeased.
So, any techies out there want to give me some advice? If so, thanks in advance!
Monday, January 7, 2013
Baby eReader (aka, adventures in purchasing a kobo mini)
Have I mentioned that I like small things? Well, a few weeks ago, a friend showed me his new teenie tiny 5-inch e-reader, and I immediately fell in love. Ok, not quite, but you get the picture. I had received $250 worth of Christmas money, and didn't plan on spending much of it on myself, but this I had to have! (I know, that sounds really familiar with me and technology toys, but really, I don't plan to spend the rest.)
So, I started doing my research. It was indeed the smallest e-ink e-reader currently available. It would fit in my pocket, for goodness sakes! And for those of you out there happily reading on your high definition tablets, I'm sorry, but e-ink is still indeed the only electronic form of reading that feels like reading a book to me. I look forward to the day that screens can switch back and forth between e-ink and LCD, or when e-ink is in color, or whatever the next great step is.
My friend scored his little kobo mini at Best Buy on sale for only $50 (the white version), and I just can't bring myself to spend much more than a sale price I've heard about. But, everywhere I looked, the price for the following two weeks was always right around the list price of $79. What's a tech gadget loving girl to do?
I did find that Family Christian was selling their version with three free Bibles included, which seemed like a justification for spending some extra funds. There were review complaints of not actually being able to download the Bible versions, but I was confident I'd figure it out. So, off I went to my local Family Christian store after ok'ing the purchase with my other half.
First, I look around the store, but don't see kobo e-readers anywhere. Then, I ask the friendly sales associate. He ends up having to go in back, but emerges with a sealed white kobo mini in it's tiny little box:
Next, I asked him about the 3 free Bible offer, but he couldn't find anything about it when looking on his computer, so he asked the manager. She said something like, "Oh, we're not supposed to sell those anymore because of people having problems with them. That's why they were only in back." I must have looked very dejected, because they said they'd go ahead and sell it to me. Next, I asked if they had any coupons, mostly because I saw some sitting right by his register. Sure enough, he dug around and scanned a coupon, and gave me 30% off! That meant I only had to spend $55 plus tax rather than $79. Woo hoo! Now my baby e-reader could come home with me.
Here's a spec comparison of my daughter's Kindle 2 (originally mine), my Kindle Paperwhite, and the kobo mini:
One thing that strikes me is how prices have come down on e-readers. This of course has been pushed by Amazon's willingness to lose money on their devices in hopes that their content sales will make up all the profit they need. That seems to be working fairly well for them. One thing I don't like about Amazon's content is the DRM, or copy protection, that is baked so heavily in. I really don't mind paying for e-books, and I certainly don't want to distribute them to others without paying. But, I would like to be able to keep e-books that I purchase on various devices without always being tied to a Kindle app. For instance, it should be easier (and legal) for me to move my Amazon-purchased e-books over to my kobo mini. But, I stick with Kindles because in my opinion, they are the best e-readers available for your money.
Here's a quick photo comparison of the Kindle 2, Kindle Paperwhite, kobo mini, and my Galaxy S3 phone:
For now, this kobo mini holds the title of smallest, lightest e-reader on the market, but that won't last long, I'm sure. Just take a look at this upcoming product: http://us.txtr.com/beagle/
I love living in a time when technology is moving so quickly. Don't you? And if you don't like keeping up as much as I do, feel free to look for my used electronics on eBay ; )
So, I started doing my research. It was indeed the smallest e-ink e-reader currently available. It would fit in my pocket, for goodness sakes! And for those of you out there happily reading on your high definition tablets, I'm sorry, but e-ink is still indeed the only electronic form of reading that feels like reading a book to me. I look forward to the day that screens can switch back and forth between e-ink and LCD, or when e-ink is in color, or whatever the next great step is.
My friend scored his little kobo mini at Best Buy on sale for only $50 (the white version), and I just can't bring myself to spend much more than a sale price I've heard about. But, everywhere I looked, the price for the following two weeks was always right around the list price of $79. What's a tech gadget loving girl to do?
I did find that Family Christian was selling their version with three free Bibles included, which seemed like a justification for spending some extra funds. There were review complaints of not actually being able to download the Bible versions, but I was confident I'd figure it out. So, off I went to my local Family Christian store after ok'ing the purchase with my other half.
First, I look around the store, but don't see kobo e-readers anywhere. Then, I ask the friendly sales associate. He ends up having to go in back, but emerges with a sealed white kobo mini in it's tiny little box:
Next, I asked him about the 3 free Bible offer, but he couldn't find anything about it when looking on his computer, so he asked the manager. She said something like, "Oh, we're not supposed to sell those anymore because of people having problems with them. That's why they were only in back." I must have looked very dejected, because they said they'd go ahead and sell it to me. Next, I asked if they had any coupons, mostly because I saw some sitting right by his register. Sure enough, he dug around and scanned a coupon, and gave me 30% off! That meant I only had to spend $55 plus tax rather than $79. Woo hoo! Now my baby e-reader could come home with me.
Here's a spec comparison of my daughter's Kindle 2 (originally mine), my Kindle Paperwhite, and the kobo mini:
Kindle 2 | Kindle Paperwhite | Kobo Mini | |
Color screen | Pearl E-ink, 16 grayscale levels | Pearl E-ink, 16 grayscale levels | Vizplex V110 E-ink, 16 grayscale levels |
Pixels per inch | 167 ppi | 212 ppi | Unknown |
Lighting | None | Built-in frontlight | None |
Screen size | 6-inch | 6-inch | 5-inch |
Overall size | 8 x 5.3 x 0.36 in |
6.7 x 4.6 x 0.36 in
|
4 x 5.2 x 0.4 in |
Weight | 10.2 oz | 7.5 oz | 4.7 oz |
Touchscreen | None | Yes, capacitive 2-point multi-touch | Yes, capacitive |
Book/text supported formats | Adobe PDF (pdf), Plain text (txt), HTML pages (html), Microsoft Word (doc), Mobipocket (mobi, prc), Other | Kindle Format 8 (AZW3), Kindle (AZW), TXT, PDF, unprotected MOBI, PRC natively; HTML, DOC, DOCX | Books: EPUB, PDF and MOBI; Text: TXT, HTML, XHTML, and RTF |
WiFi/3G | WiFi, Free 3G | WiFi, Free 3G | WiFi only |
Internal storage | 2gb | 2gb | 2gb |
Charging/syncing | Micro USB | Micro USB | Micro USB |
MSRP | $359 | $179 | $79 |
One thing that strikes me is how prices have come down on e-readers. This of course has been pushed by Amazon's willingness to lose money on their devices in hopes that their content sales will make up all the profit they need. That seems to be working fairly well for them. One thing I don't like about Amazon's content is the DRM, or copy protection, that is baked so heavily in. I really don't mind paying for e-books, and I certainly don't want to distribute them to others without paying. But, I would like to be able to keep e-books that I purchase on various devices without always being tied to a Kindle app. For instance, it should be easier (and legal) for me to move my Amazon-purchased e-books over to my kobo mini. But, I stick with Kindles because in my opinion, they are the best e-readers available for your money.
Here's a quick photo comparison of the Kindle 2, Kindle Paperwhite, kobo mini, and my Galaxy S3 phone:
For now, this kobo mini holds the title of smallest, lightest e-reader on the market, but that won't last long, I'm sure. Just take a look at this upcoming product: http://us.txtr.com/beagle/
I love living in a time when technology is moving so quickly. Don't you? And if you don't like keeping up as much as I do, feel free to look for my used electronics on eBay ; )
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