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Archive for April, 2009
Overheard a few hours ago near Mr. Ed’s stable…
Mr. Ed: Good morning Wilbur, where did you get that awesome new BlackBerry case?
Wilbur: Oh, this case? This thing is a piece of garbage! Wait until you see which case I have coming next week.
Mr. Ed: But, Wilbur, how do you get all this cases when you spend all day talking to me?
Wilbur: Golly Gee Ed, haven’t you heard? Amazon just released their first ever BlackBerry application! Now I can buy you the new saddle you have been asking for.
Mr. Ed: Can I borrow your BlackBerry for a little while, Wilbur?
Wilbur: No, because I already bought you your own. Just make sure you download the new Amazon application before you forget to buy my birthday present next week.
Mr. Ed: Wilbur, your the best. Where do I get the Amazon BlackBerry application?
Wilbur: Ed, I have to do everything for you don’t I? There are two ways you can get it, from your new BlackBerry at www.amazon.com/bb or gallop to here.
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What is an Apple fan boy to think? Research In Motion has scooped up Don Lindsay, one of the original masterminds behind the iPhone user interface, mocoNews has learned. In his new role, he will be charged with “creating” the VP of user experience, according to his updated LinkedIn profile. Spokespeople at RIM and Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Last month, RIM hired Lindsay from Microsoft, where he worked for five years as a design director for Live Labs and contributed to the Windows Vista user experience. But it is likely his eight years at Apple that was of more interest to RIM, where Lindsay’s work left a larger legacy on the mobile industry. At Apple, he led the Mac OS X interface concept project and directed the Design team responsible for the User Experience for Mac OS X. Simply put, that means Lindsay helped develop the iPhone interface. The Ottawa Citizen reported in July 2007 that Lindsay left Nortel in 1994 to join Apple, where “he hired the team that created the Macintosh Computer’s OS X operating system. Though Lindsay now works at Microsoft, where he runs a design group at Microsoft Live Labs, his influence at Apple would remain profound. His OS X team created the user interface for the iPhone.”
Lindsay’s rap sheet probably won’t hurt in bringing BlackBerry devices to the next level. He’s been named inventor on “forty utility and design patents covering core user experience, application frameworks, mobility and speech user interfaces.”
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