PC World's 20 Most Innovative Products of 2006 233
Craig Sender writes "PC World has put together a list of their choices for the 20 Most Innovative Products of 2006. The List includes Office 2007, Nintendo Wii, Sony Reader, Sony PlayStation 3, the BlackBerry Pearl, and some other interesting choices."
Print view (Score:5, Informative)
Ridiculous that the article is stretched across 8 pages.
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Thanks for the alternate view linkage, it would hurt even more if I had to read that spotty list clicking "next" over and over
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Are you also one of those nutters who asks: "Got any coinage?"
WHAT IS WRONG WITH COINS! WHAT!
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And on PC World's site, the article's "next" and "back" links are nearly pixel for pixel copies of....Safari's back and forward buttons.
Even PC World's web site is aping the Mac OS now!
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gah (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd like to see advertising revenue figures from 2006 for the featured items' companies on PCWorlds financials... I wonder how closely they'd tie in to the rank of the products.
I'm sure it's part of their sales strategy (I work in print publishing... you can bet advertisers get preferential treatment in editorial content).
Here are the top 10. (Score:5, Informative)
2. Intel Core 2 Duo
3. Parallels Desktop for Mac
4. Nintendo Wii
5. Samsung 32GB SSD
6. Sony Reader
7. YouOS
8. Dell XPS M2010
9. Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB
0. T-Mobile Dash
Re:Here are the top 10. (Score:5, Insightful)
Core 2 Duo: How is this anything but an incremental improvement over the Core Duo, which is in turn just improvements on techniques that have been out there for years? The first dual-core chip could have been innovative. The 39th or whatever this is isn't.
MS Office 2007: I see. So, Office 6, Office 97, Office XP, Office 2003, none of those were innovative. But this one, the 10th or so in a series, really is.
I just don't see any innovation here. A hard drive bigger than previous hard drives? Unheard of!
Re:Here are the top 10. (Score:4, Funny)
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I mean, every time there's a new Office, various MS-fans tell me that it's completely innovative and, unlike the previous one, doesn't suck. Why should I believe it this time?
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P.S: Please don't tell you're sick of already trying out the all the previous versions and why should this version of Office be better. It just may be.
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I'm not about to spend $hundreds on the off chance that, for the first time since 1987, I'm going to find that MS Word has suddenly become a good tool for writing with.
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There, fixed that for you !
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I wish MS [and other developers] spent more time copying the UI idea's of Apple, which generally have fewer of the more arcane options that people rarely if ever change from their default values. Focus on what people WILL use, not what they COULD use.
First: You're right. Fixing the interface is not innovative. But if this was a 20 Best Ideas list or 20 Best Things To Have Happened list, damn straight the Ribbon in Office 2007 would have placed on it, and that's a line I didn't think I'd write about this
Re Bleh (Score:3, Funny)
Just think, right around the corner we might see awk Radio! Or Perl the Movie. Or how about groff the Board Game?
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Could it be that MS Office (#1 on this list) just isnt popular with the slashdot crowd and that is why the first several posts are denouncing PC World as paid Microsoft shills?
Could be. (Score:5, Insightful)
It could be.
But then
Now, compare that to this system.
http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/compaq/ [obsoleteco...museum.org]
Yes, the "luggable" computer. But, all you have to do to make it "innovative" is to add more speakers (speakers with a portable computer, how
And reviews like that are why PC World is disparaged.
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I guess you can make the case that a luggable
The difference being 22 years. (Score:2)
Yes. About 22 years worth of "difference". Seeing as how I believe that the Compaq luggable was around in 1984.
Yes. Hence the term "luggable".
"gamers system"?
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You mentioned the ipod in another comment which wasn't, if one considers it as such, innovative because it was an mp3.portable player
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Its not unusual for top X lists to sound like a little like ads, I mean obviously they liked the product so it seems logical that the little blurb would be favorable. They have list
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Both Firefox and GMail were hard to ignore. They took the world by storm and forced Microsoft (and in GMail's case, just about every other webmail provider) to improve their product.
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My point with firefox and gmail is not that they werent important
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Proving once again that PC World has no shame (Score:4, Insightful)
But wait! There wasn't an iPod! But iPods are the most innovative things evar!
Number 0 must be the iPod Video, now with rubber ducky control built in!
Re:Proving once again that PC World has no shame (Score:5, Insightful)
To begin or introduce (something new) for or as if for the first time.
What bothers me with this list is that most of the products can not really be classified as inovative; the list might be alright if it was the 10 most important products released in 2006, or the 10 most improved product lines of 2006, but 10 most innovative is a big stretch. Now, I recognize that this is partially my love of the Wii speaking but the Wii is (from my understanding) the only product on that list which really brings anything new; the others may bring a lot of improvement to their product lines, but they don't bring much that is really new.
Annoying article.. (Score:2, Redundant)
Playstation 3? (Score:3, Insightful)
Can someone explain to me exactly what is innovative about this? I do not understand how a hardware upgrade is innovative. Can I get on this list since I put a new video card in my machine this year?
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While I really hope that it isn't successful (mostly because I want the video game designers driving the video game industry, not the hardware designers), I can't argue that it's a new kind of thing.
Unlike nearly everything else on that list.
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You may not like them, you may hate Sony, but it's absolutely seeping with innovative technologies. It's really a next-gen console, not a last-gen.5.
Xbox 360 has no innovation whatsoever, it's just a faster Xbox with nicer software. The Wii has an innovative controller, and a cool virtual console service. It's certainly not a gaming powerhouse nor an HD superstar.
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The Wii is innovative, in introducing a new way of controlling and playing the games. Without getting into a console flamewar, the PS3 and 360 are, technically and factually just GFX upgrade bonanza. Nintendo changed little about the GameCube design, one can almost say the just added the new controller. That tiny
YouOS (Score:5, Insightful)
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Have you seen the whole list? I'd say that YouOS has far more rights to be on this list than any other item.
I agree that there is hardly any use for it right now, but this is like a concept car: nobody uses them as they are, but you see many innovative parts of it appear in other new cars in a while.
Google Sketchup? (Score:2, Interesting)
Since Google bought them, all they've done to the actual app is stamp "BETA" on it. They brag that it works on Macs, but the last upgrade was over 18 months ago, before Apple announced the Intel transition, and they still have no Universal binary for Macs. The PPC binary works, mostly, if you're willing to put up with workarounds. Oh, and random crashes.
It's a sad state of affairs when "making no forward progress" counts as "inno
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Integrating Sketchup with Google Earth has opened up a lot of interesting opportunities. As a stand-alone tool, it was a useful, if quirky, CAD package. Now, it's potential as a way of rapidly (by way of community involvement) building 3D versions of our cities and suburbs goes far beyond its original scope.
That's a lot more innovative than a facelift to an aging set of office tools, which rely more on format lockin than innovat
A Hard Drive? (Score:2, Redundant)
I assume others will speak to the inclusion of Office.
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Not as many as I would expect by now.
My initial thought was also "MS OFFICE?!? INNOVATIVE?!?" (see username...).
Personally, I would define "innovative" in this context as "things customers probably wouldn't have thought of, but once they saw it, they liked," and limit it to those products/changes that were introduced in 2006.
When I actually RTFA, MSO 2k7 is actually fairly innovative, in comparison to most of the rest on the list.
Skimming over the list
I believe... (Score:2)
These guys are confused. (Score:4, Insightful)
750GB HDD: A nice upgrade from the 500GB ones? Sure. An innovation? Well, the number is bigger than it was last year.
That logitech control puck thing: Cute? Sure. Innovative? Well, it has a few more buttons than the Griffin PowerMate that has been around for years.
And so on and so forth. There are almost no actual innovations. Mostly just feature bumps and price/performance increases. Now, that is what makes the world go round, most of the time; but don't call it "innovation".
There is no innovation any more! (Score:2)
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Another poster mentioned perpendicular recording...so perhaps that is what makes it innovative.
perpendicular recording is not really innovation. (Score:2)
WOOOOOOO (Score:2, Insightful)
Is it me, or... (Score:3, Insightful)
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How many laptops did it take? (Score:5, Funny)
Please perfect the innovations we already have. (Score:5, Interesting)
Why does my Xbox360 still require bizarre router settings to connect wirelessly to my router? Oh yeah I forgot, Microsoft does not care. Why did I have to return 3 different routers until I found one that worked with all my clients and VPN tunnels? Oh yeah I forgot, they're lazy. Why did the wireless print server I picked up naturally assume that it had to have the same IP address as my router and afforded absolutely no options to switch it? Oh yeah I forgot, the vendor bought the product instead of developing themselves. Plus the quality of their firmware is shit. Why am I still shopping for an affordable NAS that actually does what it's supposed to do without bugs and the feature set is actually what they say it is instead of vague promises and bullshit? Oh yeah I forgot, all the goodness is in the next version of their $700 unit. Sorry.
See I'm not a big fan of best new gadgets because next year either they will be abandoned as the shit they probably are, or, they will be shit anyway and still be around bolstered by hype, consumer indifference and marketing.
which NAS unit are you referring to? (Score:2)
Why am I still shopping for an affordable NAS that actually does what it's supposed to do without bugs and the feature set is actually what they say it is instead of vague promises and bullshit? Oh yeah I forgot, all the goodness is in the next version of their $700 unit.
Which unit are you talking about, out of curiosity? I've been eying the ReadyNAS NV+ and the Thecus N5200.
I've seen benchmarks showing performance is all over the map with the ReadyNAS, and I know that it painfully slow with fsck's (a
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Parallels? (Score:3, Funny)
think before (Score:2, Insightful)
Olympus E-330 like the Panasonic DMC-L1 (Score:3, Informative)
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Big flash drives (Score:4, Insightful)
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And unlike hard disks, when the flash drive wears down its cells, it remains in a read-only state, allowing you to copy over your data to a new disk. I've had enough hard disks die on me to really appreciate that particular aspect of flash drives.
As soon as the flash drives come down in price enough (to withing twice the $/MB) , I'
I felt a distrubance... (Score:2, Insightful)
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PS3? (Score:2)
It is no more impressive or innovative than adding an FM tuner to a portable MP3 player.
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Using an experimental research processor in a mass-market toy? That's innovative.
Irony (Score:2)
Where is the "innovation"? (Score:5, Informative)
1. Microsoft Office 2007
Nothing innovative here - GUI office productivity suites have been around for decades - MS Word was the innovation on the Apple MacIntosh - but that was before MS released a usable version of MS Windows!
2. Intel Core 2 Duo
Where is the innovation here? The Intel Core 2 Duo is merely two CPUs on a single chip. Duo is neither the first 64bit processor, nor does it share resources between cores, nor does it have an onboard RAM controller. for all the above look to AMD's CPUs.
3. Parallels Desktop for Mac
Running Windows software on the Mac is not a new thing - especially now that the Mac is being sold using Intel hardware. Neither is using virtualisation software to run Windows on other platforms. For years it has been possible to run Windows on Big Blue's mainframes, and on *nix using such applications as VMware.
4. Nintendo Wii
Truly innovative interface - completely new design for use in a completely new way with a completely different range of games.
5. Samsung 32GB SSD
Using Flash EPROM for mobile storage of user data is not new. Neither is the incrementing of the maximum size available. What is new is the replacement of a mechanical permanent storage device with a solid state storage device that may yet prove to be not yet as reliable as a HDD.
6. Sony Reader
Truly innovative device that enables electronic texts to be read as easily and as casually if they were a proper book, and with a very easy UI. Only problem is that it uses a proprietary file format.
7. YouOS
Using a browser for remote desktop access is not a new development.
8. Dell XPS M2010
Portable computers have been around for decades (predating even the Mac). Wireless keyboards are not new, nor is a DVD player, nor is a 20" flat screen. Nothing new there - except the hefty weight.
9. Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB
Yes - innovative method of writing data onto a HDD. But the fact of increased storage capacity is nothing new. HDDs have been increasing storage capacity for many decades.
10. T-Mobile Dash
QWERTY keyboard not new. 1.3 megapixel camera - not new. Wireless - not new.
Additional RAM storage - not new (but close). Amount of built in RAM - definitely not innovative.
11. Pioneer Inno
In one form or another a "Real Live radio receiver" that can also record onto some sort of storage medium has been around since the '70s.
13. Sony BWU-100A Blu-Ray Disc Rewritable Drive
Re-writeable optical discs - nothing new here.
14. Olympus EVolt E-330
Digital camera with LCD display - definitely nothing new here.
15. Google SketchUp
3D software is not new. Free (as in Libre or as in Beer) is also not new. Perhaps the ease of use is what is new.
16. Sony PlayStation 3
Games consoles have been around since the '70s.
17. RIM BlackBerry Pearl 8100
Two words... Palm Treo. Enough said.
18. Rhapsody 4.0
One word... Ipod.
19. Logitech NuLooq
Different. Cross between a joystick and a mouse and a rollerball. I wouldn't mind trying it out if I ever came across one in a shop.
20. Shure E500PTH Sound Isolating Earphones
Noice cancelling headsets have been around for years. Nothing new there.
So where is the true innovation? 19, 15, 9, 6, 4. That's only 5 out of 20.
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YouOS (Score:3, Insightful)
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I dont think that using either ODF or MS Open XML (or whatever its called) is very innovative one way or the other. Claiming they arent/are being innovative by choosing one format over another is kind of silly.
Just because you dont like that they arent suppo
Re:Office 2007? (Score:5, Insightful)
Office 2007's innovation is the ribbon interface, which does away from the traditional toolbar/menu interface. Although I personally don't like the interface (the ribbons are uncustomizable, and some options that used to require only one click on a toolbar now require two or three clicks), the interface does accomplish the task of placing related options together in an easily accessible way to novices of Office, as well as accessing less-commonly used features.
Like the interface or not, the ribbon interface is an innovative way of grouping tasks together, especially in a program such as Microsoft Office that supports hundreds of features. If the ribbon interface contained some concessions for experienced computer users (shortcuts and ribbon customization, for example), then the ribbon interface may be a serious contender to the traditional menu/toolbar paradigm on the Windows platform. This is probably the single most innovative thing I've seen coming from Microsoft yet, even if I personally don't like it ;)
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I didnt mean for it to be part of some "company X did this first!", "No! Company Y did! And company X sucks!" type of debate. Its just a nice feature that works
More bad analogies (Score:2)
I could be wrong, though, and I am sure others may disagree. I DO accept my nomination for the Bad Analogy award, if one exists, and I am nominated.
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Good point, which is why I self-nominated for the bad analogy award. Even so, let me strengthen my case for that award with some explanation.
As far as interfaces go, I think the only real notable innovation was the move from command line to graphics. Anything else (to this point,) is "moving the shift lever." A commercially-viable, dependable, verbal command interface would
Re:Office 2007? (Score:5, Informative)
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Good lord, how is this innovation in anything except crapiness? Office 2007 is the opposite of ODF [wikipedia.org], which is the wave of the future in documents. Fighting against the community for profit is hardly innovative -- MSFT has been doing it for years.
Give it a rest. This community of which you speak has been ripping off Microsoft Office for inspiration for years. Check out OpenOffice.org's innovative word processor interface [openoffice.org] -- everything is ripped off, from the font dropdowns, the indent/unindent icons, to the bold/italic/underline options, the clipboard icons, even the 3.5" floppy disk drive icon representing the save function. And who saves to floppy drives anymore? As far as interfaces go, I'd say it's pretty hard to rip something off better th
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No, you're wrong. The vast majority of MS Office users would care about ODF, but they never heard about it and don't even know what it is. The vast majority of the people using MS Office use it because it supports the file format that everybody else uses. They don't give a damn about the few features MS Office has w
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This is exactly how Sony is shitting on their gamers. I don't want to solve differential equations. I don't want to sponsor a Blu-ray marketing campaign. I want to play games.
The cell processor is optimized for in-order processing. As far as games are concerned, this makes it ideal for pretty reflection and water eff
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The PS3 is indeed innovative. The Cell is the first non-shared memory multiprocessor in a mass market product. Whether this is a good idea or a dead end, like the Itanic, remains to be seen.
I personally think that the hassles of a non-shared memory machine outweigh the advantages, especially when the amount of memory per processor is on the low side. The XBox 360 is a 3-CPU shared memory multiprocessor, and presents no new programming problems. Historically, non-shared memory multiprocessors are very
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We'll again point to Chris Hecker's take on the cell processor: http://crystaltips.typepad.com/wonderland/2005/03/ burn_the_house_.html [typepad.com]
in short. It sucks for good games. More innovative would have been a console including a multicore/processor machine that had different types of processors for doing different things on. The PS3s processor is handicapped for AI, and since no one wants one, you won't find anyone online to play with it.
Its like putting r
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The PS3s processor is handicapped for AI, and since no one wants one, you won't find anyone online to play with it.
Are you mad? The PS3 is a hot seller this holiday. *Every* gamer I know, except one, bought a PS3. Only one bought a Wii. None have an Xbox 360. These gamers run the gamut, from hardcore PC gamer, to casual console player. Most of the people in my list did have an original Xbox, slightly more had the PS2, and there was a lot of overlap between the two.
I know it's popular to dump on the PS3, mostly because it's so easy to hate Sony (rootkit CDs), but seriously, the average consumer couldn't care less, and s
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But also don't forget that it's only Sony gets the royalty check at the end of the day.
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Why I think the Cell is a good idea:
1. Standard PPC core. With the wealth of PPC code out there, compilers shouldn't have a problem with that.
2. Parallel vector processors. How cool is that? Each one like a math coprocessor, only with more awesome included (sorry for the non technical terms ther
Bravo! (Score:2)