Decisions, Decisions

SignpostSo I’ve just been talking to my dad, explaining that my phone contract ends next month, and wondering what phone I should get next. My choice was basically between Android and iPhone.

My dad asked if the iPhone was the one that if you held it incorrectly, it lost signal strength. I confirmed that he was correct, that was the reported story, and a bumper should fix that problem.

Which got me to thinking, how many people worldwide still consider this a problem? Now, my dad is more than capable on a computer, and is fairly knowledgeable about the tech world in general – but as far as he is concerned, antennagate is still an unresolved issue.

Since the recent availability of iPhone on Verizon in the States, it seems that the popularity of the iPhone hasn’t waned – it seems more popular than ever. Like so many things in tech, problems appear and then disappear just as quickly. Remember the Conficker virus and the Sasser virus? No, probably not!

What about the Y2K bug? You remember the name, but none of the chaos it caused – probably because it didn’t cause much chaos at all. Systems were changed, bugs were fixed, and everything went (vaguely) smoothly, so no-one really thinks of Y2K as having been a problem. But I assure you things were done to make it not-a-problem. I know, I was one of those doing the fixing…

I do still wonder how many perceived problems put people off of trying or buying a particular item of technology.

Fidel Castro to step down

President of Cuba Fidel Castro has officially given up…and will no longer be the head of state for the country he has run for the past 49 years.

49 years. That’s a mighty long time. He was el jefe in Cuba before we won the World Cup – so that is a very long time!

The American government has already called for democratic elections to be held in Cuba. All I’m thinking is that they keep sticking their noses in, don’t they? Don’t get me wrong – the American people as a whole are a wonderful bunch, and I’m not just saying that because I have American relations. Their government, on the other hand, is almost as much use as our government.

Castro’s Cuba has a better healthcare system than the US, and literacy rates and infant mortality rates to rival any country in the world. Seems communism hasn’t worked out that badly for them!

Yes, changes are needed, but it’s up to Cuba and the people of Cuba to instigate them. I certainly wish them well.