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Apple iPhone Software and Firmware Updates – Iphone Accessories

Archive for December, 2009

More streaming video fun: a first look at Qik Live for iPhone

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The folks who first showed us video streaming live from an iPhone, Qik, now have an official (non-jailbreak) app available in the App Store.

Like Ustream Live Broadcaster, Qik Live [iTunes Link] is a free iPhone app that streams live video to a web page where friends, relatives, and the world at large can watch and hear what you’re currently doing. Qik Live has a very streamlined interface that’s simple to use. You’ll need to sign up for a free Qik account before you start blasting your video to the world, but you can do that from within the app. The app runs on iPhone 2G, 3G, and 3GS devices on 3G or Wi-Fi networks.

Once you’ve launched the app and logged in, a pre-broadcast screen appears showing a live image. Settings are changed by tapping on a 320 x 240 landscape image to bring up a small menu. The menu options include muting/unmuting sound, turning chat on/off, setting a video to private, editing the title and description of a broadcast, choosing where to share the video, or sending the last stream to someone via email.The folks who first showed us video streaming live from an iPhone, Qik, now have an official (non-jailbreak) app available in the App Store.

Like Ustream Live Broadcaster, Qik Live [iTunes Link] is a free iPhone app that streams live video to a web page where friends, relatives, and the world at large can watch and hear what you’re currently doing. Qik Live has a very streamlined interface that’s simple to use. You’ll need to sign up for a free Qik account before you start blasting your video to the world, but you can do that from within the app. The app runs on iPhone 2G, 3G, and 3GS devices on 3G or Wi-Fi networks.

Once you’ve launched the app and logged in, a pre-broadcast screen appears showing a live image. Settings are changed by tapping on a 320 x 240 landscape image to bring up a small menu. The menu options include muting/unmuting sound, turning chat on/off, setting a video to private, editing the title and description of a broadcast, choosing where to share the video, or sending the last stream to someone via email.

TUAWMore streaming video fun: a first look at Qik Live for iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Could Apple be moving to a spectrum of operating systems?

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I was eating a late post-Christmas breakfast this morning and perusing my email when I came upon a note from my friend and fellow Apple Consultants Network member Michael Kimble. Mike’s been involved with Apple products since before the Mac arrived, so he has seen product trends come and go for decades. In his email, he mused that:

“I’ve been wondering if Apple, on their Jan. 26th product announcement, won’t start to differentiate OS X to include OS X Mobile, OS X Touch, OS X Desktop & OS X Server. But rather than discreet versions of the OS, it is a spectrum where features of one version can slide up and down the scale depending on the functionality of the hardware platform it’s running on. It seems to be moving in that direction whether a formal acknowledgment is made or not.”

It’s not that far a stretch to see Apple adding another variety of OS X to the family tree. As a result of yesterday’s post about the as-yet-unannounced Apple tablet, TUAW reader Dillon made a similar observation to Mike’s:

“Just a thought, but if the new Apple tablet ran straight iPhone OS, then it would probably be released in June with annual iPhone update… meaning that the Mac tablet will probably run a cross between Mac OSX 10.6 and iPhone OS or just Mac OSX 10.6.

Apple really won’t release something unless it is speedy enough. They don’t even let you run a background app or multitask on the iPhone due to speed issues. If they wanted to make a speedier tablet it would make sense that they would [deliver] a hybrid of the two operating systems, allowing better speed, battery, and more functionality than the iPhone, yet something not as relatively bulky as Snow Leopard.”

Three of the four operating systems already exist (and there’s always the family member they keep locked in the closet — the Apple TV — with its odd edition of Mac OS 10.4 Tiger). All it would take is for Apple to add a new version of the OS that would, as Dillon points out, allow background processing and true multi-tasking, yet pull out a lot of the more weighty components of OS X.

What do you think? Is a new, formal acknowledgment of a new Apple OS on the way, or will the tablet run a beefier version of the iPhone OS? Leave your thoughts in the comments section below.

Illustration from Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tigerpixel/ / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

TUAWCould Apple be moving to a spectrum of operating systems? originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 27 Dec 2009 15:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dozen Daily Deals for December 27, 2009

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‘Tis the season to shop until your brains melt (or skip it all entirely, depending on your interpretation of the term holiday). In that spirit, for the next few weeks we’ll be rounding up a dozen daily deals courtesy our friends at DealNews.com. Each afternoon tune in to TUAW for this handy summary. Keep in mind that while our posts will live on, the deals won’t. Each is lovingly generated by the deal-bot every day, so get ‘em while they’re hot. Enjoy!

  • PopCap Games: [PC Games] PopCap Games Holiday Sale: 50% off all games, deals for $10
  • Musician’s Friend: Musician’s Friend coupon: 15% off select items
  • Geeks.com: [Notebook Carrying Cases] AWP 14″ Molded Laptop Backpack for $15 + $9 s&h
  • Kohls: [Books & Magazines] Kohl’s sale: 50% off 2010 team calendars + extra 20% off, free shipping
  • Tanga: [Magazines] 1-Year Subscription to Entrepreneur Magazine for $3
  • SupermediaStore: [CD/DVD Cases] 4 SuperMediaStore 104-Disc CD / DVD Wallets for $20 + free shipping, more
  • Sears: [Plasma TVs] Samsung 50″ 600Hz 720p Plasma Widescreen HDTV for $700 + pickup
  • Kohls: [Digital Camcorders] Shift3 Slide Mini Digital Camcorder for $32 + free shipping
  • Best Buy: [46" - 47" LCD TVs] Samsung 46″ 120Hz 1080p Widescreen LCD HDTV for $1,000 + pickup
  • Beach Camera: [50" - 52" LCD TVs] Sharp AQUOS 52″ 1080p Widescreen LCD HDTV for $999 + free shipping
  • Apple Store: [iPods] Refurbished Apple iPod nano 16GB MP3 Player for $129 + free shipping
  • Staples: [Color Inkjet Printers] Brother MFC-790CW Wireless All-In-One Printer w/ Touchscreen LCD for $100 + free shipping

TUAWDozen Daily Deals for December 27, 2009 originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 27 Dec 2009 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Two GPS app updates for travelers

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News in the GPS world keeps swirling around, and for downloaders it’s not too late to get some holiday GPS cheer. Here’s a couple of updates of note.

First, Gokivo [iTunes link] just announced a new pricing option that allows you to download Gokivo for just $0.99 for the first 30 days, and then pay $4.99 per month/$39.99 a year for service from then on out. We reviewed the app in November. It was middle of the road (pardon the pun) in performance and features, but it does have live traffic and text to speech for announcing turns, so it might be worth a look at this lower price.

Meanwhile, Navigon [iTunes link] has launched a version for Mexico at $49.99. The Mexico version includes many of Navigon’s premium navigation capabilities such as Google Local Search, Enhanced Pedestrian Mode, Speed Assistant, Route Planning and even a localized point-of-interest database. If you’re doing some driving south of the border, or happen to live down there, it should be on your list of travel options.

I expect the new year will bring a slew of enhancements and new products for the iPhone and iPod touch — who knows, maybe we’ll even get to see a tablet navigator before 2010 is through.

TUAWTwo GPS app updates for travelers originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dozen Daily Deals for December 24, 2009

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‘Tis the season to shop until your brains melt (or skip it all entirely, depending on your interpretation of the term holiday). In that spirit, for the next few weeks we’ll be rounding up a dozen daily deals courtesy our friends at DealNews.com. Each afternoon tune in to TUAW for this handy summary. Keep in mind that while our posts will live on, the deals won’t. Each is lovingly generated by the deal-bot every day, so get ‘em while they’re hot. Enjoy!

  • iTunes Music Store: [iPhone / iPod Apps] Navy Patrol: Coastal Defense Zero for iPhone / iPod touch downloads for free
  • iTunes Music Store: [iPhone / iPod Apps] Tap Tap Revenge 3 for iPhone / iPod touch downloads for free
  • Meritline: [USB Flash Drives] USB 2.0 Flash Drive Roundup: Kingston 4GB for $10 + free shipping, more
  • Walmart: [Cell Phones] Motorola TracFone W260 Cell Phones with double minutes for $10 + $2 s&h
  • Circuit City: [50" - 52" LCD TVs] Samsung 52″ 1080p LCD HD Television for $1,049 + free shipping
  • Buy.com: [USB Hard Drives] LaCie Grand 1TB USB 2.0 External Hard Drive for $90 + free shipping
  • HandHeldItems: [iPod Accessories] HandHeldItems.com: Up to 80% off Apple iPod touch cases + 20% off coupon
  • Yugster: [Store Events] $10 Yugster.com Virtual Gift Card for $5
  • Walmart: [Office Furniture] Sentry Fire- and Water-Resistant Combination Safe for $129 + $1 s&h
  • US Appliance: [50" - 52" LCD TVs] Samsung 55″ 120Hz 1080p LED LCD HDTV for $1,849 + free shipping
  • Pennywise : [Rechargeable Batteries] Rayovac AAA I-C3 15-Minute Rechargeable Battery 12-Pack for $11 + free shipping
  • Buy.com: [Notebook Hard Drives] Kingston 40GB SATA 2.5″ SSD Hard Disk for $90 + free shipping

TUAWDozen Daily Deals for December 24, 2009 originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 24 Dec 2009 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Creator codes make a comeback in Snow Leopard with LaunchCodes

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In Mac OS X (and back into OS 9 history), a creator code is a hidden value attached to a document and bound to a preferred application, allowing the OS to know which application to use for opening that file. This is particularly helpful for filetypes that have multiple valid ‘target’ apps (JPEG, PDF, etc.); the creator code lets Preview ‘own’ its PDF or image files, TextEdit automatically open its text files, and so on.

Those who are familiar with the process are already (painfully) aware that Snow Leopard ditched this system a while back (some great details at Ars Technica). For many users — especially Windows switchers — the new method is an improvement, allowing a more standardized response to double-clicking a document file that’s driven by the file name extension (.doc, .html, and the like). If you’re in the former group, though, and missing your creator codes, the developer behind PageHand has a treat for you: LaunchCodes.

LaunchCodes is an extremely simple utility which restores the creator code functionality to Snow Leopard. The creator codes never went anywhere; they’re still in the metadata. LaunchCodes just tells the system what to do with a filetype. Setup is fast and easy, just enter the extension for the file and assign an application to it (similar to “Always open with”). It runs quietly in your menubar and directs OS X to open the application you prefer for any given type of file.

LaunchCodes is $4.95US and is available as a free trial at the PageHand website.

TUAWCreator codes make a comeback in Snow Leopard with LaunchCodes originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 23 Dec 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPod touch + Edu Apps = Happy Students

Julio Ojeda-Zapata (twincities.com) reports that the iPod touch “has taken classrooms by storm” in several Minnesota K-12 schools, increasing student enthusiasm and engagement and offering new ways to teach children with special needs.

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Camera Pro Preaches iPhone Photography

Thomas Houston (switched.com) reports that Pro photographer Chase Jarvis has created Best Camera, an iPhone app “that lets you shoot, apply multiple filters and effects, and share via Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, and the Best Camera photography community.” In an accompanying video, Jarvis discusses mobile photography, shooting, and his new app.

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Global Mobile U

As one of the largest research universities in the United States, the University of Washington brings together 65,000 students, faculty members, and administrative staff. From the laboratory to the dormitory, this thriving academic community stays connected with iPhone and the university’s proprietary m.UW app, which gives students and staff mobile access to campus maps, news, directories, course schedules, and lectures.

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How the iPhone Could Reboot Education

Brian X. Chen (wired.com) reports that Abilene Christian University has just finished the first year of a pilot program in which 1,000 freshman students each received a free iPhone or iPod touch to explore how the always-connected devices ”might revolutionize the classroom experience with a dash of digital interactivity.” Says Bill Rankin, a professor who helped plan the initiative: “I think this is the next platform for education.”

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Apple's 12 Days of Christmas iPhone app

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As we reported last week, Apple is again rolling out their ’12 Days of Christmas’ promo for almost all of Europe. From December 26 to January 6 anyone with a iTunes account in the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Austria, the Netherlands, Finland, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland, and Ireland can download a free song, music video, app, television show, or film from ‘some of the biggest star performers’ on iTunes.

To help you remember to download the daily giveaway, Apple has created a ’12 Days of Christmas’ iPhone app [UK iTunes link]. It uses push notifications to alert you when the new download is available and also allows you to connect to Facebook and recommend the download to your friends. So if you live in Europe, get downloading! The promo starts December 26th, but the app is available now!

TUAWApple’s 12 Days of Christmas iPhone app originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 23 Dec 2009 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW TV Live: Watch it this afternoon (12/23) at 5 PM ET

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In our continuing quest to bring you the latest Apple info and let you be part of the fun, the TUAW mad scientists are going to perform an experiment this afternoon.

TUAW TV Live is a live broadcast that will be starting at 5 PM ET today. Your host, Steve Sande, is going to bring you the day’s Apple news, maybe show you some cool apps, and take your input and feedback via live chat. The show is scheduled for about an hour, and we’ll post a embedded viewer here on TUAW about 15 minutes before the start of the show.

If you’re interested in chatting live with Steve, just click on the viewer in our link this afternoon to be taken to Ustream, where you can sign in to chat or give Steve some discussion ideas. Come back to TUAW at about 5 PM ET (2 PM PT) and join the fun!

TUAWTUAW TV Live: Watch it this afternoon (12/23) at 5 PM ET originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 23 Dec 2009 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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30 Must-Have Games for iPhone and iPod touch

Reviewer Peter Cohen (loopinsight.com) writes that “iPhone and iPod touch both make great handheld gaming systems” and offers thirty reasons why in a select roundup of racing, action, and strategy games available in the App Store.

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iPhone Improves Legal Services

DLA Phillips Fox, founded 145 years ago, is one of Australia’s largest legal firms, providing services in 29 countries around the world. With iPhone in the hands of almost every partner in the 1,300-person firm, they can offer faster, more flexible responses to their clients’ legal needs. John Dockett, General Manager of IT, says choosing iPhone was “one of the smarter things we ever did.”

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Snow Leopard Server “a tremendous value”

In an in-depth review of Mac OS X Snow Leopard Server, Ryan Faas (computerworld.com) cites “performance gains, improvements to several collaboration tools introduced in Leopard Server, enhanced simple administration for non-technical users and new features designed for mobile access and for supporting the iPhone.” Adds Fass: “Snow Leopard Server is a tremendous value.”

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New Quad-Core iMac “worth the wait”

Reviewer James Galbraith (macworld.com) gives the new quad-core 27-inch iMac computers with Intel Core i5 and Core i7 “Nehalem” processors 4.5/5 mice, calling them “worth the wait.” In performance tests, writes Galbraith, the 2.55GHz Core i5 iMac was “the fastest standard configuration Mac we’ve ever tested” and the Core i7 “showed even greater performance prowess.”

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“The Obama Time Capsule”

A custom coffee table book by co-author and publisher Rick Smolan takes you back to — and into — the story of Obama’s rise to the presidency. Says co-author and publisher Rick Smolan: “Every component of this project, from photo editing to design to video, was created entirely on a Mac.”

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Cutting Health Care Costs on a Mac

Using a Mac Pro as the keystone of his rural radiology practice in Bemidji, Minnesota, Dr. Hilton Bakker is able not only to reduce the costs of his own practice but those of the hospitals who use his services. Says Bakker: “If hospitals can use Mac technology to do radiology cheaper, that’s my goal. Health care costs too much. If I can do my little bit to make it cheaper, that’s cool.”

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Mac mini with Snow Leopard Server a “fantastic deal”

Reviewer Jason Snell (macworld.com) awards Mac mini with Snow Leopard Server 4.5/5 mice, calling it a “fantastic product for workgroups, small businesses, and even schools to use.” Emphasing value, Snell adds: “Mac mini server is just too good a deal to pass up.”

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Nuru Uses Macs to Fight Extreme Poverty

Jim Dalrymple (loopinsight.com) reports on one-year-old non-profit organization Nuru, formed by ex-Marine platoon leader Jake Harriman, who “served two tours of duty in Iraq where he realized that the key to ending terrorism was to end extreme poverty.” To that end, Nuru educates communities in impoverished nations using technology, particularly Mac Pro and MacBook Pro computers, iPhone, Final Cut Studio, iChat, and MobileMe.

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Apple Store Upper West Side

Apple opens its newest retail store on New York’s Upper West Side on Saturday, November 14 at 10:00 a.m. Set beneath a breathtaking all-glass arched roof, the street level of the Apple Store Upper West Side will offer more Macs, iPods and iPhones than any store in the world and feature the largest area ever created by Apple for personal training and technical support, including a 45-foot Genius Bar.

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Taking iPhone to New Depths

At DOER Marine, a California company that designs and builds subsea vehicles, engineers are working to create a manned vehicle that can explore the ocean floor. VP of Operations Ian Griffith credits iPhone for keeping their engineering team responsive and nimble enough to make it happen — no matter where they are in the world. “The iPhone accelerates how we perform as a team,” says Griffith.

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New Apple Mouse Really Is “Magic”

Reviewer Mark A. Kellner (washingtontimes.com) calls the new Magic Mouse “transformative,” “supereasy and very fast,” and “really, really worth it.” Kellner concludes: “After decades of using computer input devices, I think this is the finest mouse ever.”

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New MacBook Offers Sleek Style, Solid Performance

Reviewing the new MacBook, Michael DeAgonia (computerworld.com) calls it ”a solid laptop that feels sculpted instead of assembled and has the processing power users need.” DeAgonia concludes that the MacBook “is a compelling computer at a compelling price,” with “beauty that is more than skin deep.”

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John Legend Live: With MacBook Pro, Logic Studio and MainStage

Fans of platinum-selling R&B artist John Legend bring the same high expectations for each new album to every live concert. On his current tour, Legend, music director Eugene “Man-Man” Roberts and his band meet and beat those expectations by playing their best studio sounds along with fresh live riffs through MacBook Pro laptops running Logic Studio and MainStage.

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Court orders Microsoft to stop selling Office 2007 by January 11th

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Update: A statement from Microsoft’s director of public affairs, Kevin Kutz, clarifies the affected versions. Note that Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac was not cited as an infringing product, so this ruling is not applicable to Mac versions of Office.

We have just learned that the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has denied our appeal in the i4i case. We are moving quickly to comply with the injunction, which takes effect on January 11, 2010.

This injunction applies only to copies of Microsoft Word 2007 and Microsoft Office 2007 sold in the U.S. on or after the injunction date of January 11, 2010. Copies of these products sold before this date are not affected.

With respect to Microsoft Word 2007 and Microsoft Office 2007, we have been preparing for this possibility since the District Court issued its injunction in August 2009 and have put the wheels in motion to remove this little-used feature from these products.

Therefore, we expect to have copies of Microsoft Word 2007 and Office 2007, with this feature removed, available for U.S. sale and distribution by the injunction date. In addition, the beta versions of Microsoft Word 2010 and Microsoft Office 2010, which are available now for downloading, do not contain the technology covered by the injunction.

While we are moving quickly to address the injunction issue, we are also considering our legal options, which could include a request for a rehearing by the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals en banc or a request for a writ of certiorari from the U.S. Supreme Court.

Whoa. A judge for the The U.S. Court of Appeals has just upheld an earlier verdict forbidding Microsoft from selling both Office and Word after January 11th, 2010. This suit, which was filed by i4i, a creator of a XML plugin for Microsoft Office, alleged that Microsoft’s Open XML format, which uses the DOCX and XLSX extensions that have been a part of Office on the Mac since Office 2007, violated i4i’s patented XML handling algorithms. The court ruled in favor of i4i back in May, and Microsoft today lost their appeal, with the judge telling them that they don’t have the right to sell the software as-is.

Microsoft now either has to attempt to appeal the ruling again, or settle with i4i (read as: “Ballmer has to write a big honking check”), and is currently considering further legal options. The company is also working to remove these features from Microsoft Office (possibly in time to release new versions of the old software on January 11th), and this ruling doesn’t affect the upcoming Office 2010 for Windows. We’ll keep you posted if anything further develops.

TUAWCourt orders Microsoft to stop selling Office 2007 by January 11th originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 22 Dec 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPod touch Still “king of the hill”

After carefully considering the competition, Senior Editor Donald Bell (cnet.com) makes iPod touch the CNET Editors’ Choice among top MP3 players, writing that it “remains king of the hill.” Adds Bell: “Whether you’re buying one for yourself or giving it as a gift, the third-generation iPod touch does not disappoint.”

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Over 100,000 Apps Now Available on the App Store

Apple today announced that developers have created over 100,000 apps for the App Store, the largest applications store in the world. iPhone and iPod touch customers in 77 countries can choose from an incredible range of apps in 20 categories, including games, business, news, sports, health, reference and travel. App Store users have downloaded well over two billion apps, continuing to make it the world’s most popular applications store.

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New MacBook and iPod touch Good to Go

Technology Editor Peter Ha (time.com) includes both the MacBook and iPod touch among Time Magazine’s Best Travel Gadgets of 2009. Ha lauds new MacBook features like the stylish, durable unibody enclosure, efficient LED-backlit screen, built-in 7-hour battery, and consumer friendly glass trackpad. And reviewing the 32GB iPod touch, he concludes that its larger memory capacity, speedier processor, longer battery life, and useful Voice Control feature make it “perfect for long-haul flights or everyday commutes.”

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Get your current weather from Outside

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Outside [iTunes link] is a new, personal weather app for the iPhone/iPod touch that provides a visual forecast with some paid options for push notifications. I like the idea of the app; it has some nice graphics and a fresh approach to weather information. The GUI is based on a metaphor of looking out a window: you can get the current conditions or a five-day forecast, if you want to glance into the future. For the relevant stats, like humidity, cloud cover and winds, you just flick up the screen, and it’ll tell you everything you need to know.

The app also features an interesting pay model: when you buy the U.S $2.99 app, you get 30 days of push notifications for free. Then it’s $0.99 for the notifications every three months. Notifications include letting you know if rain is in the forecast, the UV index when it goes above a set level, a warning if the temperature goes below your preference, and a notification that the weather is OK to wear a T-shirt.

There are a few things that would make this app better. First, it’d be nice to reduce the need to flick the screen so often. The five-day forecast could be placed on one page, not five. And the notifications are unique, but a bit strange. I’d much rather be notified of upcoming storm warnings rather than T-shirt weather, but there is no such option — especially since the notifications are so pricey (getting them for a year costs more than the app itself), it’d be nice to have some more options. And if you want weather from a different location, you have to enter that location manually. There is no list of favorites.

I think weather junkies would be better off with the Weather Channel app [iTunes link], which is free, Weather Channel Max for $3.99 [iTunes link], or MyWeather [iTunes link] mobile which provides very detailed info for a one-time $4.99, and includes (free) push notifications for severe weather. There is some clever thinking behind Outside, and it’s a fresh approach to a function that’s seen its share of rainy days. But I wish it had more information on the individual screens, and it wasn’t so expensive to get notifications.

TUAWGet your current weather from Outside originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 21 Dec 2009 21:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPod touch + Edu Apps + Happy Students

Julio Ojeda-Zapata (twincities.com) reports that the iPod touch “has taken classrooms by storm” in several Minnesota K-12 schools, increasing student enthusiasm and engagement and offering new ways to teach children with special needs.

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Camera Pro Preaches iPhone Photography

Thomas Houston (switched.com) reports that Pro photographer Chase Jarvis has created Best Camera, an iPhone app “that lets you shoot, apply multiple filters and effects, and share via Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, and the Best Camera photography community.” In an accompanying video, Jarvis discusses mobile photography, shooting, and his new app.

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Global Mobile U

As one of the largest research universities in the United States, the University of Washington brings together 65,000 students, faculty members, and administrative staff. From the laboratory to the dormitory, this thriving academic community stays connected with iPhone and the university’s proprietary m.UW app, which gives students and staff mobile access to campus maps, news, directories, course schedules, and lectures.

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How the iPhone Could Reboot Education

Brian X. Chen (wired.com) reports that Abilene Christian University has just finished the first year of a pilot program in which 1,000 freshman students each received a free iPhone or iPod touch to explore how the always-connected devices ”might revolutionize the classroom experience with a dash of digital interactivity.” Says Bill Rankin, a professor who helped plan the initiative: “I think this is the next platform for education.”

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30 Must-Have Games for iPhone and iPod touch

Reviewer Peter Cohen (loopinsight.com) writes that “iPhone and iPod touch both make great handheld gaming systems” and offers thirty reasons why in a select roundup of racing, action, and strategy games available in the App Store.

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iPhone Improves Legal Services

DLA Phillips Fox, founded 145 years ago, is one of Australia’s largest legal firms, providing services in 29 countries around the world. With iPhone in the hands of almost every partner in the 1,300-person firm, they can offer faster, more flexible responses to their clients’ legal needs. John Dockett, General Manager of IT, says choosing iPhone was “one of the smarter things we ever did.”

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Snow Leopard Server “a tremendous value”

In an in-depth review of Mac OS X Snow Leopard Server, Ryan Faas (computerworld.com) cites “performance gains, improvements to several collaboration tools introduced in Leopard Server, enhanced simple administration for non-technical users and new features designed for mobile access and for supporting the iPhone.” Adds Fass: “Snow Leopard Server is a tremendous value.”

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New Quad-Core iMac “worth the wait”

Reviewer James Galbraith (macworld.com) gives the new quad-core 27-inch iMac computers with Intel Core i5 and Core i7 “Nehalem” processors 4.5/5 mice, calling them “worth the wait.” In performance tests, writes Galbraith, the 2.55GHz Core i5 iMac was “the fastest standard configuration Mac we’ve ever tested” and the Core i7 “showed even greater performance prowess.”

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“The Obama Time Capsule”

A custom coffee table book by co-author and publisher Rick Smolan takes you back to — and into — the story of Obama’s rise to the presidency. Says co-author and publisher Rick Smolan: “Every component of this project, from photo editing to design to video, was created entirely on a Mac.”

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Cutting Health Care Costs on a Mac

Using a Mac Pro as the keystone of his rural radiology practice in Bemidji, Minnesota, Dr. Hilton Bakker is able not only to reduce the costs of his own practice but those of the hospitals who use his services. Says Bakker: “If hospitals can use Mac technology to do radiology cheaper, that’s my goal. Health care costs too much. If I can do my little bit to make it cheaper, that’s cool.”

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Rumor: Moscone schedule + "corporate event" = Verizon iPhone?

Filed under: , ,

Rumors and speculation are fun. Sometimes 2 + 2 = 4… and sometimes they don’t add up to anything. Here’s today’s equation:

Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference 2010 seems likely to happen at the end of June/beginning of July.

The schedule for the Moscone Center, traditional home of WWDC, shows a “Corporate Event” running June 28 through July 2, 2010. This is around when Apple usually holds WWDC. “Corporate Event” has been the WWDC placeholder-name on the Moscone schedule in the past, at least until Apple was ready to say, “Hey everybody, we’re having a party and here’s when!” Additionally, Moscone is booked for all of June and most of July by other companies or organizations. Given that, it’s likely that WWDC 2010 will be June 28 through July 2.

That space on the calendar may be a big deal.

If WWDC goes the way these things normally do, registration and other pre-conference fun will happen on Monday, June 28. The WWDC keynote will take place on Tuesday, June 29 — three years to the day after the first iPhone was released.

Maybe Apple had to settle for that week because the International Stem Cell Conference and the NACUBO Annual Meeting beat them to the dates they really wanted. But it’s also possible that Apple is waiting until its exclusivity deal with AT&T ends — the exact day its exclusivity deal ends — before announcing an iPhone for Verizon, T-Mobile, or Sprint.

Verizon’s CTO made noise last week about his company being prepared for the iPhone in terms of network capacity, though he said nothing about an actual deal.

Do you think 2 + 2 = anything this time?

Photo by http://www.flickr.com/photos/parislemon/ / CC BY 2.0

[via MacNN]

TUAWRumor: Moscone schedule + “corporate event” = Verizon iPhone? originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 21 Dec 2009 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mac mini with Snow Leopard Server a “fantastic deal”

Reviewer Jason Snell (macworld.com) awards Mac mini with Snow Leopard Server 4.5/5 mice, calling it a “fantastic product for workgroups, small businesses, and even schools to use.” Emphasing value, Snell adds: “Mac mini server is just too good a deal to pass up.”

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Nuru Uses Macs to Fight Extreme Poverty

Jim Dalrymple (loopinsight.com) reports on one-year-old non-profit organization Nuru, formed by ex-Marine platoon leader Jake Harriman, who “served two tours of duty in Iraq where he realized that the key to ending terrorism was to end extreme poverty.” To that end, Nuru educates communities in impoverished nations using technology, particularly Mac Pro and MacBook Pro computers, iPhone, Final Cut Studio, iChat, and MobileMe.

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Apple Store Upper West Side

Apple opens its newest retail store on New York’s Upper West Side on Saturday, November 14 at 10:00 a.m. Set beneath a breathtaking all-glass arched roof, the street level of the Apple Store Upper West Side will offer more Macs, iPods and iPhones than any store in the world and feature the largest area ever created by Apple for personal training and technical support, including a 45-foot Genius Bar.

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Taking iPhone to New Depths

At DOER Marine, a California company that designs and builds subsea vehicles, engineers are working to create a manned vehicle that can explore the ocean floor. VP of Operations Ian Griffith credits iPhone for keeping their engineering team responsive and nimble enough to make it happen — no matter where they are in the world. “The iPhone accelerates how we perform as a team,” says Griffith.

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New Apple Mouse Really Is “Magic”

Reviewer Mark A. Kellner (washingtontimes.com) calls the new Magic Mouse “transformative,” “supereasy and very fast,” and “really, really worth it.” Kellner concludes: “After decades of using computer input devices, I think this is the finest mouse ever.”

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New MacBook Offers Sleek Style, Solid Performance

Reviewing the new MacBook, Michael DeAgonia (computerworld.com) calls it ”a solid laptop that feels sculpted instead of assembled and has the processing power users need.” DeAgonia concludes that the MacBook “is a compelling computer at a compelling price,” with “beauty that is more than skin deep.”

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John Legend Live: With MacBook Pro, Logic Studio and MainStage

Fans of platinum-selling R&B artist John Legend bring the same high expectations for each new album to every live concert. On his current tour, Legend, music director Eugene “Man-Man” Roberts and his band meet and beat those expectations by playing their best studio sounds along with fresh live riffs through MacBook Pro laptops running Logic Studio and MainStage.

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iPod touch Still “king of the hill”

After carefully considering the competition, Senior Editor Donald Bell (cnet.com) makes iPod touch the CNET Editors’ Choice among top MP3 players, writing that it “remains king of the hill.” Adds Bell: “Whether you’re buying one for yourself or giving it as a gift, the third-generation iPod touch does not disappoint.”

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Over 100,000 Apps Now Available on the App Store

Apple today announced that developers have created over 100,000 apps for the App Store, the largest applications store in the world. iPhone and iPod touch customers in 77 countries can choose from an incredible range of apps in 20 categories, including games, business, news, sports, health, reference and travel. App Store users have downloaded well over two billion apps, continuing to make it the world’s most popular applications store.

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