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PDA版 - Tech's biggest misfires of 2011
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Tech's biggest misfires of 2011
By Brian Heater posted Dec 29th 2011 1:00PM
http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/29/techs-biggest-misfires-of-20
Feature
The past 12 months have been a boon of technological innovation,
particularly in the world of mobile devices, where top companies have been
waging an arms race for the top of the smartphone and tablet hills. Not
everything has been smooth sailing, however -- 2011 has also been dotted by
delays, false starts, security breeches and straight up technological turf
outs. Check out some of the lowlights from the year that was after the break.
AT&T / T-Mobile
It was a troubled engagement from the get-go. The moment AT&T announced its
plans to swallow up T-Mobile, the word "monopoly" was on the tip of everyone
's tongues. After all, it would have effectively meant the loss of one of
the top players in a market ruled by four companies. Much to AT&T's very
vocal chagrin, The FCC and Department of Justice put the proposed marriage
under the legal microscope, a fact that the telecom giant cited as chief
amongst the catalysts for its decision to back out of the deal in December.
AT&T exited with its tail between its legs and $4 billion poorer.
Carrier IQ
The mystery software, which was first spotted back in November, turned out
to be surprisingly widespread, having been deployed on some 150 million
mobile devices, according to the company. Carrier IQ has since repeatedly
claimed that its software is simply installed for diagnostic purposes, but
the secrecy with which it exists on devices has given the tech media and
privacy advocates cause for concern, with a number of hardware manufacturers
and carriers offering up conflicting answers as to whether or not they've
utilized it for their own devices.
Cisco Flip Cam
The company that became synonymous with pocket camcorders died an unexpected
death this year, shut down by Cisco after being picked up by the IT giant
for a cool $590 million in stock just two years earlier. Cisco announced its
exit from consumer products back in April, a move that effectively
shuttered the once booming Flip Video business, even as companies like Sony
and Kodak have continued to duke it out for market share.
Duke Nukem Forever
Okay, okay, we knew we were destined for disappointment after waiting
roughly a decade and half for the latest installment in this FPS series, but
even with all of the arguably unrealistic expectations that come with such
delays, the title ultimately proved a major disappointment, with bad
controls and, not surprisingly, extremely dated gameplay -- all the more
reason to look forward to Duke Nukem Forever II, which should arrive in the
second half of 2030.
Fusion Garage
Fusion Garage company already delivered a major tech belly-flop in the form
of the JooJoo, which was delivered late, underpowered and overpriced,
belying its sub-$200 roots. When the company announced its triumphant return
in the form of the Grid10, Grid4 and GridOS, we were excited at the
prospect of a new take on the tablet market. Once again, however, the tiny
company had taken on far more than it could manage, delivering buggy
software and, in the case of the Grid4, nothing at all.
HTC Thunderbolt
There's certainly a lot to like about the Thunderbolt -- namely, its 4.3-
inch display and zippy data speeds, courtesy of Verizon LTE. The smartphone
has one fatal flaw, however: truly awful battery life. Oh, the pitfalls of
first-generation devices.
iPhone 5
The iPhone 5 makes it onto our list for committing the unforgivable act of
simply not existing. As ever, the rumor mill ran wild ahead of this year's
rather belated iPhone event, promising the delivery of yet another
revolutionary device from Cupertino. Instead, we got the iPhone 4S. Sure,
the handset offered up some improvements over its similarly named
predecessor, most notably the introduction of Siri, but the added features
were ultimately a disappointment in the face of ever increasing competition
in the crowded smartphone race.
Jawbone Up
Products like the MotoACTV offered up a new spin on fitness gadgets in 2011.
And then there's the Up, Jawbone's take. The wristband promised an
innovative approach to workout gadgetry, but ultimately fell flat, with
widespread reports of device bricking and skimpy battery life. Add a limited
feature set and iOS-only compatibility, and you've got a straight up
disappointment on your wrist.
Kobo Vox
We love rooting for the underdog, and Kobo has certainly given competitors
like Amazon and Barnes & Noble a run for their money in the e-reader market,
but the company's entry in the budget tablet category came up short
compared to the likes of the Nook Tablet and Kindle Fire. The Vox delivered
abysmal battery life, limited multimedia functionality, an uninspired take
on Gingerbread and last-gen hardware specs.
Kno Tablet
Mark this one down as another hardware maker biting off more than it could
chew. The Kno was a rather ambitious dual-screen take on the tablet world
marketed toward students. After several delays, the company actually began
shipping the devices only to pull the plug after fulfilling a few hundred
pre-orders. In the end, Kno announced that it would be exiting the hardware
business, licensing designs to Intel and focusing on the software side of
things.
Netflix Qwikster
How did we know that Netflix's Web-only initiative was in trouble from the
outset? For starters, the company failed to secure the Qwikster Twitter
handle, which remained in the possession of someone with a pot smoking Elmo
icon. After large scale public outrage, the company backtracked on the
initiative less than a month after first announcing it. If nothing else, you
've got to give Reed Hastings and Co. a little credit for responding to
investor public demand in record time.
Nintendo 3DS Circle Pad Pro
The 3DS wasn't even the first product that Nintendo unleashed on the world
without being fully-baked. To the company's credit, however, it did address
the situation, offering up a major price drop, some apologies and tossing
some free games at early adopters who paid full price. Nintendo's hardware
fix, on the other hand, wasn't quite so graceful. The portable console will
be getting a right circle pad in February, courtesy of the Circle Pad Pro, a
massive, $20 piece of plastic that cradles the rear of the device.
Notion Ink Adam
It's not every day that "broken promises" and "unrealized dreams" make it
onto the cons list of one of our reviews, but the Notion Ink Adam was a
special product indeed. Like the Grid10, the Adam was the story of a startup
taking on behemoths, ultimately over-promising innovation and under-
delivering with aplomb. The Froyo-packing tablet was a massive
disappointment on both the hardware and software fronts -- facts that its
innovative design couldn't disguise.
PSN
A network outage is bad; a breach that potentially exposes personal user
information for tens of millions of users is tough to walk away from. The
PlayStation Network nightmare seemingly took forever to unfold, and things
just kept getting worst for Sony. The network finally started going back up
in mid-May, nearly a month after it first went offline. A month later, Sony
launched its "Welcome Back" campaign, offering up free games for affected
users -- for some subscribers, however, the olive branch was hardly enough
to rejoin team PSN.
Research in Motion
Surely, few companies are looking forward to the end of 2011 quite so
eagerly as RIM. This year was a rough one for the Canadian handset maker,
with its market share further eroded by the likes of iOS and Android. The
PlayBook fell flat, as did its BBX operating system, which was re-branded
BlackBerry 10, due to trademark disputes. The long-awaited next-gen OS was
also put on hold in a big way, and is now expected to drop toward the end of
next year. And outages? RIM had those too, going offline globally with the
largest blackout in the company's history.
webOS
BlackBerry 10 may have been a non-starter, but in the world of mobile OSes,
2011 may well go down as the year that HP effectively killed webOS. After
the TouchPad launch was met with disappointing reviews and lackluster sales,
the company announced that it was pulling the plug on its line of hardware
running the beloved, but troubled mobile operating system. The Touchpad did
see a temporary resurgence, however, thanks to a $99 fire sale, briefly
becoming the second best selling tablet, according to some studies. webOS
may have seen a reprieve as well, when new CEO Meg Whitman told her staff
that webOS may, in fact, be getting a second life in the wonderful world of
open-sourcing.
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