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

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

OS X Mountain Lion Operating System Review

Mountain Lion logoMountain Lion logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Source: macworld.com

One year and one week since the release of OS X Lion, Apple is back with Mountain Lion, also known as OS X 10.8.

Like Lion, Mountain Lion offers numerous feature additions that will be familiar to iOS users. This OS X release continues Apple’s philosophy of bringing iOS features “back to the Mac,” and includes iMessage, Reminders, Notes, Notification Center, Twitter integration, Game Center, and AirPlay Mirroring. There are even a few features that are making their debut with Mountain Lion, and will find their way back into iOS 6 this fall.

As the first OS X release post-iCloud, Mountain Lion offers a much more thorough integration with Apple’s data-syncing service than Lion offered. Mountain Lion also brings options to limit which kinds of apps users can install, offers systemwide integration with social networking and media-sharing services, and gives some recent MacBook models the power to keep working even when they appear to be asleep. And although there are no actual mountain lions in China, OS X Mountain Lion does add a raft of features to speak to users in the country that’s Apple’s biggest growth opportunity.

At $20, Mountain Lion is Apple’s cheapest OS X upgrade since version 10.1 was free 11 years ago; like Lion, Mountain Lion is available only via a Mac App Store download. The combination of the low price and the easy download will likely make Mountain Lion the most quickly adopted OS X upgrade of all time. Given how solid a release I found Mountain Lion to be, that’s a good thing.

(A compatibility note: Some Macs now running Lion won’t be able to run Mountain Lion. For more details, read our Mountain Lion FAQ.)
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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Little Apple: Rumors swirl of iPad mini

English: The "Made for iPod, iPhone, iPad...
English: The "Made for iPod, iPhone, iPad" emblem appearing on accessories approved by Apple Inc. for iPod, iPhone, and iPad. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA - NOVEMBER 28:  People part...

Is There a 4th Member of the Family Coming - iPad mini


Source: cbsnews.com


Rumours might abound. Rumours might abound of an "iPad mini"

But now, they're fed by media reports from South Korea, China, and Taiwan, saying Apple has ordered Samsung screens that are 7.86 inches measured on the diagonal. That would make for a screen about half the size of the current iPad, which has a diagonal measurement of 9.7 inches.
Apple iPad mini rumors resurface
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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

iCloud could potentially do wonders for sync


Source: macworld.com

Cross-Device Productivity

By now we have heard all sorts of things about iCloud.
But the thing I am most interested in is how it will help me access documents that I am working with or need access to across my devices from my laptop to iPad to iPhone and my iMac at home.
I'm much more interested in how the service could theoretically improve my cross-device productivity.
Right now, iPad file management requires a combination of several kludgey methods.
Search the Web - including this very site - and you'll find plenty about the awesomeness of Dropbox, but not every iOS app supports it (including any of Apple's). The apps that do support Dropbox each rely upon their own implementation.
All this is true of Apple's own iDisk, too, except that we haven't spent much ink extolling that service's virtues.
(I don't use iDisk anymore. I found it slow and occasionally hungry for eating up my files.)
But if iCloud means we can stop relying on sending files between apps, we'll be thrilled.
Thus, my wish for iCloud is that it includes Dropbox-esque live document sharing and synchronization between Macs and iOS devices.
I want it to be built in such a way that developers can include it in their apps as easily as they can embed an Open dialog box (on the Mac) or call up the virtual keyboard (on iOS).
All the work - the syncing, the interface itself - should fall under Apple's purview, so that the experience is constant and equally available to all developers.
As I imagine it, I could create a document in Pages on my Mac and save it to iCloud.
When I go to my iPad, I can open the same document there from iCloud within the mobile Pages app.
And as with Google Docs, if I leave the document open on multiple devices at the same time, each of them automatically updates on-the-fly to remain current with whichever version I'm actually editing at that moment.
If iCloud merely simplifies that process with Dropbox-style syncing that's baked into the core of both Lion and iOS 5, I'll be on cloud nine.
But if Apple wants to send my joyousness levels into the stratosphere - and really, why wouldn't the company share that goal? - the process of saving files to and from iCloud will be seamless and nearly invisible.
Though I love Google Calendar, I prefer iCal overall, and iCal's Google Calendar support is weak.







Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Steve Jobs Dead at 56

Steve Jobs Dead at 56


Source: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-10-06/hold-hold-steve-jobs-dead/3317496?section=business#comments
A mighty man!
Silicon Valley pioneer and Apple co-founder Steve Jobs has died after a seven-year battle with pancreatic cancer.

Silicon Valley pioneer and Apple co-founder Steve Jobs has died after a seven-year battle with pancreatic cancer.

The 56-year-old was diagnosed with a cancerous tumour in his pancreas in 2004 and had been on medical leave for an undisclosed condition since January 17.

"Apple has lost a visionary and creative genius, and the world has lost an amazing human being," a statement on Apple's website reads.

"Those of us who have been fortunate enough to know and work with Steve have lost a dear friend and an inspiring mentor."

Mr Jobs recently stepped down as chief executive of the company which he co-founded in a garage when he was 21.


Check out his speech to Stanford Graduates to remember why he he was so great at communication. www.youtube.com







Friday, August 19, 2011

New Mac minis add Thunderbolt, lose optical drive | Desktops

Image representing Apple as depicted in CrunchBaseImage via CrunchBase

New Mac minis add Thunderbolt, lose optical drive


Source: macworld.com


Summary:

The MacBook Air line wasn't the only Mac hardware to get a Thunderbolt-inspired makeover Wednesday.
Apple also added a Thunderbolt port to its Mac mini desktop, which sports new processors and discrete graphics as well.
The new mini retains the 7.7-by-7.7-by-1.4-inch shape of its predecessor, though there is one key difference to its exterior - there's no optical drive, giving the new mini the same look as the server configuration.
That's the clearest sign yet that Apple, with its Mac App Store for software downloads and its iTunes Store for music and video content, believes that the future belongs to digital downloads.
That would also explain the addition of Thunderbolt, an interface technology that promises high-speed input and output.


As on the updated MacBook Air models released Wednesday, the Thunderbolt port on the new Mac mini replaces the Mini DisplayPort, though it remains compatible with Mini DisplayPort for video out purposes.
The previous Mac mini generation featured a single configuration: a $699 model with a 2.4GHz Core 2 Duo processor, 2GB of DDR3 SDRAM, a 320GB SATA hard drive, and nVidia GeForce 320M integrated graphics.
Apple has replaced that version with two new models, both of which feature more powerful Intel Core i5 processors.
In addition to returning to two configurations, the mini lineup is also returning to its old pricing structure, with a lower entry price.
The entry-level mini features a 2.3GHz dual-core Core i5 chip.
It also ships with 2GB of memory and a 500GB hard drive, though you can opt to boost memory and storage capacity to 8GB and 750GB, respectively.
This $599 model also features Intel HD Graphics 3000 processor with at least 288MB of DDR3 SDRAM that it shares with the system memory.
The other Mac mini configuration offers discrete graphics with an AMD Radeon HD 6630M processor with 256MB of GDDR5 memory.
It's also powered by a 2.5GHz core-duo Core i5 chip and ships with 4GB of RAM and a 500GB hard drive.
(Again, you can upgrade memory and storage capacity if you wish.)

Mac Mini Server

Apple also offers a version of the Mac mini with Lion Server installed.
The 2.0 GHz quad-core Intel Core i7-powered Mac mini with Lion Server also offers 4GB of memory and dual 500GB hard drives.



Concepts:

Mac, Mac Mini, Cameras, Drives, Apple, Thunderbolt, Macworld, Macbook Air, Accessories, Imac, Camcorders, Memory, Hard Drives





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Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Ten Safari shortcuts you should know

Apple Safari iconImage via Wikipedia

Ten Safari shortcuts you should know


Source: macworld.com


While I like my Magic Trackpad, and the trackpad on my MacBook Air, I do as much as I can from the keyboard.


As such, I use LaunchBar () to launch applications, and have learned a number of essential iTunes shortcuts to save time when I work with my music collection.
I know dozens of shortcuts for the apps I use most.


Since it's easier to use the keyboard - no need to move my hand to my trackpad - I've memorized a handful of useful shortcuts for browsing the Web.
Here are ten that I think are essential. (These should work in both Snow Leopard and Lion unless otherwise noted.)

1. Quickly enter URLs

When I want to type a URL, I don't use a mouse or trackpad to click in the Address Bar, clear it, then type. Just press Command-L, and all the text in the Address Bar is selected, so whatever you type replaces it immediately. Start typing a URL for a favorite site, and Safari can auto-completes it by looking at your history or bookmarks. If Safari displays a list of sites, use the up- and down-arrow keys to choose the right one, and then press Return to go there.

2. Search in a snap

Like everyone, I search a lot using Google. Why click in the Google search field when you can go there by simply pressing Command-Option-F? Remember this shortcut, as it works in many Apple programs. Use it in Mail, iTunes, Address Book and more when you need to zip to the search field.

3. Hop to your history

There are times when I want to browse my History list to find a Web page I visited recently, but whose URL I can't remember. Pressing Command-Option-2 takes me to the History list, and puts the cursor in the search field. I can type a word or two and narrow down the display to find what I want. Double-clicking an entry in the History list takes me to that page, and pressing Command-Option-2 again takes me back to the previously visible Web page.

4. Scroll with the spacebar

When I get to my favorite Web page, I rarely bother to use scroll bars, or even my trackpad, to scroll. Just press the spacebar, and Safari scrolls down one screen. Need to go back up a screen? Press Shift-Spacebar. It's fast and efficient, and doesn't make me dizzy watching the page move up and down.

5. Open tabs in the background

Safari’s Tabs preferences show the shortcuts you can use to create new tabs. Go to Safari -> Preferences and click on Tabs to see these. The shortcut I use most is Command-Shift-click, which opens a new tab in the background. I use this a lot when I’m doing research on the Web and want to open several pages from search results without looking at them right away. Safari's tabbed browsing is a practical way to have several Web pages open at once without getting confused by multiple windows. IMAGE - SAFARI-TABS Safari's Tabs preferences let you choose how you want tabbed browsing to work, and show you the available keyboard shortcuts according to your settings.

6. Navigate your tabs

Use Command-Shift-Left Arrow or Right-Arrow will take you from one tab to the other. Just make sure that your cursor isn’t in a text field on any window displayed in a tab

7. Send a page (or its URL) to a friend

To email a neat Web page you’ve found to a friend.
  • Command-I does the trick; it takes the contents of the page and send it to the person in a new message in Mail, with the page’s title as the message subject.
  • Command-Shift-I Will just want to send a link

8. Save pages for later

New in Lion is Reading List, a sort of temporary bookmark list that you can use for pages you want to come back to and read later. If you press Command-Shift-D, you can add the current page to the Reading List.

9. Save links for later

The above Lion shortcut works when a page is visible. If you want to add a linked page to the Reading List - a page in search results, or a link, say, on the main page of macworld.com - just hold down the Shift key and click on that link

10. View Lion’s Reading List

To view the Reading List, you could click on the eyeglasses icon in the Bookmark Bar, if it was visible. Since we’re discussing keyboard shortcuts, however, instead you use the easier method of just pressing Command-Shift-L.


Concepts:

Mac, Shortcuts, Tabs, Safari, Command-L, Command-Option-2, Command-Option-F, Command-Option-2, Command-Shift-Click, Command-Shift-Left Arrow, Command-Shift-I, Right-Arrow, Command-Shift-D, Command-Shift-L, Lion, Macworld, Business, Accessories

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Tuesday, June 14, 2011

How to Automatically Pause and Resume Music using AppleScript - Apple

Use AppleScript to Automatically Pause and Resume Music


Source: thenextweb.com

Here’s a tiny tutorial to achieve the same result as Take Five using AppleScript.
If you’re not too sure what AppleScript is, wikipedia explains:
AppleScript is a scripting language created by Apple Inc. and built into Macintosh operating systems, [...] designed to exchange data between and control other applications in order to automate repetitive tasks.
To put simply, it’s a scripting language with a syntax that very closely resembles the English language that lets you control most applications on your Mac. We’ll see that in a minute.
1. First, we need an app to invoke our AppleScript using a global shortcut. I personally recommend FastScripts — a little menubar utility for running AppleScripts, but you can also choose to use QuickSilver or Launchbar. Download and install any of these apps and proceed to the next step.
2. We need to write an AppleScript that will automatically pause iTunes and wait for X minutes before resuming playback again. Launch the AppleScript Editor app from your Utilities folder and create a new script with the following code:
if appIsRunning("iTunes") then
tell application "iTunes"
pause
delay 120
play
end tell
end if
on appIsRunning(appName)
tell application "System Events" to (name of processes) contains appName
end appIsRunning


The code has a delay of 120 seconds or 2 minutes by default, but you can change it to any value you like.
3. Save this script to Macintosh HD/Library/Scripts folder as itunes.scpt. Alternatively, you can click FasctScripts’ menubar icon to “Open Scripts Folder” under FasctScripts menu. Once saved, the script should automatically show up under the FastScript menu.
4. Go to FastScripts’ preferences and navigate to the “Script Shortcuts” tab to assign a global shortcut to this script. I personally use Cmd+Shift+P.
5. Fire up iTunes and start playing your favorite playlist. If and when you want to temporarily pause your music, just hit the global shortcut key you just assigned and the script will do its thing.
Unfortunately, the other popular music apps such as Spotify and Rdio do not support AppleScript natively i.e they do not answer to the pause/play or similar commands. For this reason, it isn’t easy to achieve the same functionality as you can for iTunes. While there is a way to write an AppleScript to do this, it’s not guaranteed to work for you. Here’s the code for Rdio:
if appIsRunning("Rdio") then
tell application "System Events"
tell application "Rdio" to activate
tell process "Rdio" to click menu item "Pause" of menu "Controls" of menu bar 1
   delay 10
tell process "Rdio" to click menu item "Play" of menu "Controls" of menu bar 1
end tell
end if
on appIsRunning(appName)
tell application "System Events" to (name of processes) contains appName
end appIsRunning


Hopefully, these apps will add AppleScript support in the future. Until then, I guess I’ll just have to manually resume playback.
The AppleScript for iTunes presently resumes playback at the set volume instead of fading in the music, so an improvement to the AppleScript would be to add the code to fade in the music after playback resumes. AppleScript can achieve some really complex tasks with a few lines of code, so I’ll definitely update this post.

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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Open a Collection of Tabs in Safari using AppleScript

AppleScriptImage via Wikipedia

AppleScript to open a collection of Safari tabs


Source: hints.macworld.com

Apr 18, '11 07:30:01AM • Contributed by: Dana Nau
Here's a simple AppleScript that replaces the current Safari window with a collection of tabs, each open to a different URL. I've seen several scripts that attempt to do something similar, but this one improves on them in a couple of ways:
  • It closes all of the old tabs, rather than just adding new ones.
  • It opens the new tabs directly in AppleScript, which is much faster than using system events.
The URLs in the script are just an example; obviously you'll want to replace them with others.
tell application "Safari"
  activate
  -- close all but one tab of the front window
  try
    repeat
      close tab 2 of window 1
    end repeat
  end try
  -- open the URLs in separate tabs
  tell window 1
    set URL of tab 1 to "http://weather.yahoo.com/forecast/USMD0100.html"
    make new tab with properties {URL:"http://www.weather.com/weather/today/College+Park+MD+20740"}
    make new tab with properties {URL:"http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=20742"}
    make new tab with properties {URL:"http://www.accuweather.com/us/md/college-park/20742/city-weather-forecast.asp"}
    make new tab with properties {URL:"http://weather.weatherbug.com/MD/College%20Park-weather.html?zcode=z6286&zip=20742"}
  end tell
end tell
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Friday, March 4, 2011

Jobs Returns to Introduce a New iPad

Steve Jobs while presenting the iPad in San Fr...Image via Wikipedia
Source: gainesville.com

SAN FRANCISCO — Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s chief executive, interrupted his medical leave on Wednesday to introduce the company’s much-anticipated new iPad, a thinner, faster and lighter version of its popular tablet computer that will sell at the same prices as the original models.

Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Mr. Jobs alluded to his leave but neither commented on his health nor said whether he planned to return to the company in the near future.

“We’ve been working on this product for a while and I just didn’t want to miss today,” he said.

The iPad 2 includes front and rear cameras, allowing video conversations, and comes in black and white versions. It will be available on March 11 in the United States at prices ranging from $499 to $829. It will be available in more than two dozen other countries on March 26, Mr. Jobs said.

But the details of the product were somewhat overshadowed by Mr. Jobs’s unexpected presence. His appearance lifted the mood of Apple’s fans and investors who have worried about the deteriorating health of the company’s visionary leader. Mr. Jobs was greeted with a standing ovation as he walked on stage in an auditorium here, and within minutes, Apple’s shares jumped more than $3, or nearly 1 percent.

“It is clear that he is still in charge,” said Tim Bajarin, an analyst with Creative Strategies. “His presence underscores how important he feels the iPad is to Apple’s future.” Though gaunt, Mr. Jobs, who turned 56 last week, looked roughly the same as he had in October, the last time he appeared in public to introduce a product.

In a sign of the intensifying competition in the tablet market, Mr. Jobs not only promoted the features of the overhauled iPad, but also took potshots at Apple’s rivals, calling them “copycats” and saying they had been unable to match the first iPad on features or price. The market for tablet computers is far more competitive now than when Apple began selling the iPad nearly a year ago. Companies like Samsung, Dell, Motorola, Research In Motion and Hewlett-Packard have introduced rival tablets, though some will not be available until later this year.

But Apple’s rivals have yet to make significant inroads with consumers, in part because they have had difficulty matching the iPad’s pricing. The Motorola Xoom, for instance, costs $800. The Samsung Galaxy Tab is available for about $500, but at 7 inches, is much smaller than the iPad, which is nearly 10 inches.

The new iPad is built around a new chip that Apple designed, called A5, which is faster than its predecessor. Mr. Jobs said graphics performance would be nine times as fast. The new iPad is 8 millimeters thick, one-third thinner than the original and slightly thinner than the iPhone 4. Mr. Jobs said that at 1.3 pounds it was a fifth of a pound lighter than the earlier model, yet it has the same 10-hour battery life.

“It feels totally different,” Mr. Jobs said.

Alluding to the white iPhone 4, which Apple announced but never introduced, Mr. Jobs said the white iPad 2 would be available from Day 1. The new iPad’s 3G models will support connections from AT&T and Verizon.

Mr. Jobs predicted that the iPad 2 would help Apple widen its lead in the market. “We think 2011 is clearly going to be the year of iPad 2,” Mr. Jobs said.

Some Apple developers said that they were impressed by the iPad 2, noting that it was more powerful yet simple to use.

“The technology is becoming more and more invisible,” said Ge Wang, the co-founder and chief technology officer of Smule, a company that makes virtual instruments for the iPad and the iPhone. Mr. Wang, who also directs an orchestra of digital instruments at Stanford, said Smule had considered making its software available on other tablets but had decided against it for now. “Nothing else comes close,” he said of the iPad.

While the iPad 2’s improvements are significant, analysts said they were largely expected.
“There were no big surprises,” said A.   M.   Sacconaghi Jr., an analyst with Sanford C.   Bernstein & Company.   “It is an incremental step forward.   But it certainly makes Apple very competitive in the market today.”

Mr.   Sacconaghi said the new features, along with the iPad’s stable of more than 65,000 apps, would ensure that Apple retained its lead in the market for now.

Apple did not update the figures for iPad sales.   In January, the company said it had sold nearly 15 million iPads in 2010, generating about $9.5 billion.   Mr.   Jobs said 65,000 apps had been tailored for the iPad.

Apple’s share of the global tablet market reached 85 percent by the end of 2010, according to estimates by eMarketer, a research firm.   Apple will sell an estimated 34 million iPads in 2011, or more than triple the 10 million tablets expected to be sold by its rivals, eMarketer said.

Along with the new iPad, Apple introduced a new version of its software, iOS, and two new popular applications already available on its Macintosh line of computers: iMovie and Garage Band.

Mr.   Jobs also announced that books from Random House, a holdout publisher, would be available on its iBookstore.   He said 100 million books had been downloaded since the company introduced the store a year ago.

Underscoring Apple’s power in digital media distribution, Mr.   Jobs also said iTunes had recently surpassed 200 million accounts with credit cards that enable customers to buy music, videos, books and apps with a click.

In a show of Apple’s knack for innovative design, Mr.   Jobs demonstrated a new thin iPad cover that attaches to the tablet through magnets, is able to turn the device on and off, and doubles as a stand.
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Monday, February 28, 2011

Apple discontinues sale of MobileMe retail boxes as overhaul looms

Apple discontinues sale of MobileMe retail boxes as overhaul looms:


Source: appleinsider.com


"Apple on Thursday removed the $99 MobileMe product from its online store and notified resellers that it has discontinued the retail box for its cloud-based syncing product, suggesting the company is prepared to launch a rumored overhaul of the service.

 The MobileMe single license and family pack are no longer available on Apple's online store. In addition, resellers have indicated to AppleInsider that both the MobileMe Single User product (identified as MC660Z/A) and Family Pack (MC661Z/A) have been declared "End of Life" by Apple.

Users of MobileMe were also notified of scheduled maintenance for the me.com website. The service's Web-based applications may not be accessible to some users for about a half-hour tonight, after which normal service is expected to be restored.

The changes come as Apple is rumored to be revamping the MobileMe service, and is also said to be considering making the product free. The New York Times reported this month that Apple plans to turn MobileMe into a free service that would serve as a digital "locker" where users could store photos, music and videos.

Apple has been rumored to be pursuing a cloud-based iTunes service, particularly for music streaming, for years. The Times said that such a move would negate the need for a large amount of local storage on mobile devices like the iPhone.
-----------------------------
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Friday, February 25, 2011

Drift Off to Sleep With iTunes & New Sleepytime 1.1.2

iTunes IconImage via Wikipedia

Source: macworld.com


Have you ever wanted to listen to music as you drift off to sleep, and have the music turn itself off after you've made it to the land of Nod?
Most clock radios can do this, of course, but if you want to play music from your Mac until you fall asleep, it's more complicated.
Simplifying this process is the idea behind Sleepytime (Mac App Store link), a nifty application that can rock you to sleep with your favorite tunes.
Fire up iTunes and start playing whatever you want to listen to, and then launch Sleepytime.
Choose how long you want iTunes to play (in minutes, hours, or even days), as well as the duration of the fadeout that occurs after that time (in seconds or minutes).
Finally, you can opt to have Sleepytime display a soothing black backdrop with track information while iTunes plays.
Set a time to wake up, choose a playlist, and decide whether you want the "alarm" to start at full volume immediately or to fade in so you won't be jolted awake by the sudden sound.



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Monday, February 7, 2011

Second iOS 4.3 beta picked apart for clues about upcoming iPad 2


Source: arstechnica.com


Apple has released iOS 4.3 beta 2 to developers, and some digging into various system files has already revealed clues to new features that may be coming to the next-generation iPad.

It also hints at new social media services, Ping notifications, and a possible February 9 announcement date for the next-gen iPad hardware.

Providing some clues about future camera features for the iPad is an image used to show a preview of what a new wallpaper image will look like on your home screen.

That image contains icons for what looks like FaceTime, Camera, and PhotoBooth applications.

This suggests that the upcoming iPad hardware revision, expected in the next couple months, will indeed have at least a front-facing camera if not also a rear-facing camera.

Other system files suggest that PhotoBooth will offer image filters like Thermal Camera, Mirror, X-Ray, Kaleidoscope, and more.

Additionally, this image shows that the icon for Calendar appears to be set to February 9.

9to5Mac speculates that this could be a hint that Apple will announce (though not necessarily ship) new iPad hardware on that date.

The same image in previous versions of iOS showed the date as January 27, the date the original iPad was announced.

Apple announcements have often been scheduled on Tuesdays in years past, though, and February 9 is a Wednesday.

Apple's special announcement events have been known to come on other days of the week, so this date is at least plausible.

Other evidence in iOS 4.3 beta 2 suggests that Apple is paying more attention to social media services for its mobile ecosystem.

For instance, Ping will now have the ability to receive push notifications (for whatever that's worth) in iOS 4.3.

Additional strings and messages buried deep within the system reveal a "Media Stream" feature that looks to be incomplete, leading to speculation that the feature won't be ready until iOS 5 or later.

However, it appears to reference features like "Find My Friends" to locate friends nearby, as well as sending "Photo Streams" to those friends.

The feature also seems to be connected to MobileMe, possibly for syncing and media storage, suggesting Apple will integrate more features into the service to justify its $99 yearly fee.

The social media features aren't iPad-specific, however, and are likely to work across iPhones and iPod touches as well.

Media Stream and Find My Friends probably won't surface until well after the next-gen iPad's expected launch in late March or early April.


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Friday, February 4, 2011

iPhone complex passwords with only numbers

Image representing iPhone as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBase

iPhone complex passwords with only numbers



Source: hints.macworld.com
Contributed by: computergeeksjw - Jan 31, '11 07:30:00AM


If you're like me, you decided not to use a 'complex passcode' on your iPod touch (or iPhone) because you can see each letter of the passcode as you type it, making it easy for someone to learn your passcode. Well, recently I decided to try a complex passcode with only numbers.

I discovered that if the passcode contains only numbers, the iPod will use an all-number keypad like the 4-digit passcode.

Here are a couple of screenshots to illustrate how this looks:











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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Steve Jobs - Is he the Seed of Apple Computer Innovation

CUPERTINO, CA - OCTOBER 14:  (FILE PHOTO) Appl...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Source: suite101.com

There are many interesting entrepreneurs but Steve Jobs certainly has been an inspiration and marvel in his field, leading Apple to an immensely successful company.   As Philip Elmer-DeWitt posts on January 17, 2011 in his article Thinking the unthinkable: Apple without Steve Jobs “Jobs brings something to Apple that's harder to measure […].

A Different Sort of CEO

Wikipedia reports that Jobs' biological parents – Abdulfattah Jandali, a Syrian Muslim graduate student who later became a political science professor, and Joanne Simpson, an American graduate studentwho went on to become a speech therapist– later married, giving birth to and raising Jobs' biological sister, the novelist Mona Simpson.


After attending Cupertino Junior High School and Homestead High School in Cupertino, California, Jobs visited after-school lectures at the Hewlett-Packard where he was hired to work with Steve Wozniak as a summer employee.


Hard to imagine that the successful CEO in those days slept on the floor in friends' rooms made a few pennies by returning Coke bottles and receiving free meals at the local Hare Krishna temple.
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Friday, January 21, 2011

Digitimes: iPad 2 Will Ship With 5 New Features

iPad with on display keyboardImage via Wikipedia

Source: thenextweb.com

Digitimes has cited a report from Chinese news portal Economy Daily News which suggests that Apple’s next generation iPad will incorporate five new features, adding video calling, lighter body, USB ports, new display technology and new 3-axis gyroscopes.

The new features have long been subject to speculation, different sources have already suggested that Apple will feature its FaceTime technology in the iPad 2. With both front and back cameras, users will be able to use the FaceTime service on their iPad, contacting friends and family on their iPhone 4, iPod Touch and Mac computers.

It has also been rumoured that Apple were experimenting with using carbon fiber panels and utilising thinner glass, reducing the mass of the iPad, a device that is currently considerably heavier than other tablet devices in the market. Introducing Apple’s Retina Display technology, coupled with thinner and lighter glass, will ensure high-resolution output and colour performance whilst making the device more portable.

The mention of USB ports is very interesting, particularly as Apple users have long campaigned for them to be added to their tablet devices. This would also signal that iOS would need to be updated to include file management support, something Apple has never offered within its operating system previously.

By adding 3-axis gyroscopes, its possible that Apple will usher in a new wave of tablet physics games, allowing the company to target gamers and younger customers.

Apple understandably remains tight-lipped about its plans, we can expect more information to become available at the beginning of 2011.




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Apple to up iPad 2 resolution to 2048 by 1536

Behold the iPad in All Its Glory.Image via Wikipedia

Source: digitimes.com


As Apple is set to start mass producing its next-generation iPad 2 at the end of February, and sources from upstream component makers pointed out that Apple is increasing iPad 2's resolution to 2048 by 1536 and the new strategy is expected to widen the company's technology gap with its competitors.
Apple has also recently started adjusting its iBooks 1.1 application with some designs for bookmark icons to allow it to support the larger resolution, noted the sources adding that the larger resolution should provide the company's App developers more convenience, while all future applications will be able to run under any of Apple's machines including the 27-inch iMac.
In 2011, Apple's iPad series should be able to ship more than 40 million units, the sources estimated. Apple is estimated to have ordered 1.6-1.8 million iPads in January with the order volumes for February expected to drop. iPad 2's initial shipments are expected to be 400,000-600,000 units.





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