Tampilkan postingan dengan label Apple. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Apple. Tampilkan semua postingan

Rabu, 23 November 2011

Apple seizes iPhone sex domains


Apple has claimed eight domain names being used to direct iPhone-curious surfers to mobile porn sites, the original registrant handing over the URLs in return for the Cupertino company dropping a World Intellectual Property Organization complaint. Domains including “sex4iphones.com” and “iphoneporn4s.com” had been registered by an unnamed Israeli company and directed to a variety of mobile-formatted smut, something Apple understandably wasn’t pleased with.


Apple’s legal team filed a WIPO complaint in early November, demanding the eight URLs be handed over. Details on the negotiations are scant, but the original registrant apparently agreed to turn over the domains – which are now being managed by MarkMonitor, an “enterprise brand protection” specialist – if Apple would dismiss its complaint.
Interestingly, the iPhone4S.com domain was originally registered back in August 2008, with the owner obviously – and correctly – predicting Apple’s nomenclature patterns. Note, some or all of these domains still resolve to NSFW content at time of writing:
  • iphonecamforce.com
  • iphonecam4s.com
  • iphoneporn4s.com
  • iphonesex4s.com
  • iphonexxxforce.com
  • iphone4s.com
  • porn4iphones.com
  • sex4iphones.com
[via DomainNameWire]


Jumat, 28 Oktober 2011

Apple’s secret Kinect plans revealed


Apple pioneered touchscreen gesture control on a mobile with the iPhone, but according to a newly discovered patent application, it’s looking to take that screen out of the equation, letting you issue orders to your iOS devices with a wave of your hand. Sounds more than a bit like Kinect to us.
Video editors were up in arms at Final Cut Pro X’s drastic UI revamp, so they’re definitely not going to like the plans outlined in “Real Time Video Process Control Using Gestures”, unearthed by AppleInsider this week.
The patent application is primarily about using one touchscreen device to film, while applying processing, editing commands and filters to it on another device, as the video is streamed to it in realtime over Bluetooth.
What’s most interesting though is the suggestion that these gestures needn’t be touchscreen based. “Other embodiments describe hand gestures in either two or three dimensions that can be sensed by the video capture device using IR sensors, optical sensors” reads the application, attributed to Benjamin A Rottler and Michael Ingrassia Jr I.
Could a future iPhone use its front facing camera to detect your movements? Could that rumoured Apple HD TV make use of similar technology to control what you’re watching? We can but dream. Microsoft’s Kinect is fantastic, and we’ve always said its greatest potential is outside of gaming. Here’s hoping Apple adopts natural body language as well as natural language for controlling its next gen tech.
(via AppleInsider)

Samsung tops Apple in global smartphone sales

Samsung tops Apple in global smartphone sales

Samsung has overtaken Apple in worldwide smartphone sales in Q3 2011. According to researchers Strategy Analytics, the South Korean company sold more than 10 million more devices than its nearest rival in the period from July to September.
With no new handset on sale, and customers tired of waiting for the iPhone 4S, Apple shifted 17.1 million devices globally in that quarter, giving it a 14.6 per cent market share, while Samsung sold 27.8 million smartphones, commanding a massive 23.8 per cent market.
Surprisingly, perhaps, Nokia was the third biggest smartphone supplier in Q3. Its sale were just shy of Apple's at 16.8 million, giving the Finnish company a 14.4 per cent share of the smartphone market, even before the Lumia 800, its first Windows Phone 7 handset, was announced.
The rest of the mobile phone manufacturers, including HTC, LG and Motorola, sold 55.3 million smartphones between them.
In total handset sales, including feature phones, Apple also fell behind, with Nokia topping the list with 27 per cent of the market, Samsung second with 22.6 per cent, LG third with 5.4 per cent, and Chinese manufacturer ZTE pipping the Cupertino giant with 4.7 per cent. With no new handset on offer, Apple only held 4.4 per cent worldwide market share.
Of course, not only will the successful launch of the iPhone 4S (more pre-orders than ever before) alter the landscape for Q4, but it must be remembered that Apple only releases one new device a year, while Samsung, while bolstered by excellent sales for the Galaxy S II, has many on the market, at a range of price points.
Perhaps the most surprising thing, therefore, is the absence of HTC in the top three.
What do you think is the reason behind Apple's slight dip? And why is HTC missing? Let us know in the comments below...
Via: bbc.co.uk

Selasa, 25 Oktober 2011

Apple iPod fathers create 'world's first learning thermostat'

At Apple (AAPL), Tony Fadell and Matt Rogers led teams that created the iPod and iPhone, displaying a knack for transforming the utilitarian and functional into sexy and desirable.
Now the two former Apple engineers hope to perform a similar alchemy with a device even more banal than a cellphone or music player -- that beige lump of plastic on the wall called a thermostat. After more than a year in an Apple-like shroud of secrecy, their Palo Alto startup, Nest, emerged from stealth Tuesday to announce a product that Fadell and Rogers hope will be so irresistibly cool that consumers will actually flock to save energy.
For starters, the $249 Nest Learning Thermostat isn't plastic, but a circular brushed stainless steel device, with a rotating outer control ring somewhat reminiscent of the iPod's control wheel. It's attractive and compelling to touch, and can connect to the Internet through a home Wi-Fi system, allowing it to be controlled by iPhone or Android smartphone apps.
The thermostat "learns" your household habits through a combination of sensors, machine learning, and cloud computing, meaning that if you typically get up at 7 a.m. and turn up the heat, before lowering it when you leave for work, the thermostat will soon learn to mimic that routine automatically.
What Nest says is the world's first "learning thermostat" has the onboard computing power of an iPhone. When users pick a setting that uses less energy, a green leaf icon pops up in the display -- a sort of reward for good energy behavior.
But what hooked Google (GOOG) Ventures, which provided funding along with venture capital giant Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Al Gore's Generation Investment Management, is that however humble and ugly, the thermostat is the epicenter of home energy consumption. About one-third of annual U.S. residential electrical consumption, and 86 percent of residential fuel oil use, is used for heating, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. An additional 21 percent of residential electricity use goes to cooling homes.
"If you could have one of these in every living room in America, you could save the U.S. 3 percent of its energy consumption, and that would be a profound impact," said Erik Charlton, Nest's chief of sales and marketing.
While programmable thermostats have been around since the 1970s, Nest's founders say no one has done anything revolutionary to improve them for decades.
Google Ventures managing partner Bill Maris remembers his dubious initial reaction to the idea of financing a thermostat. He's now on Nest's board.
"I thought, 'I like the team; I love Tony's background,' " Maris said. "Then you hear it's a new generation of thermostat, and I kind of became skeptical. I was like, 'What can we do here that's interesting?' But then when you see the product ... you touch it, you feel it, and you say, 'This is something new and I want that in my house.' "
Nest says its learning thermostat can cut home heating and cooling use by an average 30 percent over a standard thermostat.
Fadell, Nest's co-founder and CEO, was an adviser to Apple CEO Steve Jobs. Then Fadell quit Apple in early 2010, wanting to make a thermostat that would be beautiful as well as functional. As with Apple products, design was crucial.
"You can buy a beautiful refrigerator; you can buy a beautiful stove; you can buy a beautiful vacuum cleaner, but you can't buy a beautiful thermostat," Charlton said.
Nest started in a Palo Alto garage about 18 months ago, before quietly taking offices in a Palo Alto shopping center. Explaining Fadell's zest for secrecy -- Maris said he was forbidden from uttering the word "Nest" over the past year -- Charlton said, "We wanted a focus on the product and the team. Tony said, 'Let's not go out and talk to people; let's just build a great product.' "
At Apple, Fadell led the teams that developed the first generations of the iPod and iPhone, and is generally credited with the idea of linking a digital music player with an online music store -- the concept that became Apple's iPod and iTunes. Rogers, Nest's other co-founder, oversaw iPod software development from concept to production. The Nest team also includes Yoky Matsuoka, the vice president of technology, a MacArthur Genius Grant recipient who was formerly Google's head of innovation.
The Nest thermostat is expected to go on sale in November at Best Buy and at nest.com, and has been in tests over the past year. But Silicon Valley's climate had been a problem.
"We've got a big problem," Charlton remembers an engineer saying at one point. "Guys, we need some weather."
Prototypes were quickly dispatched to Florida, Texas and New York, where weather extremes provided a better test.

Senin, 24 Oktober 2011

Gadget Lab Podcast: Ice Cream Sandwich, Nokia and Apple Updates

On this week’s Gadget Lab podcast, the crew talks shop about Google’s recent Android updates, a new Nokia phone and, of course, the obligatory week in Apple news and rumors.
First up, staff writer Mike Isaac and product reviews editor Michael Calore kick off the show with tasty news about Ice Cream Sandwich, the latest version of the Android mobile platform. We recently played with the new Android OS running on Samsung’s Galaxy Nexus smartphone, and can tell you it’s the best Android version yet.
Next, the two Mikes discuss another smartphone, the obscure yet playfully adorned Nokia’s N9. While the N9 itself is easy on the eyes, its Meego operating system is just this close to obsolescence.
Finally, staff writer Christina Bonnington stops by to chat about Apple. The company has announced an unlikely fourth U.S. carrier for the iPhone, and it’s not T-Mobile, but rather C-Spire Wireless, which provides coverage to a number of Southern states. Perhaps Apple is trying to hone in on territories that aren’t covered well by AT&T, Verizon and Sprint. Or maybe Apple just likes the South.
Christina finishes the show off by debunking rumors of an imminent smaller, 7-inch iPad. A mini iPad is unlikely for a number of reasons, she says, including complete disinterest on the part of Steve Jobs himself.
Like the show? You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast via iTunes. Or, if you don’t want to be distracted by the sight of our on-camera talent, check out the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can also subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds.
Or listen to the audio below:
Gadget Lab audio podcast #129

Minggu, 23 Oktober 2011

Apple's iPod Turns 10


Apple’s iPod, which transformed the way music is sold and distributed and revolutionized the consumer electronics industry, turned 10 on Sunday.
Known largely for its computers until then, Apple introduced the first iPod on Oct. 23, 2001, moving the company into a new era in which it would develop ever sleeker handheld devices, including the iPhone and the iPad.
After releasing Windows versions of both the iPod in 2002 and the iTunes online store in 2003, the floodgates were opened for Apple’s consumer success. As Macworld points out, it was at that point that Apple became more than a niche computer maker with a cool little device. It was propelled into an iconic brand that became known across the globe for making the best music player on the market.
“From Apple’s revenues to design influence to the fundamental business and distribution models that glue the industry together, the iPod started it all,” writes CultofMac’s Mike Elgan.
The iPod also changed the music industry.
Remember when you’d have to buy an entire album for more than $10 just to get one song? The iTunes store changed all that when it let people buy and download to their iPods individual songs for less than $1. Today the amount of content Apple sells there in addition to music -- movies, TV shows, apps, books and more -- is a massive asset for the company and one that propels people to continue buying its devices in droves.
The industry quickly followed suit.
Amazon now also has a wealth of online content in addition to the books the company started with and is increasingly using devices to get people buying it. Note the Kindle Fire, for example. It also doesn’t come as a surprise that Google may be opening a music store to compete with Amazon and Apple.
And ever since people began walking around with Apple’s white earbuds in place, the entire consumer electronics industry has reacted. Countless accessories have been made for the iPod line, including some really wacky ones.
Originally, the now ubiquitous entertainment device was a 5GB music player that only worked with the Mac operating system and used a FireWire connection instead of a USB cable to update songs and charge the battery. After many iterations, today the iPod line includes the iPod Classic, the touchscreen iPod touch, the iPod Nano and the tiny iPod Shuffle.

Sabtu, 22 Oktober 2011

Apple iPod touch (2011)


http://www1.pcmag.com/media/images/322017-apple-ipod-touch-2011.jpg?thumb=yIn 2010, Apple's fourth-generation iPod touch got two cameras—one for shooting HD videos and photos, one for FaceTime chats. In 2011, the changes to the iPod touch are all based on the new iOS 5, which brings with it iMessage, iCloud, notifications, and Game Center enhancements. Physically, the player is unchanged, except now it's offered in white. The high-res Retina display remains crisp, colorful, and highly responsive to touch. Since the iPod nano ($129, 3 stars) no longer supports video, the 8GB touch is the least-expensive video-playing iPod, starting at $199 direct—a $30 price drop from 2010. The other two models remain $299 (32GB) and $399 (64GB). Despite the hefty price, the iPod touch is still, by far, the best portable media player you can buy—and it retains our Editors' Choice.
Design
There's a new white model, which is white on the front face and mirrored on the back, but the touch retains its 2010 dimensions: 4.4 by 2.3 by 0.3 inches (HWD) and 3.6 ounces. Apple's custom A4 chip powers the device, and the super-sharp Retina display remains 3.5 diagonal inches and 960-by-640 pixels (at 326 pixels per inch). The touch's left-hand panel houses two Volume buttons. A headphone jack, a speaker, and a 30-pin connector for USB computer syncing are on the bottom of the player. The Power button sits up top, and the Home button remains below the display on the front panel. There are two camera lenses—one toward the top of the display, and one on the back, in the top left corner, which is accompanied by a mic. The mirrored back panel is excellent for checking your teeth on the sly, but it picks up fingerprints very easily.

Specifications

Storage Capacity (as Tested)
32 GB
Player Type
Portable Media Player
Radio
Optional
Music Playback Formats
AAC, AIFF, Apple Lossless, Audible, MP3, WAV, Protected AAC
Photo Formats
BMP, JPEG, TIFF, PSD, PNG, GIF
Video Formats
MPEG4, H.264
Audio Battery Life
47 hours 25 min
Dimensions
4.4 x 2.3 x 0.3 inches
Weight
3.5 oz
More
In the box, you'll find a Quick Start Guide, a proprietary USB cable for connecting the touch to your computer, and a pair of Apple signature earbuds. It's a good idea to upgrade those bass-deprived, ill-fitting earbuds to earphones, and our Ultimate Guide to Headphones is a good place to start your search for the right pair.
User Interface
With the inclusion of iOS 5, the iPod touch now becomes a messaging device. It can also use the new iCloud function, which features iTunes in the Cloud, Photo Stream, and Documents in the Cloud, so you can share content wirelessly between your computer, your iPod touch, your iPhone, and your iPad. Another useful new feature is Notifications, which works with just about any relevant app to keep you informed about updates and friends' responses. For more about what iOS 5 can do, check out PCMag's full review, or read on here to discover some of the nuances that improve the iPod touch's performance.
Audio and Video
Navigating the music menus on the iPod touch is completely intuitive. First off, there are so many ways to do it—using CoverFlow, searching Artist or Song, or perusing playlists. Apple has made everything fast and easy—scroll song or artist lists by dragging a finger or skip ahead to a letter on the scrollable alphabet on the right side of the screen. The Now Playing view is a showcase for album art, and you can play music while you surf the Web, view photos, or even play games.
By itself, the iPod touch is a fine audio device—plug in a pair of good-quality headphones and you won't be disappointed with the frequency range and overall audio quality. To my continuing disappointment, Apple still offers its stock, subpar earbuds. Audiophiles listening to Lossless tracks on the touch will be best served by leaving the EQ off. The settings Apple provides are presets; there's still no user-customizable EQ. Extra features like Shake to Shuffle, Volume Limit, and Sound Check can all be enabled or disabled easily.
The iTunes Store can be accessed via Wi-Fi for on-the-spot music and video purchases. Video looks fantastic on the Retina display. YouTube and Netflix will not look as sharp as video purchased from the iTunes Store, of course, but the speed with which video can be cued up without stuttering is impressive. Again, this is dependent on the strength of your Wi-Fi signal.
The touch integrates Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR and 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, though 802.11n only operates on the 2.4GHz band. Nike+ iPod support is also included for those who want to use the touch to help keep in shape.
CameraThe rear-facing camera records video in HD (720p), up to 30fps, capturing audio through the rear panel mic. Still photos max out at 960 by 720 pixels. This amounts to less than a megapixel, and compared with the iPhone 4S ($199.99-$399.99, 4.5 stars) and its 8-megapixel rear camera, the quality in images is stark. (See the slideshow for a side-by-side comparison.) The front-facing camera, intended for FaceTime video chat, offers lower resolutions: VGA-quality for photos and videos, again, up to 30fps.
Camera operation couldn't be more intuitive. An onscreen slide control toggles between still and video camera modes, and an icon in the lower left takes you to your gallery, where you can peruse your photos and videos. Video footage plays back onscreen with a scroll tool that shows a thumbnail timeline of your footage, making skipping to a certain spot easy. You can trim your footage on the player by dragging your finder over the thumbnail timeline of the footage and selecting segments to cut.
Capturing video is achieved by pressing the red Record button onscreen when in video camera mode, and tapping it again to end recording. The screen acts as your viewfinder and everything moves along in real time without stuttering. Low-light situations will make for some noisy footage, but in well-lit scenarios, the touch's video looks colorful and crisp. Uploading your video to YouTube or sending it as an email attachment, provided you have a Wi-Fi connection, is made easy with a button in the lower left-hand corner of the screen that walks you through a streamlined process to do either.
Unlike the iPhone 4S's camera, the iPod touch's has no flash, which makes low-light—particularly back-lit—scenarios rather challenging. You get 5x digital zoom for photos, which is activated by moving the slider on the screen above the on-screen shutter button, but zooming in creates noticeable artifacts. Landscape shots in adequate lighting look decent for a camera built into a player, and well-lit portraits look sharper than you'd expect, provided you don't zoom in too far. Like videos, photos can be sent out immediately via email, or you can assign a photo to be your new wallpaper or a friend's contact photo, all by pressing the lower left-hand button when viewing your image.
iMessage and FaceTime
iOS 5 brings iMessage to the iPod touch. If you use an iPhone, the difference between an iMessage and a text message is pretty much undetectable—they appear the same in your Messages app. However, iMessage uses Wi-Fi rather than a carrier's signal, which means that Wi-Fi devices, like the iPod touch, are invited to the party. Not invited: Devices not running iOS 5. Still, any friends of yours with an iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad can now be sent virtual texts via iMessage—all you need is a wireless signal. This means you can send them photo and video straight from your iPod touch, too.
FaceTime still works quite well—images are fairly crisp and clear, aided by the smaller screen, and it's easy to understand what your chat partner is saying. Of course, this is contingent on your Wi-Fi signal being strong, but in ideal scenarios, it's not much different than video chatting on a laptop. However, Google Talk has a bit of an advantage over FaceTime, in that it works across multiple operating systems. You can, for instance, chat on Google Talk between a Motorola Xoom ($599, 3.5 stars) and an Apple laptop; FaceTime, like iMessage, only works between iOS devices and some Apple computers. But what began as a portable media player with no camera now has video chat and virtual text messaging capabilities—even with its iOS 5-only limitations, that is quite impressive.
Gaming and AppsIn 2010, Apple introduced Game Center, a feature that encourages you to find a friend—either someone you know or a stranger with an iPod touch or an iPhone—to play real-time games. Your success (or failure) earns you a ranking you can use for bragging rights or to seek out opponents with similar skill levels. With iOS 5, Game Center gets a few new features, like the ability to purchase new games from within the app and add photos to your profile.
Meanwhile, the App Store, which is accessed via Wi-Fi, is loaded with single-player, accelerometer-driven games like Zombie Highway, that look fantastic on the Retina display. There are more than 500,000 apps with a range far too wide to detail here. If you're familiar with the iPhone or iPod touches past, you know the possibilities are endless.
Web, Email, and Notifications
Surfing in Safari on the iPod touch is a great experience.  Now that the Zune HD (4.5 stars), which was also a strong Internet device, is officially a relic, the iPod touch offers the strongest Web experience on any device this size that isn't a mobile phone. Still, there are some annoyances. Given Apple's stance on Flash support, you shouldn't expect it on any iPod or iPhone anytime soon, and that's the single advantage competing mobile browsers can offer.
Email remains easy to customize and use—AOL, Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Microsoft Exchange, and mobileMe remain options in the mail section, where you can also add an iCloud account. Multiple accounts can be synced via Exchange.
With the new notifications features in iOS 5, email notifications appear on-screen, as well as app notifications—say, when your opponent makes a new play or a friend comments on your Facebook post. Notifications appear on the Lock screen (Alerts), at the top of the home screen (Banners), just over the app's icon (Badges), and you can choose between various combinations of the three for each app—or to turn them off completely.
Battery Life and Conclusions
Apple rates the battery life for the iPod touch at an impressive 40 hours for audio and seven hours for video. We ran three different battery rundown tests. With Wi-Fi on, and the screen illuminated (meaning Auto-Lock is disabled) and audio playing, we got a reasonable four hours and 25 minutes. With Wi-Fi off and the screen going dark (Auto-Lock set to one minute), we got a great result: 47 hours and 25 minutes. For video playback with the screen brightness at maximum and with no Wi-Fi on, we got one hour and 41 minutes—not enough time to watch a full movie, in most cases.
There are very few devices left that you can actually compare directly with the iPod touch, though both Sony and Samsung have announced, but not yet shipped Android-based PMPs. Many manufacturers have thrown in the towel and are taking on slightly less daunting targets, like the iPod nano or the iPod shuffle ($49, 3.5 stars), or are focusing on tablets instead. The only real problem with the touch is its high price—especially if you want a decent amount of storage. But with an entry point of $199, you do get a camera, HD video recording, messaging and video chat, a music and video player, portable gaming, the Web, email, and apps all in one slick, pocket-size package. It was true when it first debuted, and even more so now: No other portable media player can compete with the iPod touch.

Jumat, 21 Oktober 2011

Apple iOS 5 jailbroken to perfection

iOS 5 is a great jump forward for Apple’s mobile devices, poaching all the best bits from Android – but it’s still not perfect.
The guys behind IntelliScreen have now created IntelliScreenX, which sees the flaws of Apple and fixes them, with quick selection buttons at the top of your pull-down for easy access to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, for example. Their tweaks even let you see your e-mails, Twitter and Facebook feeds – meaning you can be in Mail and jump between those other areas for information, without leaving the message you’re writing.

Minggu, 16 Oktober 2011

iPad 3 going into production


http://cdn.pocket-lint.com/images/CA2R/apple-ipad-3-in-production-0.jpg?20111016-210745
Now that the iPhone 4S has released, the rumourmill can start to focus on the next batch of yet to be announced Apple products, and that means the Apple iPad 3.
According to Susquehanna Financial analyst Jeff Fidacaro the iPad 3 has gone into production reports All Things Digital (the tech arm of the Wall Street Journal).
"Since our last month supply chain checks we are now seeing 600,000 to one million iPad 3 builds showing up on the plan for the fourth quarter of calendar 2011," Fidacaro told AllThingsD. "Our previous estimate did not include any iPad 3s."
Apple released the iPad 2 in March 2011 in the US and around the world, so it figures that Apple is likely to do the same again for a 2012 iPad 3 launch.
If that is the case, that gives Apple just 6 months to make as many as possible.
Apple sold over 1 million iPad 2 in the first weekend on sale in the US and has continued to sell around 100,000 iPad 2s a day.
Apple’s mobile division continues to grow in popularity. Its iPhone 4S smartphone racked up over 1 million sales before it even hit the shelves.
Check out all the latest iPad 3 news via Pocket-lint's dedicated iPad 3 homepage. 
iPad 3 display resolution details leaked
iPad 3 delayed due to Retina display problems
Via: allthingsd.com

Sabtu, 15 Oktober 2011

Apple's iPhone 4S generates big 1st-day sales

Well before dawn on Friday, Chad Dorsey woke up and made his way to the Apple Store on Stockton Street.
By the time he arrived, at 4:30 a.m., there were already 40 people standing in front of him in line. And by the time the iPhone 4S went on sale, a line of hundreds wrapped around the block.
The arrival of the iPhone 4S in stores drew crowds around the world. Analysts estimated that Apple would sell up to 4 million of them during its opening weekend, according to Bloomberg, a reflection of pent-up demand for a new Apple smart phone and good reviews from critics.
Many waiting in line said they were eager to try Siri, the voice-controlled digital assistant exclusive to the 4S - even if it meant hours in line.
http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2011/10/14/ba-506528024_0504353903.jpg"You gotta do what you gotta do," said Dorsey, a Boston resident who is in town for a technology conference. "The personal assistant is definitely interesting. The advances in intelligence are really impressive."
At 7:30 a.m., dozens of Apple employees emerged from the store to greet customers, running down the line and giving high fives to everyone waiting.
The intense interest in the new device, which arrives 16 months after the debut of the best-selling iPhone 4, contrasted sharply with the reactions of investors on the day it was announced. Apple stock declined slightly Oct. 4 amid concerns that the 4S would not be different enough from its predecessor to spur sales.
But those fears failed to take into account the tens of millions of people who own previous models of the iPhone who had never upgraded to the 4. Robert Castaneda, a Palo Alto resident working in San Francisco, arrived at the AT&T store in Union Square late Friday morning looking to replace his battered old iPhone 3GS.
Castaneda said buying the new phone was an easy decision - his contract was up, and the new phone is faster.
"For me it's just speed," he said.
Sales around the state were exceeding customer expectations, said Terry Stenzel, vice president and general manager for AT&T in Northern California and Reno.
"We had lines in every store - Stockton, Reno, everywhere," Stenzel said. He attributed the foot traffic to customer desire for access to AT&T's HSPA+ network, which independent testing has shown to offer faster data downloads than its rivals.
Sprint, which began selling the iPhone with the launch of the 4S, announced its "best day ever of sales" on Friday, said Fared Adib, Sprint product chief. Sprint said its sales were driven by demand for its plan that offers unlimited data downloading, which is unavailable on rival networks.
"The response to this device by current and new customers has surpassed our expectations and validates our customers' desire for a truly unlimited data pricing plan," Adib said in a statement.
Earlier in the week, Verizon sold out of preorders for the iPhone 4S.
The 4S launch comes nine days after the death from cancer of Apple's iconic co-founder, Steve Jobs. While Friday was arguably Apple's biggest product launch day of the year, the company's home page remained a solemn tribute to its former CEO, with no direct link to the new phone.

Selasa, 11 Oktober 2011

iPhone 4S delivered to a number of German customers

A number of lucky customers have received Apple’s iPhone 4S a few days earlier than the phone’s official release date. According to reports, some customers in Germany who pre-ordered the new Apple smartphone have already received the device, and some photos are popping up online.
These lucky users sent in some photos of the iPhone 4S, its packaging and some screenshots of the new Siri feature to Macerkopf.de, a German tech blog.
Apple Inc. has introduced the iPhone 4S last October 4 at the “Let’s talk iPhone” event in its Cupertino headquarters, and began accepting pre-orders on October 7. The official launch date of the new smartphone is on October 14, which is also the date Apple scheduled for pre-order deliveries.
Also, benchmarks have started surfacing online, with the iPhone 4S clocking in at 68 percent faster than the iPhone 4. Separate tests also confirmed that the graphics processor of the iPhone 4S is seven times faster than its predecessor.
The iPhone 4S also scored 677 on the benchmarking test of Geekbench, almost twice the iPhone 4′s 370 and not too far under iPad 2′s 751. The iPad 2 tablet and the iPhone 4S share the same A5 dual-core processor.
The iPhone 4S will be released on Friday in the United Kingdom, U.S., Canada, France, Australia, Germany and Japan. It will launch to 22 more countries, including Mexico, Netherlands, Singapore, Spain and other European countries, by the end of the month.

iOS 5 Review

Apple iOS 5 is, arguably, the version we’ve always been waiting for. New iOS builds have always introduced new features, but in iOS 5 Apple sets out its digital hub ecosystem, the culmination of a decade of product positioning and service development. It also brings very specific challenges to each of Apple’s key competitors – Siri as the answer to Android’s voice command system, iMessage to take on BlackBerry Messenger – in addition to addressing some of the longer standing complaints iOS users have had. Read on for the full SlashGear review.


Notification Center

Until now, the iOS notifications system has been the area of the platform, which was most un-Apple. Attention-stealing, unattractive and – worst of all – inefficient, the pop-up notifications were a problem that was only getting more significant, as apps proliferated and more services clamored for their share of our eye-time.

iOS 5 addresses that with an all-new system for notifying updates and alerts. At first glance it’s something of a hybridization of the best we’ve seen on other platforms: new alerts slide in at the top, discrete as on webOS or Windows Phone, and can be tapped to respond immediately or left to disappear after a short delay. Alternatively, all alerts can be accessed by swiping down from the top of the screen, Android-style, to open up the Notifications Center itself.

This has each new update sorted by app, as well as optionally showing the weather and recent stock movements. Each set of notifications can be cleared on a per-app basis – though not individual alerts, so you can’t dismiss all but one outstanding calendar alarm, say – but it’s worth noting that clearing an alert removes it from Notifications Center but not from the app itself. The lock screen also shows alerts now, and you can swipe them to go straight to the relevant app (though not clear them without unlocking the phone and opening the Notification Center). New voicemails are also readily accessible from the lock screen, with a smaller slide-bar automatically triggering playback.

As an improvement over iOS 4.x it’s huge, and anyone who has struggled to use an app or play a game without pop-up boxes distracting them will appreciate the changes. More granular control over what gets dismissed and what can be left on-screen would be useful, but they’re relatively minor complaints.

iMessage

Instant messaging apps for iOS aren’t uncommon, but Apple’s own iMessage software in iOS 5 is likely to corner the market for most users. Supported on the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch – and with conversations synchronized across all the devices you’re signed in on, meaning you can pick up a chat begun on your iPhone on your iPad instead – iMessage supports text, photo and video sharing over WiFi and 3G (depending on the capabilities of your device) along with location and contacts sharing.
The interface is familiar from SMS and MMS messaging on iOS, with a bubble interface showing in-line photo and video thumbnails. Delivery receipts and, optionally, read receipts are supported, so you know the recipient has seen the message, and those “are they there?” moments are diffused by iMessage showing “…” when the other person is typing.
Like BBM, all iMessage conversations are encrypted, which is likely to appeal to the enterprise crowd. It’s worth remembering that the app falls back to SMS when the iMessage service isn’t available, however, which means each chat bubble demands a new text message. That could eat through a text bundle fast, or get expensive if you’re charged per-message, and it would be nice to see a way of shutting it off completely.
The biggest frustration, though, is the absence of a Mac or PC client, since iMessage works so well as an IM system. There are rumors of integration with a future version of iChat on OS X Lion, though nothing confirmed as yet.

Siri

Although new with iOS 5, only the iPhone 4S (review) will get to enjoy Apple’s new Siri system. A combination of voice recognition, artificial intelligence and integration with Phone, Mail, Safari, Music, Messages, Calendar, Reminders, Maps, Weather, Stocks, Notes, Clock and Contacts, in addition to services like Yelp and Wolfram Alpha online, Siri can recognize not just a list of canned spoken commands but natural speech and complex tasks.

Hold down the Home button and you can ask Siri to call a contact, send messages to set up appointments – having automatically checked your schedule and slotted in a new reminder – find nearby restaurants that come Yelp recommended, manage your contacts and check the weather. That’s the tip of the iceberg, however: the magic is in Siri’s grasp of conversational instructions and ability to distill meaning from your speech.

Since the Siri beta is currently limited to the iPhone 4S, we’ve detailed its performance in our full iPhone 4S review.

AirPlay Mirroring

AirPlay already worked with music, but with the arrival of iOS 5 the wireless media streaming system has been extended to support video, too. You’ll need an iPad 2 or iPhone 4S in order to send video to your Apple TV (which must be a second-gen model), footage is streamed at 720p HD max, and for the moment there’s no Mac mini or other Mac support either. Nonetheless, it works as you’d expect, supporting screen rotation and zoom, and we were able to play HD video jitter free across an 802.11n network.

Reminders

Our phones have quickly become the device we carry with us at all times, and so it’s unsurprising they’ve also evolved to supplement our memory. Reminders is Apple’s answer to the to-do list, supporting list and date-based tasks with tick-boxes for that “job well done” feeling. They’re synchronized across iOS devices via iCloud – so a grocery list compiled on your iPad is automatically loaded onto your iPhone for when you’re at the store – as well as with iCal and Outlook on your desktop. You can optionally set priority levels – though doing so has no real effect on how iOS 5 alerts you – or organize individual reminders by different lists.

What’s clever, though, is the location support. Rather than expect you to remember to check for that grocery list, Reminders can be set to automatically flag it up at a specific location from your Contacts. For shopping, that might be when you pull into the grocery store parking lot, or it could be when you leave whatever has been set as your work location. Reminders supports both “when I arrive” and “when I leave” as a trigger.

It’s very dependent on having an accurate location fix, but in our testing the iPhone 4S was able to regularly notify us. One potential downside is the impact running Location Services – which iOS 5 uses to actively monitor your position and hence know when to flag up a task – could have on battery life, though even when the location icon is showing up in the status bar (which happens as soon as you set a location-based reminder) it doesn’t necessarily mean the device is relying on GPS for a position fix. Instead it can be using far more battery-friendly systems like cell-tower triangulation, only resorting to GPS when you change position considerably.

Twitter

Twitter integration into iOS 5 considerably boosts the sharing potential of the platform; assuming, that is, you’re a Twitter user in the first place. After logging in from the Settings menu, you can then send tweets from Safari (URLs), Camera and Photos (images), YouTube (video links) and Maps (location links). Contacts has been updated to include Twitter handles, auto-completing as you type, and any tweet you send can have location attached.

It’s a big improvement and reduces jumping between apps to send content out via the popular short-message service. You’re still dependent on what third-party services Apple chooses to include in iOS, however; unlike the Android “share” menu, which third-party apps can easily be included in, if you prefer say Facebook sharing to Twitter you’re out of luck. The upside is simplicity, of course, and consistency of Apple’s UI across Twitter shares.

Camera and Photos

Apple’s camera hardware varies across devices – from the relatively low-resolution iPod touch and iPad optics to the new 8-megapixel sensor in the iPhone 4S – but the camera app itself has had a significant boost in iOS 5. It’s now easier to access, thanks to a shortcut on the lock screen (or a double-tap of the home button when the device is locked) and faster to open, on the iPhone 4S at least.

When you’re in the app, there are optional grid lines to better frame your shot, and support for pinch-zooming. Tap-to-focus is intuitive and straightforward, and also locks the exposure to suit different light levels and the nature of your subject. The volume-up button has been repurposed as a shutter release when in the camera app, meaning it’s easier to keep the phone steady when shooting off a frame.

Once you’ve taken a picture, the Photos app supports basic editing including cropping and rotating, as well as photo enhancement and red-eye removal. It’s also possible to organize shots into different folders, directly on the device. Apple still offers iMovie for iPhone and iPad to edit video you’ve recorded, too.

Newsstand

Newsstand is an evolution of folder support in iOS, a customized layout designed to showcase your digital newspaper and magazine subscriptions. Tap the icon and the Newsstand shelves spring up, organized by the most recent issue, showing covers in full color. A Store button drops you straight into the App Store, with a new section for newspapers and magazines, with newly-released copies being downloaded in the background when available and flagged up on the Newsstand icon. If you’re an avid subscriber then it’s an easier way to manage your reading, though a list-view for easier browsing through previous issues would save some time.

Mail, Calendar and Safari

Email in iOS 5 has seen some polishing, with support now for simple font formatting – bold, underline and italic – as well as layout options like indents. Simple stuff in comparison to a desktop email app, but it makes for more flexible – and professional – looking messages sent when mobile. Other changes, such as being able to search not just by subject line but for in-body text are welcome improvements, while composing messages is slicker thanks to drag-&-drop support for recipients in the To/CC/BCC fields. Apple’s auto-prediction and auto-correction in the on-screen keyboard are as adept as ever, among the best on a mobile platform, and with Siri there’s now support for voice dictation too.
The Calendar app has new layouts, with a year planner view on the iPad and a week-to-view on the iPhone and iPod touch. It’s quicker and easier to add appointments, too, with the new ability to drag out the duration directly on the agenda screen, rather than spin through time/date wheels. iOS 5 brings greater independence, too, with the ability to create, edit and delete calendars all from your device, rather than having to set them up on a computer and sync across. However, there’s little calendar interaction with the new Reminders app, which seems short-sighted.

Safari has gained tabs on the iPad – though the iPhone/iPod touch still sticks with the separate thumbnail page – and a new Reader option similar to Safari on the desktop. Like Instapaper, this strips out adverts and unwanted page styling to show simply photos and text in an easily read layout. Along with bookmarking, you can now add a page to your reading list, a todo list of sites you want to come back to, and which is synchronized across all your iOS devices. Unfortunately, while mobile bookmarks are sync’d with Safari on your desktop, using iCloud, the Reading List isn’t.
The browser itself is faster, too; Apple isn’t making specific speed increase claims, but side-by-side with the iOS 4.x version you can see that pages render more quickly and scroll more smoothly. Considering the browser is often the most-used app on a smartphone, that’s a welcome improvement.

PC Free and WiFi Sync

Apple is keen to cut the cord between iOS 5 and your computer, and gives two options depending on how PC Free you want to be. Nudged perhaps by people giving up a laptop in favor of an iPad, iOS 5 now allows you to set up a new iPhone, iPod touch or iPad from the device itself, rather than having to connect it to iTunes on your Mac or PC. You can activate it as a new device, for a clean slate, or use an iCloud Backup (more on which in a moment) or iTunes to restore data from a previous device.
The independence extends to software updates down the line, too. Rather than downloading new iOS versions in iTunes and then using the USB cable to transfer them across, iOS 5 devices can download and install them standalone, just like Android and other platforms permit. If you’ve ever wished you could restore an earlier backup to your iPhone while out of the office, or picked up an iPad in duty-free at the airport and realized you can’t actually use it until you get back home from your holiday, then you’ll instantly see the value of PC Free.
For those less interested in complete independence but still wanting to do away with the USB cord, WiFi Sync is the answer. Triggered every time you plug your iOS 5 device into a power source, WiFi Sync automatically triggers a device backup over a shared WiFi connection to your Mac or PC (more of which in a moment), as well as synchronizing any new iTunes content such as TV shows and movies, music, photos and apps. It’s not as fast as a wired sync – you can still plug in direct if you have, say, an entire library of media to transfer – but it’s a lot more usable than before, especially when you factor in iCloud.

iCloud

Free with iOS 5 and OS X Lion – after the 10.7.2 update released on Wednesday – iCloud is the evolution of Apple’s MobileMe services to encompass media sync, cross-platform sharing and more. You’ll need to have iTunes 10.5 in order to use it, but once each of your devices are up to date, the promise is a fully joined-up work, play and entertainment ecosystem. We’ll go through each section individually.

iTunes in the Cloud

At first, you bought an iPod and loaded your iTunes music library onto it. When you upgraded your iPod, you transferred the library and just carried the new model. With more people having two or more iOS devices, however – an iPhone and an iPad, say – and the increase in on-device content purchasing, iTunes no longer makes sense as the hub for all your music, video and photos.
Instead, iTunes in the iCloud takes center stage, relegating iTunes on your Mac or PC to just another arm of the Apple ecosystem. Buy a track from the iTunes Store on your iPhone, now, and it’s automatically downloaded for your Mac, your iPod touch, your iPad – any device registered to the same account, in fact, and all done automatically. No need to wait until you’re back home to sync across a newly purchased TV show between your iPod touch and your iPad: iTunes in the Cloud automatically does it for you.
The auto-sync behavior is optional – useful if you’ve got a low-capacity iPhone or iPod touch, for instance, and don’t want it swamped with video content bought on your iPad – and there’s a manual route for those users. Tap the “Purchased” option and you can re-download anything bought previously. Some content will have download limits, restricting the number of simultaneous or repeat downloads to ten or some other figure, which is a limitation of the licensing. Devices with 3G connections can be set to allow sync’ing over cellular data, or limit it to WiFi so as to avoid chewing through a data allowance.
Apple TV also gets in on the iTunes in the Cloud action, which means it’s more straightforward to access content purchased while mobile when you’re back at home. It’s also a good workaround if you have a first-gen iPad or an iPhone earlier than the 4S, which don’t support AirPlay Mirroring.

iTunes Match

Although streaming music services like Spotify – which allow full catalog access for a monthly fee – continue to gain in popularity, Apple hasn’t thrown open its entire iTunes library on a subscription basis. Instead, the company now offers iTunes Match, a way to share all your music – even if you didn’t buy it from iTunes – with all your devices. Priced at $24.99 per year (and available, initially, in the US only) iTunes Match scans your music collection and matches any tracks that are already in its catalog with a 256Kbps AAC DRM-free version.
Those tracks it recognizes are automatically synchronized across your devices from Apple’s master copy. Those it doesn’t have, it uploads to the cloud from your original. Playlists, too, are sync’d, and you can match up to 25,000 tracks.
If you’ve already got a sizable catalog of your own music, iTunes Match makes more sense – and is cheaper – than premium streaming services like Spotify. If your originals are lower bitrate, such as the 128Kbps MP3s commonly seen, then you’re also getting a higher quality version to enjoy. On the flipside, of course, if your originals were ripped at a higher bitrate than Apple’s master – in Apple Lossless format, for instance – you’re losing quality in the name of convenience.

Photo Stream

Photo Stream works in a similar way to iTunes in the Cloud, pulling photos off your iPhone, iPod touch or iPad and synchronizing them across devices. Take a shot on your iPhone and it automatically appears in the Photo Stream album on your iPad, for instance. Shots are also pushed to your Mac or PC, while photos can be pushed back to your iOS 5 devices from your computer by importing them into iPhoto or Aperture on Mac or dropping them into a pre-selected sync folder on your PC.
What Photo Stream isn’t is a permanent cloud backup of images. Only the latest 1,000 images are stored, for up to 30 days, with the oldest automatically being removed (you can’t remove them manually, either). A Mac or PC automatically keeps every shot – on the assumption that it’s likely to have plenty of storage space – but an iOS 5 device will only keep a copy if you actively select “Save to Camera Roll” (from where you can move it to an album if you choose). Apple TV owners can access the iCloud Photo Stream to browse the most recent 1,000 shots, though not save them locally.
In practice, there’s something close to magical in seeing a new photo turn up automatically across devices. Apple included an iPad 2 running iOS 5 for us to test the system, and it’s effectively seamless. It’s also a lot quicker than emailing images between devices if, say, you want to use your iPhone’s better camera but view on your iPad’s bigger display. We’d like to see a shared Photo Stream option added: the ability to tune into someone else’s public feed, great to show grandparents the latest holiday snaps.

Find My Friends

Find My Friends is Apple’s answer to Google Latitude, a location-sharing app intended to be used to quickly locate family and friends. Your contacts’ positions are shown on a map – with regular and satellite views available – and requests for your own position pop up as a regular notification. Location sharing can be either permanent, including parental restrictions on turning it on or off, or temporary, so that you can share your position for as long as an event lasts (e.g. until 7pm that day, or until the end of the week) and then have it automatically deactivate.
Usefully those temporary shares can be extended to a group of people rather than solely on a per-person basis, making it quicker to set up. Finally, it’s possible to instantly shut off sharing to all of your followers with a single switch. Tapping a nearby person on the map pulls up their contacts page, from which you can trigger a call, email, message or iMessage conversation. It would be useful to see some sort of floating current-status message – like “Looking for lunch company” – for each person on the map, however.

Documents in the Cloud

The work-focused version of iTunes in the Cloud, iOS 5′s document support operates with the iWork for iOS suite of apps: Pages, Numbers and Keynote. If you have one or more of those apps loaded on your various iOS 5 devices, files created and edited in them are automatically synchronized. If you haven’t got the relevant app, or you’re on your Mac, PC or a public computer, you can log in at icloud.com/iwork and download a copy of the document in either iWork ’09 format, Microsoft Office format, or as a PDF. Similarly, you can share a document through this web interface to your phone or tablet, by dragging it to the site.
Apple is throwing open access to Documents in the Cloud to third-party developers, too, so that they can support file sharing across multiple iOS 5 devices along with web access.

Sync, Backup and Find My iPhone

Although multimedia sync is the main draw for iCloud, the rest of your data hasn’t been forgotten. Contacts, calendar, mail, apps and books are all synchronized across devices, together with notes, reminders and browser bookmarks. It’s possible to share calendars – which can now be created on the iOS 5 device – with multiple people, and Apple throws in a free me.com email account if you haven’t already got your own.

As mentioned with the WiFi Sync, iTunes now supports wireless backups over WiFi, whenever your iOS 5 device is on mains power and has the screen locked. Any purchased music, TV shows, apps and ebooks are backed up in the cloud, together with photos and video in your camera roll, any app data and device settings, the layout of your apps, your messages (including SMS, MMS and iMessage chat logs) and custom ringtones. It’s a comprehensive list, and happily Apple uses incremental backup so a full copy of everything isn’t transferred each time. On the flipside, any media you’ve sideloaded – e.g. tracks you’ve ripped from CD rather than bought from iTunes – aren’t backed up, and if an item you’ve purchased, whether app, video, song or ebook, has subsequently been pulled from sale, you won’t be able to restore it from the cloud. For that reason alone it’s worth doing the occasional local backup over a USB connection to iTunes on your computer.

Find My iPhone works as before, offering a choice of browser-based or iOS tracking and remote control over a missing device. If it’s online – either via WiFi or cellular data – then you can see it on a map; if it’s offline, you can choose to receive an email when it next connects. As previously you can choose to play a sound – useful if you’ve dropped your iPhone behind the sofa – or show an onscreen message, remotely lock the device or even erase all the data. In this latest version, however, functionality has been extended to support Mac OS X Lion as well as iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.

Cloud Storage

Apple offers 5GB of free cloud storage space for all iOS 5 and Mac OS X Lion users. That’s for me.com mail, sync’d documents and backup; saving or sync’ing a copy of anything you’ve bought from iTunes or the App Store doesn’t count against that total.

If 5GB isn’t enough, you can buy more directly from an iOS 5 device. 10GB is $20 per year; 20GB is $40 per year; and 50GB is $100 per year. There’s no option to set up your own “personal cloud” using a Time Capsule router with integrated storage, for instance.
That’s disappointing, because in our experience 5GB gets used up very quickly. Even with just our iPhone 4S review unit, after a few days we’d already got well past 4GB: if you have a second iOS device that you expect to backup to the cloud, plan on spending some money every year to increase your allowance.

Wrap-Up

As a free upgrade, it’s difficult to argue with iOS 5. We’ve grown used to our devices gaining new functionality as the months go by: people even buy products today based on what they may well do tomorrow. Nonetheless, as updates go, iOS 5 is a considerable one. The Notifications Center would be welcome alone, and does a huge amount to make iOS feel fresher and ready to cope with the multitude of apps most iPhones, iPads and iPod touches end up running.
Factor in iMessage, and we can see BlackBerry owners giving iOS a second look. What’s dangerous to RIM is not so much iMessage on the iPhone, but an affordable iPod touch running the IM client. It will need desktop support to fully pull ahead of BBM, but even limited to iOS it’s usable and makes us wonder whether we’ll ever need those messaging bundles from our carriers again.
Finally, iCloud is the glue that holds the new Apple experience together. It’s not too great a stretch to say that iOS 5 – along with OS X Lion – has welcomed in the next generation of Apple’s content ecosystem. Steve Jobs talked of Post-PC, and with its shifted focus from desktop to cloud, iOS 5 effectively downgrades your computer from essential to merely optional.
If Apple was charging for iOS 5, we’d tell you to pay for it. Free, and with iCloud services thrown in too, it could well be the bargain of the year.
iOS 5 will be a free upgrade for the iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPod touch 3rd/4th-gen, iPad and iPad 2 this Wednesday, October 12. It will be preloaded on the new iPhone 4S – our full review of which you can find here.
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