Tuesday 27 February 2007

No Apple TV in February, March Looking Likely

No Apple TV in February, March Looking Likely

Waiting for your Apple TV? Yah, me too. The Apple store website has changed the shipping date from late February to mid-March, something disappointing. Reuters confirmed the change of date with Lynn Fox, a spokesperson from Apple, who said that “wrapping up Apple TV is taking a few weeks longer than we projected, and we now expect to begin shipments mid-March.” That’s just in time for Yours Truly’s birthday.

So there you have it. Expect to see displays in stores any day, though, as Apple should be anxious to get word of the device out to as many brains as it can.

Apple TV Delayed till mid-March [Reuters]

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Saturday 24 February 2007

Apple to Advertise iPhone during Academy Awards

Apple to Advertise iPhone during Academy Awards

Macworld reports that Apple will be featuring a teaser advertisement for the iPhone during the Academy Awards (Oscars) this Sunday.

Macworld was unable to get any further details about the ad but "the new ad was described as being made...

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Thursday 22 February 2007

Apple and Cisco settle! iPhone name to be used by both

Apple and Cisco settle! iPhone name to be used by both

Filed under:

Here's one we didn't exactly see coming (at least not like this): Apple and Cisco have settled that "silly" lawsuit, with Apple agreeing to guarantee the exploration of "interoperability in the areas of security, and consumer and enterprise communications" according to the WSJ. We don't know exactly what that means, but it doesn't sound fantastic for Jobs, who we're sure wanted to have exclusivity over the name without cutting a partnership with Cisco, and didn't want to have to pay a red cent for it. But this does sound a lot like what Cisco wanted initially from Apple, and might possibly wind up in some kind of SIP / VoIP solution that allows iPhones and iPhones to communicate. Apparently both will make use of the trademark in the market (i.e. Apple's and Cisco's iPhones will both continue to be iPhones), and all's well that ends non-litigious.

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Sunday 18 February 2007

Postponed, not cancelled ...

Most probably the trip will now take place end of 2007.


Portugal

Last week I was in Karlsruhe, Germany, for Learntec. This coming week I will be in Porto, Portugal to party a best friends 40th Birthday. Normally the weather is much better compared to Amsterdam, but this is the forecast ... In Amsterdam although colder no showers predicted ...

portoweather.jpg 


Friday 16 February 2007

Apple May Be Re-Entering the Sub-Notebook Market

Apple May Be Re-Entering the Sub-Notebook Market

An anonymous reader writes "AppleInsider is reporting that Apple has plans to reenter the sub-notebook market this year. The project, the article states, should be unveiled around the time of WWDC (summer). Drawing parallels to the legendary PowerBook 2400, the sub-notebook will offer some of the best elements of old and new. With a small footprint, light weight, and manageable screen it will fill a niche not currently occupied by any Apple hardware. At the same time, it will offer some new technologies that the current crop of computers do not: 'The new MacBook model is expected to introduce some features not yet available with Apple's existing notebook offerings, such as onboard NAND flash. Plans reportedly call for the notebook to be the first of the company's MacBook offerings to utilize the solid-state memory in order to improve power efficiency and facilitate near instantaneous boot times. This feature, however, had not been frozen upon last check.' Apple hopes this micro-notebook will capture interest both here in the states and in Japan, where the appeal of small consumer electronics may offset the current weak computer market."

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Saturday 10 February 2007

8 feet of snow in N.Y., and more coming (AP)

8 feet of snow in N.Y., and more coming (AP)

Randall Converse shovels snow off the roof on his parents house in Scriba, N.Y. Friday, Feb. 9, 2007. While the northern Plains and Northeast shiver in dangerously cold temperatures, the folks in upstate New York are keeping warm shoveling snow, lots of snow. (AP Photo/The Palladium-Times, Harrison Wilde)AP - Before weekend squalls add to the 8 feet of snow already on the ground, the communities along eastern Lake Ontario needed the dry respite they got Friday.

Well here we got 3 cm..... this week and the country came to a stop almost ..... :-)


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Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard), iLife '07, and iWork '07 in March?

Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard), iLife '07, and iWork '07 in March?

ThinkSecret reports that Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) development is "wrapping up faster than many at Apple even anticipated" and that the newest version of Mac OS X could be expected as soon as the end of March.

The rumor site also expects...

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Friday 9 February 2007

Apple iPhone vs. Samsung F700: Which Touchscreen Phone Is Better?

Apple iPhone vs. Samsung F700: Which Touchscreen Phone Is Better?

Apple's iPhone may have been announced first, but Samsung's Ultra Smart F700 (announced yesterda) seems to be one-up Apple's effort in a few feature categories. If you'll take a little journey with me, we'll compare the iPhone and the F700 and see which one comes out on top—on paper.

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Thursday 8 February 2007

Apple Moving to All Flash-based iPods?

Apple Moving to All Flash-based iPods?

As reported by Appleinsider, Prudential analyst Jesse Tortora claims that Apple may be moving to an all Flash based iPod line.

"We believe that the video iPod transition from 1.8-inch hard disk drives to NAND flash memory may occur as...

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Anti-Vista Marketing at Apple Stores

Anti-Vista Marketing at Apple Stores

Appleinsider reports that Apple will be increasing their direct marketing against Microsoft's Vista operating system with Apple Store materials:

The campaign, set to get underway this Saturday, will include new store displays and empl...

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Wednesday 7 February 2007

Apple Openly Supports Death of DRM

Apple Openly Supports Death of DRM

Steve Jobs has stepped up to the plate and written an open letter to the music industry in the fight against DRM. We wrote our thoughts on the eventual demise of DRM just last month. Bill Gates gave his own thoughts on DRM back in December.

Despite Apple’s near monopoly on legal digital music sales, he discusses how they got to where they are now with DRM and options moving forward. The record labels then and today demanded protection of their songs — and thus Apple created their internal DRM called FairPlay.

Jobs speaks about how DRM is an ongoing fight — there are a lot of smart people in this world that have spare time on their hands, and like to discover the “secrets” that keep the songs protected. As soon as the DRM is hacked, Apple works to update the DRM by updating the iTunes software, as well as the software found in their hardware devices (iPod). He says that if their DRM is compromised, they have only a few weeks to fix it, or the labels are able to exit their agreement with Apple entirely. Rolling out these security updates is a difficult task with just one company, but if they were to license out their DRM to multiple software and hardware vendors, it’d be a nightmare — this is not an option that Apple will consider.

Another option is continuing the same course — software/hardware vendors writing their own DRM and consumers purchasing songs that only work in certain software/hardware. He brings up that Microsoft decided to ditch their own ‘PlaysForSure’ DRM technology and create a brand new (proprietary) one for their Zune.

The third option that comes as a bit of a shocker is Jobs promoting DRM-free music. He discusses how 90 million iPods have been purchased and 2 billion songs — equating to an average of 22 songs per person on iPods that hold 1000 songs. Internal research at Apple shows that the average iPod is full — meaning that only 3% of songs on an iPod are DRM-protected, with the remaining 97% unprotected (ripped audio CDs; illegally downloaded tracks).

Jobs discusses how 90% of record label sales revenue comes from the billions of CDs sold — CDs that are not DRM-protected (consumers can go home and rip their CDs). In 2006, 2 billion songs were sold DRM-protected, while 20 billion were sold unprotected (as audio CDs).

He makes a good point — and he likely feels Apple could sell more digital music than the mere 3% that occupy iPods, by selling unprotected songs. The question on everyone’s minds is whether the music industry would sell more than the 20 billion total songs in a year if they opened the DRM-free floodgates online. Emusic has been the poster-child for the DRM-free sales of straight MP3s by the Indie labels. Amie Street is another model we like.

Editor’’s Note: This post was written by guest contributor Steve Poland, whose blog Techquila Shots brainstorms web start-up ideas.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

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Tuesday 6 February 2007

Steve Jobs on Music

Steve Jobs on Music

An interesting column written by Steve Jobs to shout out his thoughts on music. Does he talk about DRM? Yes. "The rub comes from the music Apple sells on its online iTunes Store. Since Apple does not own or control any music itself, it must license the rights to distribute music from others."Read the whole story it is interesting!

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Monday 5 February 2007

Apple Inc and Apple Corps Form New Trademark Agreement

Apple Inc and Apple Corps Form New Trademark Agreement

Apple Inc and Apple Corps said in a joint statement today that they have entered into a new trademark agreement that effectively replaces their prior 1991 agreement over the use of the corporate name "Apple".

Under this new agreement, ...

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Sunday 4 February 2007

iPhone and Mac mini: cake editions

iPhone and Mac mini: cake editions


See what you've done, Steve? You've gotten people so whipped up in a froth over your new phone that they're actually baking cakes in its visage. Same with the Mac mini, but it's safe to say that's probably not the first Mac mini cake that's come to be. Now, if you're really into gadget-themed cakes, we'd like to remind you that a little less than a year ago we held a cake contest, remember? Hope you're getting your recipes ready, we may just do another this year.

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Saturday 3 February 2007

Apple sez iTunes users should hold off on Vista

Apple sez iTunes users should hold off on Vista

As if filming a commercial dissing Microsoft for Vista upgrade hassles wasn't enough, Apple has issued a warning to iTunes users that they should wait for Apple to issue a patch before making the switch to Vista. Apparently some users are encountering problems playing purchased music and videos, synchronizing address book contacts and calendar dates, and slowed response time, along with the occasional outright corruption of connected iPods. Such problems don't affect everyone, but they're pervasive enough for Apple to advise users to wait on the upgrade. According to Apple spokesman Derick Mains, "Although iTunes 7.0.2 may work with Windows Vista on many typical PCs, Apple is aware of some known compatibility issues and recommends that iTunes customers wait to upgrade to Windows Vista until after the next release of iTunes, which will be available in the next few weeks." We're guessing Microsoft is a tad bit miffed that one of the most popular pieces of software on Windows is incompatible with its fledgling operating system -- it's not like Apple didn't have ample warning of the launch -- but in all fairness, it took Microsoft's own Zune a few weeks to catch up to Vista, at least in the Business incarnation.

Update: Thanks to the comments below pointing out that Apple has indeed released what appears to be at least a partial fix to the Vista / iTunes problems, specifically to "repair permissions." So if after that dire warning above you're still willing to give it a shot, you can grab the iTunes Repair Tool for Vista 1.0 and give it a whirl.

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Friday 2 February 2007

Blackboard's "Pledge" Not to Sue Open Source Software

Blackboard's "Pledge" Not to Sue Open Source Software

Another anonymous reader writes with a link to the Inside Higher Education site. Those folks are reporting on Blackboard's 'pledge' not to sue open source projects used by universities and colleges. The Blackboard patent on educational groupware filed last year has come under a lot of fire, with many organizations simply seeking an open-source alternative. This newest peace offering to higher education groups has the Sakai open source consortium more than a little bit nervous. If Blackboard meant to set people at ease, all it has managed to do was confirm to onlookers that it 'wants to keep its legal options open.' Blackboard insists that this new pledge affords universities a number of legal privileges, and is designed to make educators 'sleep easy at night.' Somehow, very few people seem reassured. Update: 02/02 17:34 GMT by Z : Bad first link fixed.

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Thursday 1 February 2007

Zune Phone Coming Soon?

Zune Phone Coming Soon?

CrunchGear has some exclusive info on a Zune-enabled phone coming from Microsoft later this year. Hot on the heels of Vista, we can’t be sure if this is a software addition to their current mobile line up or an actual device, but now that they’re in the race with the Zune itself, it makes sense they’ll try to beat the iPhone at its own game. More details to come but check out CrunchGear for full details.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

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