Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Apple Chief hints at iPhone cheaper

By Rosa Rosa Golijan

Previously we heard that Apple is working on an iPhone cheaper and now some comments by Apple CEO Tim Cook all but confirms that the plan.

Eric Savitz of Tech Trade Forbes ' blog reports that a research note released recently from Bernstein Research analyst Toni Sacconaghi revealed information about a meeting with Apple COO Tim Cook, CFO Peter Oppenheimer and VP of Internet Services Eddy Cuetogether with some details about Apple's product plans:

Analyst says Cook "appeared to reaffirm the notion that Apple is likely to develop lower priced bids" to expand the market for the iPhone. Cook said the company is designing "smart things" to deal with the prepaid market and that Apple does not want the products to be "only for the rich", and that the company is "not cede any market."

It seems quite reasonable to interpret these comments as a sign that Apple is plotting to offer a cheaper iPhone and we hope certainly is — especially considering that our wallets will probably already have a nice success shortly after announcing the upcoming Apple iPad 2.

Related stories:

Rosa Rosa Golijan writes tech here and there. She is a little obsessed with Twitter, but still loves be liked on Facebook.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Apple iPad launch live 2

HomeNewsApple IPad 2 launch live CoveragePosted from Chris Smith on Fri, February 25, 2011

Date of launch of Apple's iPad 2 is imminent. Follow our Liveblog from event in San Francisco on Wednesday.

The countdown to the second iteration of epochal tablet PC Apple is almost finished. When the clock strikes 8 pm in the United Kingdom on Wednesday iPad 2 will be revealed to the world at a media event in San Francisco.

Once the 2 March press invite (pictured) landed in our inbox this week, the endless speculation and rumor-mongering turned to excitement and we can't wait to hear what Apple has in store for the legions of aspiring iPad 2 owners out there.

Will the camera FaceTime? A sleeker design? Retina the iPhone's screen? Faster processors and better graphics chips? Or will a new version-and-improved handling of iOS? All these questions will be answered on Wednesday.

We'll be liveblogging media unveiling of San Francisco, and we'll be in the hands of a specially organized media event in London to be among the first to get our hands on the new device that Apple hopes will bring the new wave of tablets rival firmly in their place.

We'll also be updating this page throughout the build-up to the event to bring you all the hottest gossip, the latest insider leaks and price-points, says so bookmark this page now and check back for the latest news between now and Wednesday.

The excitement is reaching fever pitch T3 towers. We hope you can join us on Wednesday.

Apple iPad controls the 93 percent of the Tablet PC market

HomeNewsApple IPad controls the 93% of Tablet MarketPosted by Luke Johnson on Fri, February 25, 2011

iPad dominates second generation before unveiling

A few days before the official inauguration of the second generation iPad Apple has confirmed for the March 2, new reports have suggested the current iPad controls 93 per cent of the Tablet PC market.

The relationship industry analysts ABI Research technology which claimed that the Apple was responsible for 93% of Tablet PC 4.5 million devices shipped in the third quarter of 2010. While it is known that Apple controls the market share of Tablet PC, to the extent that it dominates was previously unknown.


With a recent spate of high-end Android powered tablets is revealed by the likes of Samsung, LG, Motorola, Apple's market share of Tablet PC is expected to fall in the coming months, despite the arrival of iPad 2 which is believed to be the voice for the arrival with front and rear facing cameras and a slimmer form factor.

Senior Director of practice at ABI Research, Jeff Orr, said of the findings and the market share of Apple's future: "over time, first time-to-market advantage Apple iPad will inevitably erode to a certain extent. ABI Research has been monitoring media tablets since December 2009; future quarterly editions of this product will include market data tracking market share of all suppliers of Tablet PC main media. "

That of the new breed of tablets 3.0 Android powered is the best chance of rollover iPad? Let us know what you think via the feed T3 Twitter and Facebook.

Via: ABI Research

Workers ' Poisoned ' turn to Apple

23 February 2011, Last updated at 12: 28 GMT Wintek touchscreens on contract makes Apple and other mobile phone companies. Chinese workers injured while making touchscreens for mobile devices, including iPhones, Apple have written in asking it to do more to help them.

Some 137 workers suffered adverse health effects after exposure to a chemical, known as n-hexane.

They argue that the Taiwanese factory owner never gave them a sufficient compensation.

Apple did not offer comment on the letter.

Five workers, including the 27-year-old Jia Jingchuan, have signed a letter to the chief executive officer Steve Jobs, asking Apple to offer help to above incidents.

They say that the owner of the factory didn't give enough compensation, urged those who took off to give up their job and was unable to guarantee that workers who might suffer illnesses fresh medical bills will have taken care of.

Long-term damage

WinTek, the Taiwan company that owns the factory said that the chemical is used in place of alcohol because evaporated faster and accelerate the production of touchscreens.

It has now returned to using alcohol to clean screens.

Jia Jingchuan is among victims of chemical poisoning

Workers exposed to n-hexane expert fainting and exhaustion, sweaty hands and feet, numbness in hands and feet swelling and pain. Some argue that they are still ill-effects.

Experts say that daily exposure to n-hexane can cause long-term damage.

In its annual report, published last week, Apple has acknowledged the incident.

"In 2010 we have learned that 137 workers at the plant of Suzhou to Wintek, one of the vendors Apple, they had suffered the adverse health effects following exposure to n-hexane, a chemical detergents used in certain manufacturing processes," read the report.

"We have commissioned Wintek to stop the use of n-hexane and provide proof that they had removed the chemical from their production lines," he said.

Apple said it has also asked the firm to provide adequate ventilation in the factory. You will monitor the plant and reaudit facility this year.

WinTek also provides components to a number of other companies, including Nokia and HTC.

This is not the first problem that Apple has experimented with its Chinese factories.

Annual report also refers to an incident to its primary supplier Foxconn factory in China, where a dozen workers committed suicide.

"We were disturbed and deeply saddened to learn that factory workers were taking their own life," read the report.

You said "suicide prevention specialists" were working with Foxconn to improve conditions.

Apple beats out succession query

23 February 2011, Last updated at 21: 44 GMT by Maggie Shiels, BBC News technology reporter, Silicon Valley, Steve Jobs didn't say when, or if, the rudder will return Apple Apple has fought off efforts to reveal the succession plans for the time when Steve Jobs is no longer in charge of the company.

The proposal was presented by the Fund for workers of the plant during the annual meeting of shareholders of the company.

Steve Jobs, who is his third medical leave, did not attend the event at the headquarters of Apple in California.

Apple, a secret society known, he fought the proposal from the outset.

A count of preliminary proxy on the measure at issue has suggested that the proposed Fund had been defeated.

Was a move that disappointed Jennifer O'Dell, who made the proposal on behalf of the Fund, which represents the 500,000 construction workers across the United States and in Canada.

«Transparency»

"We want Steve Jobs to get back to work yesterday," Ms. O'Dell told BBC News.

"We want him to be here every day. We want to live forever.

"That is not realistic, and that's why they need to have a plan. And if they have a plan, and I'm sure they do, what's wrong with a little transparency?

Apple until now said that such a disclosure would give competitors a "unfair advantage" by publishing goals and plans of the company.

' Internal ' candidates

The first time, Mr Jobs took time off work to take care of her health was in 2004 when he revealed that he had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

A second medical leave came in 2009 after a liver transplant.

When investors have expressed some concern about the future of the company, given how Mr. Jobs has seen central to its success.

The Illinois-based pension fund said it has submitted its proposal, last year, months before the most recent decision Mr Jobs ' taking time from work due to medical reasons.

The measure had called for Apple to develop a plan that would be reviewed each year which specifically established "criteria for the position of CEO" and "identifies and develops internal candidates" potentially fill the position.

The Fund has also called for CdA Apple start emergency planning for a new Executive Director three years before a planned transition.

' Real ' Debate

Despite the defeat, Ms O'Dell said that this was not the end of their efforts.

The Fund holds nearly 11,500 shares of Apple, a value of approximately $ 4 million (£ 2.4 m).

"If the company doesn't want to get in touch with us and have a real debate on this issue we will refile again next year," he said.

"Thirty companies have adopted this [succession plans] including HP and Intel.

"There are a lot of things we can do with this proposal.

"If the Board continues to not want to listen to long-term shareholders, to talk seriously about this problem, we can take a second step and hold directly responsible for the Management Board and we could hold our votes by members of the Board of Directors. We want to do it? NO. "

While Apple provided hundreds of thousands of workers with pension security, an enterprise cannot be executed by one person to dictate the role of the company, he said.

«Decisions»

In the absence of Mr Jobs ', the company is run by chief operating officer Tim Cook.

During the meeting of one hour, not shareholders questions on health of Mr. Jobs ', although a number wished him well for the future.

Out of the Office of the company, the majority opinion upheld the decision of Apple to hold his cards on succession close to his chest.

"I feel make public such a plan is useless," said Pam Pallakoff, a shareholder for 20 years.

"We feel the management in place is very good management and make the right decisions at the time that they need."

Fellow shareholder Shelton Ehrlich, 76, said he was glad he lost the proposal, and that he had faith that the company knew what he was doing.

"Mr jobs, if he is not here or here ... the company will complete his vision. At least for the next five years, everything is set up on a good path. "

Analysts have long agreed with this point of view, that Apple has a long pipeline of products and a deep bench of management with a wealth of experience.

Similarly confident in future Apple was a shareholder in 29-year-old Melissa Gutknecht, who has held the stock of the company since 2008.

"I am respectfully of the way that Apple is thinking of this problem and to understand that a lot is happening behind the scenes," he said.

"My thoughts are already have a plan in place and does not endanger the shareholder by any means. I think just trying to be smart about how they spread this information to shareholders and the public ".

More say

A proposal that was adopted was an undisputed requirement that the applicant's board of the company to receive a majority in order to be appointed.

The move was seen as a victory for Calpers, the largest pension fund in the United States, that the meeting was said, holds 1.6 m shares Apple worth just under $ 1 billion.

Apple was opposed to this measure and said that would hamper his ability to keep the members of its Board of Directors.

Analysts said that the vote has emphasized investors want more say in the selection of board members and more power to pass beyond the wishes of the management of Apple, which is seen as a very close-knit group.

IPad ad?

At the annual shareholders ' meeting also ignited a iPad updated entries, with an event in San Francisco next week dubbed come see what 2011 will be the year.

The company has sold more than 15 m of devices since its launch last April.

Mr Cook wouldn't talk about future products, but said she thought that the market for tablet PC was "huge, huge".

Unlike last year when iPad had the market almost to itself, this year will face increased competition from a number of companies from Google to HP of Research in Motion.

Much advertised Xoom Motorola tablet that runs an operating system developed by Google, goes on sale on Thursday.

The Xoom was crowned the best gadget at the giant Consumer electronics Show in Las Vegas last month.

Research in Motion plans to release four versions of its tablet PlayBook this year, largely intended for the enterprise market.

Workers sickened at Apple supplier in China

Apple, describing it as a "violation of core" safety of workers, said that he had ordered the contractor to stop using chemical and to improve safety at the installation. Apple also said that they would monitor the medical conditions of workers.

But in interviews last weekend, almost a dozen employees say it's been damaged by chemical said he had never heard from anyone at Apple.

Instead, they told the contractor — a Taiwanese company called Wintek — had pressed them and many other workers affected to resign and accept cash settlements that would fulfil the responsibility for the future, charges the company denied.

"We hope that Apple will pay attention to its social responsibility," said Jia Jingchuan, 27. Said display at the plant to Wintek for the chemical, known as n-hexane, had left him with damage to the nervous system and made it so hypersensitive to cold that now he must wear down insulated clothing, even indoors. "Usually someone my age not wearing this kind of pants," said his voice raising awareness. "Only men 50 or 60 years wear something like this."

Monday, however, a Wintek spokesman denied that the company was pushing employees to resign or sign documents fulfilling the company's future liability.

The company said that he was working with healthcare professionals to assess the health of workers. Jay Huang, the spokesperson, Wintek has even suggested that it would be willing to pay for medical care should symptoms persist after the resignation of workers.

"Wintek's policy of handling this is to the benefit of workers, as the first priority," he said.

Kristin Huguet, a spokesman at Apple in Cupertino, California, has refused to discuss appropriate Wintek but said that the company has been committed to the highest standards of social responsibility in its supply chain. "We need our suppliers provide safe working conditions, treat employees with dignity and respect and use environmentally friendly manufacturing processes, whenever our products are made," he said.

Many workers, however, say that do not trust factory because some managers continue to press workers injured to resign, sometimes insisting that they work longer hours, even if their health is compromised.

Mr. Jia, a machine repair worker, was among a group of employees gathered Sunday Wintek to discuss the case of unheated Apartment naked, a worker a few miles from the factory.

Some members of the group said that they were suffering from health problems still at work in the factory, which employs 18,000 employees at an average monthly wage of approximately $ 200, after hours of overtime.

Wang Mei, 37, Wintek, a supervisor of quality inspector said that she was hospitalized for 10 months due to n-hexane poisoning. Said he would leave the factory, but only after receiving assurances that Wintek would cover your medical bills, if kept his health problems.

"It's not that we want to work here," he said Sunday, as she tried to explain why she stays at the factory despite symptoms such as pain, recurrent in his limbs and fatigue. "We want to fight for our legal rights."

Another woman came into the room waving a letter from an insurance company in China, it for insurance life because she had been poisoned at Wintek factory.

Although many workers said that he hadn't heard from Apple, and had been pressed to leave Wintek, a worker has said that an employee of Apple had arrived at the factory in Suzhou, the Tuesday and had met with a few workers affected.

Workers also told Wintek managers appeared to be softening their stance earlier this week telling various workers injured that they would no longer be required to sign documents if they choose to resign.

Wintek injuries highlight the challenges Apple faces in trying to source goods from China, which dominates the production of electronics with cheap labour and highly efficient factories that often operate around the clock.

But China is also known for the factories that ordinarily do not comply with environmental and labor laws.

Chen Xiaoduan contributed research.

Gadgetwise: Apple Announces the new MacBook Pro

Apple announced today an upgrade to its line of MacBook Pro laptops. The highlights? New faster processors, more powerful graphics processors, an HD camcorder and a new port for a technology that Apple is calling Thunderbolt.

Aesthetically, the new professionals seem very similar to their predecessors. There are still 13-, 15 and 17 inches (starting at $ 1,199, $ 1799 and $ 2499, respectively), and still have the same unibody aluminum construction and full-width glass screen. Look, you'll see a lot that is different.

Is under the hood where things change. The new Intel Core i5, and Core i7, dual-core and quad-core chip that promise up to twice the performance of the chips in earlier models.

One of the new features of the Intel chip has an integrated graphics processor. But in 15-and 17-inch MacBook Pro, Apple doubled down on the graphics by the addition of a graphics chip from AMD Radeon discrete. Models with both chips perfectly and automatically switch between the two processors, depending on desired performance.

There's also a new camera, which can transmit FaceTime videos in 720 p resolution and display it in a new widescreen format.

The new port of Thunderbolt on MacBook Pro.
Is the latest addition to the line MacBook Pro which is perhaps the most intriguing: the Thunderbolt. Apple has worked with Intel on its light peak project to create a new high-speed data and display the port that would be adaptable to existing rules on the connection. The MacBook Pro are the first computer to feature the technology, but it will roll out across the builders of the next year.

Thunderbolt performance specifications are surprising: at 10 Gbps, is twice as fast as USB 3.0, 12 times as fast as FireWire 800 and 20 times faster than USB 2.0. As Intel calculated in their press release, a Thunderbolt connection can transfer a full-length high-definition movies in 30 seconds.

Thunderbolt is also a Mini DisplayPort native, so that any display with that connection can connect easily. HDMI, DisplayPort and VGA, DVI display may use tabs. Thunderbolt also provides up to 10 Watts of power to peripheral devices and can be daisy chained up to six devices.

The new MacBook Pro are now available.

Apple March Madness: as In a lion

Translate Request has too much data Parameter name: request Translate Request has too much data Parameter name: request If you nauseate easily at the prospect of non-stop Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) announcements, right now might be a good time to take a long hike in the woods, weather permitting. Apple's given developers a brand-new preview of OS X Lion; next week we'll see an announcement that's almost certainly going to be all about iPad 2; and there are rumors that iOS 4.3 is just around the corner.

Previews and just-about-there hearsay aside, Apple also pulled off an actual product release this week. A new batch of MacBook Pros washed ashore, and in terms of design, they're really very similar to last year's models. There were a few notable steps forward, though, including a new technology Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) has been talking up over the last few months.

But first, processors: All three models -- 13, 15 and 17 inches -- have Intel's latest Core processors, and the bigger two offer quad-core options. In graphics, the larger models have ditched Nvidia (Nasdaq: NVDA) and jumped over to AMD's (NYSE: AMD) camp.

Apple's also polished up the webcam to provide 720p HD video-calling abilities. You can use FaceTime, too, if you happen to have an extra dollar.

Then there's Thunderbolt, the new input/output system built on Intel's Light Peak technology. It's all about fast data transfer speeds -- up to 10 gigabits per second. So you can move lots of data into and out of the computer -- as long as that other data bucket happens to be have a Thunderbolt port as well. Several companies say they have stuff on the way, but it's going to be a while before you'll find it everywhere you turn.

Listen to the podcast (10:32 minutes).

There are two kinds of Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) Prime members: 1) People who buy lots of stuff on Amazon and figure they probably save money by paying a flat $79 per year to get free express shipping on anything, any time; and 2) People who signed up for a free one-month membership in order to save a few bucks shipping one item, then forgot to cancel the automatic renewal.

But Amazon's Prime membership isn't just about shipping; the latest perk the retailer's given its VIPs is movie streaming. Anyone familiar with Netflix's (Nasdaq: NFLX) system should recognize how it works: Choose the night's entertainment from a catalog of thousands of movies and TV shows, then just sit back and watch, commercial-free, either through a computer or any of the various set-top boxes that already work with Amazon's video download service. No limits as far as Amazon's concerned, though your ISP might have a different theory about that.

Amazon's providing this at no extra charge above the annual fee Prime members already pay. And it just so happens that the fee actually comes out to a few bucks less than what Netflix charges for 12 months of its own streaming-only plan.

But you can't call Amazon's offering just flat-out better than Netflix's, not yet anyway. For one thing, Amazon's streaming library is about 5,000 titles strong; the Netflix instant catalog is about five times that amount. Also, there's no sign Amazon is about to budge from its annual membership system and open up some kind of pay-by-the-month offering. Maybe they figure they'd get too many hop-ons. So after that first free month, new users will have to commit for a full year.

Finally, Amazon currently offers no way to stream video directly to a mobile device through an app. Netflix, on the other hand, has an iOS app -- though that's exactly the kind of app that seems like it could quickly suffocate if Apple intends to enforce its new subscription rules across the board, not just for magazines and newspapers.

Microsoft's (Nasdaq: MSFT) plans to keep a foot in the mobile game with Windows Phone 7 are well under way, and it even has the massive, hulking Nokia (NYSE: NOK) on its side. But in terms of basic mobile OS childhood development, WinPho 7 has a few skills it still needs to acquire in order to catch up with the rest of the class.

One of these is copy and paste. Might not be a feature everyone uses all the time, but it's sort of the technological equivalent of being able to dress and feed yourself -- if you don't know how to do it, the perception is that you're definitely behind the curve.

Perhaps copy and paste were what a lot of Windows Phone 7 users were hoping for when they started installing the OS's latest update this week. It's not what they got, though -- this update seemed to be focused on improving the update process. A meta-update, or something.

And that's if the whole exercise worked properly. But as some owners of Samsung Windows Phones soon learned, the process was not universally smooth. Some reported that it kept freezing up mid-stride, and in certain cases, it more or less bricked their phones -- in other words, scrambled their firmware so bad they were rendered inoperable. Microsoft quickly pulled the update from Samsung models.

Some feel that Microsoft really ought to graduate to a system that does over-the-air updates, where you don't have to plug your phone into a computer in order to get the latest version of the OS. That might have its advantages from a convenience perspective, but if the software's botched to begin with, it doesn't matter what the phone is or is not plugged into; its brains are still gonna get scrambled.

Over-the-air is no guarantee against defective updates. I remember that last summer, Sprint's (NYSE: S) EVO 4G, an Android phone from HTC, had its own little problem with a bum update, and that one was done over-the-air. If you have to plug it in, at least you might have a chance to back up and create a restore point -- if the management software's designed that way.

Much doubt has been raised about Apple CEO Steve Jobs' role at the company right now. Technically he's on a leave of absence, putting COO Tim Cook in charge. Tabloids report his health issues have taken a turn for the worse. Yet he's said to be calling Apple's major shots from home, he was well enough to join a who's-who-in-technology dinner with President Obama last week, and those cryptic, one-liner responses to random emails from the public are still trickling in every now and then.

Just like the last time Steve Jobs had to take a major break from full-time duties, his absence has made some shareholders very anxious. They want to know what the board's plan is for when Jobs isn't in charge anymore, whether that happens tomorrow or many years from now. Will Cook officially take over immediately, or will the job be open to applicants? Will it only consider current top Apple execs, or will there be some outside head-hunting? Or will it reorganize into some kind of new-agey council of elders where no one person officially wears the turtleneck?

Apple's board says it does indeed have a plan, and it's not difficult to believe that's true. Not having any kind of plan at all would be so fiscally irresponsible that it makes me wonder whether someone might end up in jail over it. So the board knows what it'll do; it just doesn't want to talk about it publicly.

Not all shareholders agree with that strategy, though, and the issue came to a head this week at a shareholder meeting in which the board squared off with the Laborers' International Union of America, backed by Institutional Shareholder Services. LIUNA wants that succession plan publicly known, and it put it up for a shareholder vote.

Apple's board is thoroughly against this; it maintains that disclosing its plan would hurt its ability to recruit and retain top executives. Those who see that they're clearly nowhere near on the right track to the crown might be less inclined to work with Apple. Apparently that's what most shareholders think too; preliminary results indicate the board won the standoff.

Not exactly surprising -- Apple's one of the most secretive publicly traded companies on Earth. It's also been one of the most successful over the past decade or so. Hard to say whether that's because of all the secrecy or in spite of it, but it seems most Apple shareholders are happy enough with its performance that they'll allow the board to keep yet another secret tucked away if that's what it thinks is best.

You always hear about how much tougher previous generations were, how they worked harder and put up without the comforts we take for granted today. But I say the people who are alive today are pretty tough too, in our own way. We gobble up fish saturated with mercury, we breathe air full of toxic exhaust fumes, we walk around under a depleted ozone layer, and a lot of our food is so heavily processed it would hardly be recognizable to someone from 200 years ago. Yet our life expectancy is still greater than it was back when it was all blue skies and clean living. Progress!

We can even take a radiological kick to the head without even blinking, which is kind of what happens every time you use a cellphone. The thing making it work is a microwave radio that uses the same frequency as a microwave oven, and although it probably won't boil your brain matter in two minutes, it still does a little something to your gray goo, according to recent research. What that something is, and whether it's good, bad or indifferent, is still unclear.

For the study, researchers pumped 47 people with a fluid used to measure brain glucose metabolism, then strapped phones to their ears and let 'em rip for about an hour. Then they monitored them for the same amount of time with the phones turned off.

What they found was that metabolism in the brain region closest to the antenna was 7 percent higher when the phone was on. They said that suggests the human brain is indeed sensitive to the kind of radiation cellphones put out.

What's more difficult to figure out is exactly how harmful that is, if at all. It might be more dangerous to younger people whose brains are still developing, and adults with neurological problems or brain injuries. But the technology's still too new to know the full life-long affects of cellphone use, if any.

It's been a quarter century since Gordon Gecko wowed the world with his fruitcake-sized Motorola (NYSE: MOT), but it'll be at least that much longer before we'll know exactly what happens to a human brain after using a cellphone daily from adolescence well into adulthood.

View the original article here

Lion areas outside the territory in the Apple ecosystem

By Mike Martin
MacNewsWorld
ECT News Network
02/25/10-5: 00 PM PT Apple latest iteration of OS X, Lion, includes some functionality inspired by iOS, the system designed specifically for the iPhone and iPad. As iOS, Lion comes with a built in app store. One issue is whether Apple will make an effort to corral the most--if not all--of the software developed for OS X and make it available only through the Mac App Store, a move that would probably be considered too control--even for Apple.


Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) may be hoping that the Mac operating system version number eight becomes the eighth wonder of the world of technology. The company has released a developer preview of the operating system, codenamed "Leo", Thursday.

However, the lion is primarily a "UI evolution, rather than a feature back end upgrade" Appitalism founder and CEO Simon Buckingham. Mac OS X Lion features Mission Control, a new view of Mac; Launchpad, a new app; full-screen applications that fill the entire screen Mac; and of course, the new Mac App Store.

Mission Control provides a "bird's eye view of each app and running on your Mac," said Monica Sarkar representative of Apple. "Launchpad makes it easier than ever to find and launch any app. multi-touch gestures give you a natural and intuitive way to interact, like pinching your fingers to zoom and duplicate it left or right to turn a page."

Mac OS X Lion-Mission Control

With the wild popularity of its iHandhelds--iPad, iPhone and iPod--the wonder Apple has incorporated a slew of iOS features OS X.

"IPad has inspired a new generation of innovative features in Scorpio," said Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing.

These characteristics are equipped with a dizzying array of moniker with trademark. "Conversations" automatically groups related messages into a single timeline. "Launch" copy files wirelessly from one Mac to another.

"Versions" automatically save the later versions of a document, with further Browse, edit, and restore options. "Resume" apps exactly as they were left to close or restart. And "filevault" disk encryption provides for local and external drives, with the possibility to erase data instantly.

"I suspect that all these new features a hint at an accelerated pace announcement," Buckingham of Appitalism told MacNewsWorld. "Apple probably will move to twice yearly and iOS operating system updates that Android not catching up to them."

The new features of Leo could tip the stricter controls on Mac software--even more restrictive, perhaps, than those applicable to iOS the App Store.

Still, Apple iDevices Leone and are different animals, said Herbert Tsang, Ph.d., a bioinformatics researcher and instructor at the Simon Fraser University School of Computing Science.

"Through the App Store, Apple's tight control over their software iDevices is famous, ' Tsang said MacNewsWorld. "There is no indication, however, that the App Store [Mac] will be the only way to get the Mac software".

A lion in roaming in pristine Apple ecosystem might suggest also that walls still more is on the way. However, the Act of constructing those walls would probably leave clues, "how to make perfectly iOS apps available on the Mac platform, which is what might be looking for if you had thought of Leo involved issues of control," Buckingham of Appitalism told TechNewsWorld. "I don't see anyone, though."

In fact, coupling Mac App Store too tightly and seamlessly to the Mac would be a "step backwards" in the advancement of technology, Tsang of SFU noted.

Simply having an app store available on a Mac, however, "is a way for individual developers to sell their software and will be a great advantage," he said. "The new integration ... Lion in Mac OS X is a way to benefit from individual software developers. Is an effort to offer alternatives, rather than exclusive.

stLight. options ({publisher: ' aa1224c6-4ba7-b198-9533-a0e9e2e5e489 '});Print the electronic version of the article reprints more by Mike Martin

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Apple opens Mac App Store ... Meanwhile, at CES ...
06 January 2011
Apple is notably absent from the CES, that has been dominating the news of the world tech since it started Wednesday, so the time of its opening Mac App Store may be intended to turn the focus away from Las Vegas to Cupertino--at least for a moment. Packed as it is with new androids, CES represents "the gravest threat to Apple's current position," said Pund-IT analyst Charles King from the show floor.

More from Mike Martin

Discovery Trail Blazes One Last
February 25, 2011
The space shuttle Discovery probe may be the most successful in history. She launched the Hubble telescope and transported crews safer from and into space than any other ship. She was the first to bring a satellite back to Earth; before you have a woman at the helm; before taking the oldest person in space--77-year-old John Glenn; in the first place to host an African-American walker of space; and before flying a member of Congress in orbit, Utah Senator Jake Garn. Light-swallowing Act of Anti-Laser
24 February 2011
The conventional laser using an "average earnings"--usually a semiconducting gallium arsenide as--glue and emit a beam of light waves with the same frequency and amplitude. So is ultra-focused laser light that has powerful properties, from cutting through steel to transfer information at the speed of light in computer and telecommunication networks. The team at Yale has used another semiconductor material--silicon--as a "loss of support" to build a perfect absorber consistent. Kinect SDK could open up new worlds for the motion-controlled interfaces
22 February 2011
Microsoft Xbox Kinect system, which allows a player to make a game through the movement of the body and without holding a controller, began life, providing players with a means of virtual skiing or care for virtual pets. Soon, however, Microsoft will launch a SKD Kinect for PC, allowing creative minds to put it in all kinds of new and interesting uses.

View the original article here

New Verizon ad Xoom: Testosterone beats Apple?

If you happened to watch the Super Bowl, you might remember that the Motorola Xoom was the next coming of flower power. Was the epitome of a humanity that exceeded the nature of big brother of the behemoth that is Apple identikit.

It may be that no one at Verizon got--or, perhaps, has bought--the message.

To View Verizon the Xoom seems completely in line with its strategy when launched the droid.

This thing for kids. You kids get excited about GigaHertz. It is for kids who love them some "Vendetta".

If you're the kind of person who gets excited about a 3D graphics engine and a gyroscope, will be rushing to your Verizon store to zoom out with your Xoom.

But if you are one of the housewives, senior citizens, hell's Angels, or project manager who simply love your iPad and can't wait for iPad 2, might pause to consider whether it might be the Xoom, well, a little too high tech for you.

My accountant tells me he bought a droid and had to take Back to the Verizon store because he just couldn't work out how, well, it worked.

It will be fascinating to see what will attract buyers to Xoom. Will be the way you are in a rocket ship? Or will something more considered, prettier, and more, well, sensitive?

Some might wonder whether the motto "Grab and grab it" offers the right kind of sensibility.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Consumer Reports ' antennagate, ' reignites sues Verizon Apple iPhone 4 editions

(Credit: Apple)

Renewal of a problem that just doesn't seem to want to die, Consumer Reports says Apple iPhone Verizon 4 suffers the same problems antenna "death grip" original device, released last summer amid widespread controversy.

Verizon iPhone 4 has an issue that could cause the phone drop calls or be able to make calls in weak signal conditions, Consumer Reports engineers have found in laboratory tests.

The "death grip" occurs when you hold the iPhone in a way that covers the band antenna, located on the bottom of the left side of the phone. As with the AT&T version of the iPhone 4, any case (or cottage industry "band-aid" product) would alleviate the problem, the conductivity of interfering with the cell phone signal of human skin.

Consumer Reports tested the new iPhone Verizon 4, along with several other popular smartphone Verizon.

Special tests were all conducted in a controlled environment isolation Chamber of RF-CU at our Testing Center in Yonkers, New York and national research. In this room, which blocks the interference from external signals, our engineers test mounted each phone on a support and established a continuous signal connection to our base station emulator, a device that mimics the cellular signals are given in the field. We then put a finger to every cell phone in a range of locations around its edge and monitored changes the phone's performance in every position.

Proofs of claim that the iPhone was the only phone hit by inserting your finger around the outer band of the phone.

Once again, Consumer Reports has not included the iPhone Verizon Smartphone in its list of recommended for its subscribers, despite the fact that it surpassed many other smartphones in almost any other category.

Consumer Reports is entitled not to include Apple iPhone Verizon 4 recommended in its smartphone? Let me know what you think in the comments!

If you have a question or a comment for Joe Aimonetti, you can submit it here. However, because our editors and writers receive hundreds of requests, we cannot tell you when you receive a response.

Joe is a seasoned veteran with years of experience on the platform. He reports on the Mac, iPod, iPhone and other Apple sells. He also worked at the Apple Retail Store. He is also a creative professional who knows how to use a Mac to get the job done. Joe is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CBS Interactive.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Apple to unveil iPad 2 on 2 March? (confirmed)

Update: Apple has confirmed the event by issuing press pass today.

According to unnamed sources cited by all things digital, Apple will unveil its second generation iPad at a media event on Wednesday, March 2. That is next week, so that if the report is accurate you can expect Apple to confirm the meeting and issue invitations soon. As usual, Cupertino has been quiet about the new device, but the rumor mill has evoked by a handful of possible technical specifications.

According to titles of Concord, iPad 2 display is 30-35% thinner with a better quality anti-glare, but has the same resolution. Because of reduced thickness of the screen and other evolutionary improvements, you can expect the device to be thinner and lighter. Analysts expect even rear and front camera, which will be accompanied by Apple software FaceTime video called.

A mockup of iPad 2

Inside, the new iPad is believed to bring a faster processor and graphics core, RAM, as well as Qualcomm chip multimode WWAN support for GSM and CDMA networks. Overall, the second generation iPad shouldn't be a radical leap forward, instead of bringing a minor update is similar to the iPhone 3GS. However, should be able to hold its own against the competition in the short term.

Apple shareholders reject the proposed succession plan

Apple's Board of Directors will not be required to disclose publicly his plans for the succession of the CEO, after shareholders voted down a proposal to the company's annual meeting Wednesday. The proposal was the focus of much attention before the shareholders meeting, which seemed to be as much about the health of CEO Steve Jobs, not the health of Apple.

Still, during a question and answer session with investors, managers of Apple has addressed other issues surrounding the company, including deleting some suggestions about possible updates to iOS devices from Apple for the Print event just announced planned for next week.

Succession plan

Steve Jobs not may not have been present Wednesday, but the CEO was the focus of discussion at the meeting of the morning. In the light of its expectation for medical reasons, his health not only attracted a good number of questions, but also the interest of several television crews stationed outside the home.

With a calendar for the return of Jobs ' for the position of CEO, uncertain, shareholders voted down a proposed succession plan. The proposal would be approved, the Board of Directors of Apple to develop internal candidates, develop criteria for the position of CEO and begin the succession of non-emergency planning CEO of at least three years before a planned transition. The plan also provided for an annual report to be produced by the Board of Directors on a succession plan to be presented to shareholders.

Jennifer O'Dell, Assistant Director for Corporate Affairs for international workers Union of North America (LIUNA), argued for a succession plan, citing the shareholders need to know how "Apple could manage a vacant CEO." The proposal, he added, would not have turned out to be released that candidates the company was looking in a succession plan proposed, but would "company to be on foot safe" should the position of CEO. Hewlett-Packard and Intel have succession plans, supported, and this plan would be an opportunity for Apple to "stand in favour of responsibility".

However, shareholders rejected the measure, according to preliminary vote totals. Council of the Apple Board was opposed to the proposal for a succession plan, arguing that already has a formal process in place and who publicly reveal his plans would play into the hands of competitors.

Even as shareholders rejected the proposal, health work was a theme frequently during the question and answer portion of the meeting-mainly in the form of well-wishes from shareholders. Chief operating officer Tim Cook, who is managing the daily duties of employment during the latter's absence and Bruce Sewell, Apple's senior vice president and general counsel, thanked well-wishers, but did not elaborate further the health of CEO.

Event 2 March

The shareholder meeting also features frequent mentions of Apple event scheduled on 2 March, usually by executives of Apple. Cook spoke at the event when it comes to sales figures for the iPhone at Verizon during the end of his presentation, and the subject came up again when a shareholder asked iPad new information on new iPhones remain competitive within the mobile and Tablet PC markets.

Cook "2 March might give you clues," he said.

Android versus iOS

Many issues of Apple's main rival in the mobile market, Google's Android operating system.

As Windows and OS X, Android is perceived to be a more open operating system for developers. One shareholder asked possibility of Android to have different modules that expand its input options, something the shareholder said that Apple has been slow to embrace. Scott Forstall, Apple's senior vice president of iPhone software, brushed off the suggestion and instead discussed uniqueness of iOS in the market.

Taking a shot at Google, Forstall said, "we are careful with how we expand". For Apple, he explained, is all about ensuring the ability and applications continue to work even after the updates of iOS. In this sense, Forstall said Apple is as careful regarding the virus and that when plug-in change multiple apps, "becomes difficult to protect those applications."

A shareholder has applied a parallel between the battle of Android and iOS and competition in the 1990s between Windows PCs and Macs. Phil Schiller, Apple senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, quickly rejected the comparison. Defended its strategy of Apple in 1990, calling it "a great."

As evidence, said that in the computer market, companies like IBM and Compaq "aren't around anymore" while Apple is yet. More important, Schiller added, when it comes to the actual competition, with more than 300,000 apps in the App Store, Apple iOS is ahead in the software. Schiller said that Apple has the opposite problem with Mac: "we can do much better this time."

iOS in the enterprise

With consumer-friendly products like the iPhone and iPod and Mac Xserve server outage, some meeting participants argued that Apple has become more and more consumer-oriented. But Cook defended Apple's commitment to the enterprise with a pair of staggering statistics: according to Cook, 88% of Fortune 100 companies are testing, and deployment of the iPhone. Meanwhile, 80% of Fortune 100 companies are testing, and deployment iPad. So, while Apple has become synonymous with "consumer-friendly," Apple executives believe that the company's products are still making an impact on the enterprise market.

Meanwhile, the Mac has not been forgotten. Cook warned "don't underestimate the Mac" — are diversifying the IOC, he noted, and the most work environments are finding Mac to be useful to have around the Office, particularly when there is a virus that affects Windows PCs but not Mac.

Other votes

Shareholder votes went largely as planned, with all seven members of the Board of Directors re-elected, and Ernst & Young ratified as of independent registered public accounting firm for 2011. Yet, despite the recommendation of the Council of Directors, the shareholders voted to adopt a standard for the election of the Director.

Sponsored by public employees retirement system (CalPERS) California, the proposal will ensure that the Director "candidates are elected in the elections is not challenged by the affirmative of the majority." Current rules Apple allow a Director to be elected with votes "withheld" votes have no effect. CalPERS maintains that this makes "impossible to defeat the appointment of administrators that manage unchallenged." Anne Simpson, senior portfolio manager for corporate governance at CalPER, said that the proposal will ensure "the Board shall be held responsible."

"Responsible Capitalism is based on transparency," Simpson said, adding that the proposal, giving shareholders more power over elections, would "keep fresh apples."


For other Macintosh computing news, visit Macworld. Story copyright © 2011 Mac Publishing LLC. All rights reserved.

Apple Store down as new MacBook Pro for release

It seems that all these rumors about a MacBook Pro Update coming Thursday instead in early March are true. The online version of the Apple Store was down this morning and, just in time before the big reveal, a photo is leaked online showing the specifications for the new 15-inch MacBook Pro updated.

The French site by Mac4Ever (translated link) posted a photo, it maintains that it is the product of the new box 15-inch MacBook Pro shows new specifications of laptop alleged. The latest MacBook Pro reported will include a 2 Ghz processor quad core Intel core i7, 4 GB of DDR3 RAM, a 500 GB optical drive, screen resolution of 1 440-by-900, two USB slots, slot for card SDXC, a FireWire 800 port, a 8 x Super Drive, camera HD FaceTime and a graphics card AMD Radeon HD 6490M with 256 MB of VRAM. The computer weighs 5.6 pounds, according to the screenshot. It is not clear what are the specifications for the MacBook Pro 13 and 17 inches.

The box also mentions something called a Thunderbolt, which is said to be using the technology of high-speed peak light of rival Intel that presumably will be USB. The box says this port is compatible with devices and also serves as a backup Mini-display port, rumors that appeared online on Wednesday.

Missing presumed spec is no mention of this previously says hybrid SSD-optical storage system. Under this scheme, the operating system OS X sit on SSD for faster startup times while storing files would be managed by large optical drive.

It is not clear when Apple will open again his online store, but if you wait to unveil refreshed MacBook Pro, you may need to wait until later today. Intel is hosting a press event on Thursday at 10 a.m. Pacific time to San Francisco to launch its light peak technology that is presumably used in technology of Thunderbolt, the new MacBook Pro.

Only a few hours until we know for sure.

Connect with Ian Paul (@ ianpaul) and Today @ PCWorld on Twitter for the latest technology news and analysis.



Monday, February 21, 2011

Where is my wrist to Apple?

You cannot purchase one of the coolest gadget of Apple: an Apple Design Award. They hand them each year at the Worldwide Developers Conference, honoring "applications that demonstrate technical excellence, innovation, adoption of superior technology, high performance and outstanding design.

Is the Apple version of Oscar, the Stanley Cup, the cup of the world's largest grandmother. Like the rest of these incredible honors, the iconic trophy award requires a and boy, did the design team to nail it. ADA is a grey cube that is practically nude on each face, except for the side with a big white Apple logo on it. Has some electronics inside that only do one function: makes the Apple logo glow brightly when the cube is touched.

This item is 100% design and virtually zero percent of the engineering function, and is designed to make you think about how awesome Apple is in the eyes of most critics of society, then, is the latest Apple product.

I like it because it's probably the silliest piece of Apple hardware ever been involved with. (Assuming that the iPod Socks don't count. I don't think they do. Textile goods cannot be classified as technology until it's possible for them to fail and precipitate a disaster without warning.)

I wish that Apple did more things that they were stupid. The Macintosh Portable don't count, either. For those of you who have joined us late, the laptop was Mac before mobile Apple Was as cumbersome as a concert accordion, heavy as a concert accordion ... and the masses are the portable Mac just as unpalatable.

No, the folks at Apple--God loves 'em--I honestly thought they had a winner with that. What I want are Apple products that are pure expression of society's ability to design things and its employees take pride in producing an object causing a spike in galvanic skin response of the individual.

Every Apple product has at least one component of that concept. I don't like the new iPod nano (I think its design is only practical if you do not have almost never choose the tracks or playlists), but man alive: a computer medium color multitouch, the size of a postage stamp are almost unbearably cool.

(Image Caption: LunaTik (lunatik.com) is a iPod nano wristwatch add-on.)

A friend of mine has started to wear your Nano on a custom belt which turns it into a wrist (very chunky) that just tell the time after you wake the display. Here's how cool his design. The new Nano is so cool that Apple fans want an excuse to stare at it longingly and lovingly several times an hour during the day.

What happens if Apple decided to cut out the middleman and actually design a wristwatch?

Not an "iPod wrist." Not "a clock which can also check with any device that is streaming music or video through AirPlay." These concepts smack of integration. In the past, I praised Apple for not introducing mai the main products that enhance and support another Apple product or service in some way. That's great. But I'll never win an Apple Design Award. If you want to own something that Apple designed exclusively for the sake of design, it must be a wristwatch.

Or a bottle opener. Or a bookstand. It doesn't really matter. I just want to see what they can do if Apple engineers are exempt from the mandates of universes, long-range strategies and commercial viability.

Are partially inspired by the work of artists and designers employed by second-most-famous Steve Jobs ' company: Pixar. You are familiar with the fantastic job that make feature films, but of course, do not cease to be creative when you climb back into their cars at the end of the day. They are still drawing and painting and building, taking the ideas that might not be enough viable as a basis for a movie of 1.2 billion-dollar-banking but worth the time.

Check out the blog of the artist Josh Cooley history, for example. It is equipped with sketch wonderful work, including an impressive array of art in progress in which he paints scenes of iconic films as would be represented in little Golden book a child version of flick. Never is the discovery of a human head in a window or the birth of a xenomorphic alien explosive from the breast of a man was so fascinating.

The difference between Apple and Pixar is that an artist can purchase art supplies and knock out a sketch killer for under five dollars. If your specialty is technology to display high-density low-power, you can't follow a flight of fancy without stopping off at Dragon's Den for $ 120,000 Angel funding and then spend a month touring factories in China.

So Apple is going to have to act as sponsor their designers. Once a year, let someone any silly product they want, as long as it can be sold in Apple stores for $ 50 or less. Let's not lose our heads here. I have been playing history of Apple's product and the product just really silly that I can think of was the 20th anniversary of the Mac. It was definitely cool for the sake of coolness, but at an MSRP of $ 7,500, was only an impulse purchase.

I suppose that Apple could afford to do a silly computer Back in 1997. The company was on the ropes, desperately shooting out all his ammunition remaining in every direction possible, hoping that something would score a great success. Now that you back up the Hill, every move making it has been carefully dissected and observed, creates ripples. If it produces a new type of can openers that doesn't immediately grab the market share to double digits and cause many people to rethink their definition of the word "may", this will affect the price of whimsical actions.

Still: I want a clock from Apple. I want a baseball cap that bill always points to magnetic north. I want an egg beater that is sometimes gets all get mopey from seasonal affective disorder.

I have great confidence in Apple. IPad, iPod, and MacBook line show a confident team of designers who understand how to fuse human unity and instincts to next-generation technology. However, underneath everything, feel a fool absolutely barking-mad struggling to be heard.

Macworld senior contributor Andy Ihnatko is also a technology columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times.


For other Macintosh computing news, visit Macworld. Story copyright © 2010 Mac Publishing LLC. All rights reserved.

Glimpses of Apple CEO feeds Rumors

One of the first things I did on Friday morning, when I saw coverage of President Obama's meeting with tech leaders in California Thursday night was the search for images or videos. Eric Schmidt, not Obama or Mark Zuckerberg. I wanted to see how Steve Jobs looked.

As most of us, I read that the National Enquirer was publishing pictures of jobs outside of a cancer treatment center in Palo Alto, trying to weak and emaciated. (The photo was published in the edition of the magazine print Wednesday.) Jobs announced last month that he was taking an indefinite leave to focus on his health. The co-founder of Apple he had pancreatic cancer in 2004, undergoing surgery and had a liver transplant in 2009.

(See also: while jobs focuses on its health, Board of Directors of Apple must focus on its responsibility)

What I wanted to see from the event on Thursday night was a picture of jobs not taken by a guy in a parking lot with a zoom lens, something that might, well, tell me something about the condition of the legend tech.

But there was just a picture from that pictured jobs. In it you can see the CEO of Apple, seated to the left of President Obama. The image is taken from behind and to the left, then in terms of offering a taste of jobs, was unnecessary. You can't help but wonder why there are more pictures of jobs from the event.

Ghoulish feels this way of thinking, but it's human nature. I am not alone. Since the National Enquirer published Wednesday alleged images of jobs, shares of Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) have abandoned the 3.5 percent.

Granted, Apple Wednesday hit another all-time high of 364.90 a share and stocks bounce off ceilings. In addition, there were other problems. The company endured a storm of criticism, not to mention possible interest by antitrust regulators, for its online content subscription policy.

But through those situations. This feels different.

Steven Burke, CRN has a good piece on the Apple business problems faced because of concerns over the health of Jobs. In it he quotes Jeff Matthews, general partner of Ram Partners LP, a Greenwich, Conn.-based hedge fund that "holds a significant amount of shares Apple":

"There is nothing good about this. It is fun to talk about, but as an investor in the real world you have to watch everything. Jobs is the reason that Apple is where it is. This is something that you need to pay attention to and understanding ".

That pretty much says it all, especially the first part: there is nothing good about this.

Chris Nerney writes about the business side-to-market strategies and technology trends, legal issues, management changes, mergers, venture capital, IPOs and technology stocks. Follow him on Twitter @ ChrisNerney.


For more information, visit ITworld news. Story copyright © 2010 ITworld Inc. All rights reserved.

MacBook Pro coming says: what buyers should know Apple

If you were planning on heading to the Apple store this President's day to go shopping for a new MacBook Pro, you might want to hold off until at least Thursday. Apple should announce a MacBook Pro updates this week with machines that are thinner and lighter and have zippy new Intel processors and better screens, according to the latest entries. The favorite date for the new line-up of MacBook Pro is Thursday 24 February, according to MacRumors.

Now that I've ruined vacation plans and Apple theme you've got nothing better to do, here's a rundown on the latest rumors and allegations surrounding the upcoming update to Apple's MacBook Pro.

Suspicions of Apple

Apple has reportedly been launching its retail partner party to prepare for a product launch this week. The company said some of its European partners expect shipments of sealed new products this week, and perhaps already Monday, according to Apple Insider.

Shipping time for new Apple MacBook Pro, via its online store also has slipped from 24 hours three to five business days, a potential sign of an impending MacBook Pro. $ 1000 MacBook white is still listed as shipping within 24 hours, so don't expect an update to the device.

Rumored Specs

At the moment are pretty sketchy Rumors about features and improvements for the new MacBook. Most Apple watchers expect Apple to unveil new MacBook Pro sporting Intel processors Sandy Bridge. New Intel chips offer improved graphics performance and efficiency. Apple MacBook Pro lineup should not be affected by the recently discovered design flaw in Intel Sandy Bridge chips.

Apple may unveil a redesigned frame for unibody MacBook Pro line, according to DigiTimes Taiwan-based. Also, most of the entries indicate typical improvements like improved screen of a resolution, improved battery life and a laptop thinner and lighter.

Fueling Apple Rumors

Cult of Mac has an interesting story about how Apple's exclusive agreement may turn up in use Liquidmetal fuel cells power Apple laptops and mobile devices.

Fuel cells used in laptops could make the devices last for 20 hours or more without recharging, says Cult of Mac.

Liquidmetal is a metallic alloy corrosion resistant Liquidmetal technologies produced by twice that is as strong as titanium, but can be modeled as plastic during the manufacturing process. Apple was recently awarded a patent for an internal component of a fuel cell "-amorphous alloys solidifying mass", something that sounds very much like Liquidmetal.

Apple in August has purchased exclusive rights to use Liquidmetal in electronic products. The League has been around since 2003 and first used in a variety of consumer products including SanDisk Cruzer USB thumb drive. It is not clear whether fuel cells would in Liquidmetal says Apple devices any time soon.

When Apple is about to announce new products is to provide always a little guess--earlier reports said the new MacBook Pro would not be coming up in March, as soon as possible. Regardless, if you're thinking of getting a new Mac this week, should probably hold off until Friday.

Connect with Ian Paul (@ ianpaul) and Today @ PCWorld on Twitter for the latest technology news and analysis.



As new subscriptions Apple Stack up to the competition

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Apple's newly announced subscriptions policy for App Store offerings has triggered a round of griping from companies that sell content or subscriptions from their mobile apps. But a closer look at Apple's new rates and terms suggest that the company's policy isn't that different from what rival services offer-and in some cases, Apple's terms are more favorable.

Before this week, publishers were able to give away their apps in the store for free, but shuffle users out to Mobile Safari when it came time to actually purchase content for that app. That changed Tuesday, when Apple updated its rules. Now, any content available outside of an app must now also be made available via in-app purchase, with Apple taking a 30 percent cut of any revenue. Users can still buy that content on-device via Mobile Safari or even their desktop computers, but Apple wants its chance at making money from content that is bought and used for its mobile platform.

Right on cue, Apple's policy came under fire from pundits and publishers. In a statement, called Rhapsody music subscription service on Apple's new rules "economically untenable lyrics link" and suggested it would work with other publishers to come up with "an appropriate legal and business response to this latest development." A post at the tech business blogs VentureBeat asked "how far can Apple push developers?" Some law professors speaking to the Wall Street Journal even raised the possibility of antitrust probes against Apple.

Interestingly, however, Apple's rules don't seem that out of line when compared to what rivals are offering. Admittedly, it's a small field of competitors-Android, Windows Phone 7, and BlackBerry platforms do not yet support subscriptions for app content. Barnes & Noble strikes deals with publishers for content on its Nook e-reader, though the company wouldn't comment to Macworld subscription on how it splits revenue with publishers in its Nook store. (Its self-publishing book rates, on the other hand, are publicly available.)

That leaves Amazon and its assortment of Kindle offerings, including the Kindle e-reading device. Like Apple, Amazon makes a popular gadget for content consumption, serves as the sole gatekeeper (legitimate) for getting the vast majority of content onto it, and publishes the fees it charges for content delivery. Both large publications like the New York Times and individual bloggers like you and me are able to publish content directly to the Kindle. But if we want to do so, we have to agree to Amazon's revenue terms.

In a nutshell, Amazon used to give publishers only about 30 percent of the revenue collected from subscriptions sold through Kindle. In December 2010, Amazon increased that amount to match Apple's existing 70-30 split with developers. But a publisher will only get that rate from Amazon if it meets certain qualifications, such as submitting its content in a format that can be read across all Kindle devices and apps. Furthermore, self-published bloggers still only get 30 percent of the fee Amazon charges Kindle customers.

Regardless of which qualify for revenue rate publishers, Amazon also charges a small fee for delivering content over its 3 g Whispernet service, billed at 15 cents per MB. Remember, with each 3 g-enabled Kindle, Amazon includes lifetime wireless service to download content for free, but passes on 70 percent of the content delivery costs to publishers.

To use Amazon's best case revenue split and pricing formula-(revenue-delivery costs) * 70 percent-a monthly publication delivered wirelessly that costs $ 10 and weighs MB will end up netting the publisher $ 6.05 per subscriber. With Apple's terms and a native app in the App Store, that 30 percent cut would give the publisher $ 7.

Barnes & Noble only publicizes its self-publishing rates for books, but they're worth mentioning. If your book costs $ 3 to $ 10, you'll get 60 percent of your monthly rent (minus wireless delivery costs). If your book costs $ 11 to $ 200, you'll get only 40 percent of your monthly rent.

One day after Apple announced its App Store subscriptions features and new rules, Google tossed its hat into the ring by announcing One Pass, a new payment system that allows publishers to charge for digital content. Designed primarily as a browser-based payment tool that's attached to readers ' Google accounts (and billed through Google Checkout), One Pass allows publishers to charge content subscriptions, day passes, membership discounts, or even per-article fees. Users can login via the browser on just about any modern device and will need an Internet connection to read their paid content, but Google will take only a 10 percent commission-undercutting what Apple and Amazon charge. Of course, Google's service is browser-based and not necessarily tied into a hardware device, which probably had an affect on the share of publisher revenue Google decided to claim.

Of course, the real point of contention around Apple's new subscription features rears its head when a publisher wants to sell content on iOS devices through a competing store such as Amazon's Kindle app or Zinio's digital magazine stand. Though Apple has so far been happy to approve quite a few third-party stores in the App Store, its new terms are clearly not winning the company much applause from them right now. Not only are the margins already thin for some of these companies, but they're also used to avoiding Apple's cut of in-app purchases by redirecting consumers to a browser-based store for purchases. Under Apple's new rules, they'll have to start paying Apple and agree to consumer-friendly terms like making it easy to cancel a subscription and protect personal information.

Again, though, in comparison to rival devices is revealing. Amazon offers no access to third-party stores on the Kindle, and even though the Nook is based on Android, Barnes & Noble has locked its reader down by removing access to Google's Android Marketplace and porting only a handful of apps that it chooses to the Nook.

However, like the iPad, these devices do offer a content consumption alternatives to their built-in stores-to the browser. The Kindle's browser may be technologically limited in some ways when compared to the iPad and the Nook, but all three devices have a browser that is not restricted from visiting any site. More to the point, it doesn't cost anyone 30 percent of anything to use those browsers.

There are also some open questions about which types of content and services will be affected by Apple's new rules. Some of the language Apple uses in its terms suggests that content delivery services-such as magazine publications and book stores-will fall under the new rules, while streaming subscription services like Netflix and Rhapsody-might not. Macworld has asked Apple for clarification and will update once we receive a comment.

It's up to the content providers to weigh whether 50 percent is too high a price to pay for access to the throng of App Store customers, but it is also up to Apple to clarify some of the boundaries of these new rules. For now, when compared to the competition, what Apple is imposing doesn't seem as out of line as the initial uproar might have you believe.


For more Macintosh computing news, visit Macworld. Story copyright © 2010 Mac Publishing LLC. All rights reserved.

Apple Hacks hacker: iBook Stops Working with Greenpois0n Hack

If you were watching the scene news regarding Apple jailbreaking, you probably noticed some consternation from people that ran the latest hack to Greenpois0n iOS 4.2.1. It seems that is the cause of a DRM-e-Books, causing the iBook app to refuse to read purchased, DRM-protected content. While this is being criticized as an attack against the jailbreak Community, reports are pointing towards it, being a legitimate defense against the piracy of copyrighted content.

The big question that I asked was whether this was against the law by Apple because jailbreaking was legal. Apple can only say you're protect Publisher owned content in a case like this, or will we see a suit claiming that Apple is blocking access to paid content on jailbroken phones? I'm not a lawyer, but I'm guessing the former in a case like this. You should determine that jailbreaking is nothing criminal, but if you can break DRM and just take those content to any device, I think Apple has a case.

An update, the iPhone Dev Team has already released an update to their popular PwnageTool which applies a workaround for the DRM control. I think we will be able to see first hand what Apple's intentions are when responding to this update with patches or fixes.

I can tell you one thing for certain; Apple doesn't make a lot of things to be popular at the moment. What do you think? You have a jailbroken iPhone? What are your thoughts on DRM content within a sandbox as iOS instead a neutral approach to DRM as Google or Amazong device? Let me know in the comments.

Jason Kennedy avoid using iTunes for purchases of media, and in General iTunes causes pairs of sneezing and swelling. You can follow him on Twitter.

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Apple updates Digital Camera RAW support for 6 new cameras

Apple has released an update for Digital Camera RAW which adds support for six new cameras. This compatibility update, version 3.6, affects users of Aperture and iPhoto.

There are five of DSLR cameras, including Canon just released additions to its line of rebel, and T3, T3i. The Olympus E-3 is now supported, as are two cameras Pentax DSLR, K-r and K-5. All cameras Olympus and Pentax were released in September 2010. The Panasonic Lumix DMC-100, a megazoom compact camera with raw capability, shooting rounds off the list.

The update fixes also problems of processing without name for Nikon DSLR, the Nikon Coolpix D7000 P7000 advanced point-and-shoot and cameras Panasonic Lumix DMC-GF 1 and GH2 Micro Four Thirds.

To download the update 6,45 MB, run Software Update on your computer or go to the download page on the Apple support site. This update is compatible with Mac OS X or OS X 10.5.8 or later version 10.6.5.

You can see a complete list of all supported cameras from Digital Camera RAW on this page on the Apple support site.


For other Macintosh computing news, visit Macworld. Story copyright © 2010 Mac Publishing LLC. All rights reserved.