2010년 10월 28일 목요일

Magazine Apps for the iPad: “Bloated and Unfriendly”

The former design director for the New York Times has written a blog post giving his thoughts on magazine apps for the iPad (something he clearly gets asked about a lot). The bottom line? He hates them. With a passion. Why? Because, Khoi Vinh says, they are “bloated [and] user-unfriendly” and because they are largely a result of a “tired pattern of mass-media brands trying vainly to establish beachheads on new platforms, without really understanding the platforms at all.”

The new app from New Yorker magazine comes in for particular derision from the designer, who says it took too long to download, cost him money even though he already subscribes to the print edition, and was a walled garden without any connection to the web — a point I made in a recent post about the new Esquire magazine app. As Vinh describes it: “I couldn’t email, blog, tweet or quote from the app, to say nothing of linking away to other sources — for magazine apps like these, the world outside is just a rumor to be denied.”

It’s unfortunate that Vinh doesn’t say much about news apps like the one his former employer has for the iPad. The designer says that news-based apps “are really a beast of a different sort, and with their own unique challenges. There is a real use case for news apps (regardless of whether or not any players are executing well in this space).” Magazines, however, are in danger of losing the battle for readers in a digital age by making their apps so closed and monolithic, Vinh argues.

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Oct. 27: What We’re Reading About Infrastructure

One of the big obstacles to cloud adoption is that most organizations have infrastructure in place, meaning they have to develop strategies to transition these environments rather than just building best-of-breed cloud environments. This was reinforced via an on-point post from James Urquhart, a survey of satisfied cloud users and a round of funding for Riptano, which is trying to sell users on a new database strategy.
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Can Intel and $50B in IT Budgets Achieve Open Clouds?

Cloud 2015

Intel’s Cloud 2015 vision – which aims to achieve cloud federation (read “interoperability”), automation and device-awareness – is almost entirely in Intel’s court. Considering its prevalence in devices from servers to netbooks, Intel can almost singlehandedly accomplish all of the goals at the hardware level, although it still will need plenty of support from the software community. However, as certain antitrust allegations against Intel (sub req’d) illustrate (in which server makers Dell, HP and IBM allegedly abandoned planned AMD offerings at Intel’s behest), the company does have the cachet to affect product strategies. I’m not inferring any illegal activity, but rather pointing out that if anyone has the might to convince IT vendors, cloud providers and device makers to collaborate on standards and interoperability, it’s Intel.

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Secret iOS Dev Conference to be Held Next Week

The Business Insider is reporting that Apple will host a select group of iOS developers in California next week, beginning Tuesday and running for three days for a special developer summit. The source wasn’t very forthcoming with details, but the central thrust of the conference appears to be improving iOS app quality to better compete with Android.

Apple is supposed to release version 4.2 of iOS in November, so a summit prior to that update makes a lot of sense. For the first time, the iPad, the iPhone and the iPod touch will all share the same version of iOS. A huddle session with Apple’s biggest and brightest will help make sure the transition goes smoothly, and could help inject some fresh energy into the App Store, too.

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Xfinity Remote powered by Comcast

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=RLz72XErN8U

L5 Remote Demo Overview Go to L5remote.com for details

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=599h1UQoLxw&feature=player_embedded

Mobile Advertising Industry to Reach $24 Billion by 2015

iad_screen.jpgAny doubts that mobile advertising is big business should be crushed by the most recent research from Informa Telecoms & Media which found that mobile ad revenue will reach $3.5 billion worldwide this year.

What's more, by 2015, revenue will have increased eight-fold to around $24 billion, thanks in part to efforts from Apple and Google, namely, says Informa.

This current report is referring to the entire mobile ad industry, not just in-app advertising, it appears. In-app ads, however, are expected to reach $8 by 2015, according to Borrell Associates.

Revenues Climb

In Informa's latest report, the firm says that Apple's iAd platform launch has prompted rivals, including Google, to speed up their own strategies. Informa senior analyst Shailendra Pandey notes that Google's AdMob acquisition "is on track to generate $1 billion in revenues from mobile in 2010, a significant portion of which will be mobile advertising revenues." Also, Google has reported a 500% increase in mobile search queries between 2008 and 2010, the report's author notes.

Informa is forecasting that, over the next 12-18 months, the mobile advertising market will begin a sustained period of consolidation where bigger players will hunt for smaller companies that can be easily integrated into their platforms.

Pandey also says that the mobile advertising industry is no longer in its "experimental" phase, but is rather an active market seeing large investments in mobile campaigns on a regular basis. "The investments from big players such as Google and Apple validates the market opportunity,"  Pandey added. This has resulted in "brands and agencies more actively considering mobile for their campaigns," he concluded.

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Report: Apple Building Own SIM Card for Fast Carrier Swapping

Apple is believed to be working with SIM-card manufacturer Gemalto to develop a SIM card built into the iPhone, making it easy for phone owners to use a carrier of their choice. Gemalto is the company that sued Google, Motorola, HTC and Samsung on Monday over alleged patent infringement in Android.

GigaOm's Stacey Higginbotham reports today that sources tell her the device is being built for European markets, where carriers are more competitive and the iPhone has largely lost its exclusivity already. Imagine, though, if such technology were to come to US markets. Built-in choice of carriers could increase competition, drive down data prices and potentially impact limitations on what kinds of apps are allowed on the iPhone, in as much as carriers object to things like VOIP and tethering.

Higginbotham writes:

The Gemalto SIM, according to my sources, is embedded in a chip that has an upgradeable flash component and a ROM area. The ROM area contains data provided by Gemalto with everything related to IT and network security, except for the carrier related information. The flash component will receive the carrier related data via a local connection which could be the PC or a dedicated device, so it can be activated on the network. Gemalto will provide the back-end infrastructure that allows service and number provisioning on the carrier network.
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2010년 10월 27일 수요일

Free iPad Engraving Now Available Through Apple

Apple updated the buying options for all models of the iPad to include free laser engraving earlier today. The option automatically comes up as you go through the process of ordering your iPad, and uses the same live preview feature that’s been standard for iPod engraving.

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Is the NOOKcolor Actually the iPad’s Greatest Threat?

The Barnes & Noble NOOKcolor, that’s how. The new e-reader from the book seller does away with the black and white e-ink display of the original NOOK, instead giving it a 7-inch IPS touchscreen with a resolution of 1024×600. It also supposedly works indoors and out, and has 8GB of built-in memory, with expansion of up to 32GB possible via microSD. It plays MP4 video, MP3 and AAC audio, and has a speaker (mono) and a 3.5 mm stereo headphone jack.

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Mobile App Recommendation Sites Drive Downloads for Developers

iphone_apps_logo_aug09.jpgMobile application recommendation websites and services have sprung out of a growing need to filter, rank and recommend the best apps from the hundreds of thousands now available for download onto mobile phones. These sites operate outside of the official app marketplaces like the iTunes App Store and the Android Market, for example.

With iTunes now carrying 225,000 apps in its "curated" collection and Android up to 100,000, it's no wonder users have turned to other resources beyond the search box and category listings found in the official vendor-specific app stores. For the end users, recommendation sites like these prove useful, even necessary at times.

But are these sites helping developers? And if so, how much?

btbuckets3.jpg

The State of Recommendation Engines is a sponsored content series by BT Buckets, a leader in personalization and onsite behavioral targeting. Check out their solutions.

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Apple Launches its Own Check-in Service

applestore_app.pngDon't worry - Apple isn't trying to launch the next Foursquare - but the company has developed its own check-in service which integrates with Apple's in-house applications. The new service went live this week.

The lineup of Apple-owned applications that make up the service includes "Concierge," a push-enabled app used by employees to receive notifications of customers with appointments entering the store and an app called "Scout" used by managers to establish precise physical locations within the store as part of the setup process.

For Apple customers, the support for these services will arrive in the Apple Store application, already available for Apple mobile devices.

How Customer Check-ins Will Work

This news comes from Macstories.net, an Apple news and reviews site with the launch exclusive. According to their article, the service went live Monday in Apple's retail stores.

apple_checkins_1.png

In addition to receiving check-in notices from customers, employees can also use the "Concierge" app to check on the lineup of customers waiting to be seen, based on appointment times and what time they checked in. The queue where this activity is managed is called - you'll never guess - yes, the "iQueue."

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Amazon Launches Windowshop, New iPad App for Shopping

windowshop_logo.pngToday Amazon has launched Windowshop, an iPad application the company describes as "a complete rewrite of Amazon.com specifically for the iPad." The app does not appear to update or replace Amazon's previous iPad application called Amazon Mobile.

Instead, Windowshop is a new standalone experience with a completely different, more visual interface than its predecessor.

Look Familiar?

Essentially, Windowshop is a new touch-enabled visual search engine for Amazon.com. Product categories are featured at the top of the page and you use your finger to flip through the screens. Not surprisingly, the first category listed is "Electronics."

If the user interface seems familiar that's because it is - back in 2008, Amazon launched Windowshop.com, a Web-based visual search site organized in much of the same way. The iPad app is apparently a touch-enabled and revamped version of this website, whose URL now points to the iPad application download page on Amazon.com.

Using the App

As with the older site, content within each category is scrollable vertically, while browsing through categories is scrollable horizontally.

At the top of the app is a search box, home button and browse button, which takes you to a full list of categories, so you can narrow down your search.

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2010년 10월 25일 월요일

Logitech Revue with Google TV unboxing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkQugsneVRw&feature=player_embedded

Apple Passes RIM in Global Smartphone Share

Despite Steve Job’s obvious distaste for the company, Research in Motion (RIM) has long remained ahead of Apple in the global smartphone market. Not any longer, according to research firm Strategy Analytics, which reported yesterday that the iPhone shipped more units than did BlackBerry during 2010′s third quarter.

However, it wasn’t really a terrible loss for RIM, as the entire smartphone market grew 78 percent overall. Though Apple did surpass RIM in sales volume (and seems poised to ship even more in the future, since supply constraints provided a choke point in 2010), it still has a long way to go before it approaches Nokia, the reigning king of the smartphone hill.

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Has Apple Given Up on iWeb?

iWeb’s Origins

The design philosophy behind iWeb is summed up best in the Keynote slide pictured below, from Macworld 2006. According to Steve Jobs, software was either too simple for producing web sites that looked good, or too complex for the average consumer. Instead of HTML editing, iWeb used customizable themes and a WYSIWYG interface.

It was easy to use, and things looked good, but cross-browser compatibility proved to be difficult. iWeb’s solution caused immediate problems, most notably the creation of multi-megabyte webpages that substituted .png images for elements like text to ensure iWeb designs looked the same in all browsers. Even then, there were issues with compatibility, and the HTML iWeb generated was pretty ugly.

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Google Apps Now Offers Business Process Automation on Google Sites with Scripts

Google announced today that Google Apps Scripts, a "JavaScript cloud scripting language" for automating tasks in Google products, can now be embedded on any Google Sites page. Google Apps Script has been around for a while, but the ability to create custom pages with the scripts is new.

Google Apps Scripts can be used to automate tasks such as "sending emails, scheduling calendar events, creating and updating site pages using data from other systems, and more."

You can create a script in Google Sites by clicking "More actions" > "Manage site" > "Apps Scripts." Once created scripts can be embedded on any Google Sites page.

Google has several guides for getting started, with the aim of helping non-developers get started automating processes.

We've written before about the popularity of point-and-click app creation in the enterprise. Tools like JackBe Presto enable non-developers to create simple custom apps.

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2010년 10월 22일 금요일

The New MacBook Air Is Underwhelming

Thinner, yes. But better?

I am one of the few, proud MacBook Air (MBA) owners in the world. Every article you’ve seen from me in the past was written on the petite beauty. In one last month, I wrote:

I’m only here to make a case that anyone that hasn’t used one should give it a shot and that Apple needs to throw some marketing dollars behind it so everyone else knows what we MacBook Air owners have known for a long time: It’s the best notebook Apple makes and it also happens to be the smallest.

This is exactly what Apple did yesterday, and yet, I was severely disappointed. It seems as if Apple is finally throwing marketing dollars behind the MBA, and I watched my Twitter stream as thousands of geeks’ heads exploded at how thin it is. But I felt a little weird reading this on my MacBook Air and thinking out loud, “I know. It’s been that way for years.” It’s thinner, yes, but not significantly. That’s the whole story in a nutshell.

 

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Still More Victims Caught in Apple’s Wake

Dead or on Life Support

It’s been a little over a month since the last Apple Media event. The aftershock in the tech industry from that has yet to be fully felt, and there are some additions to the casualties I listed in September.

If Apple and Facebook can work things out regarding Ping, the final nail in MySpace’s coffin may be struck. Some of the new features in iTunes, like the artwork viewer, make certain add-ons like Sophiestication’s CoverSutra a little less appealing. Rogue Amoeba is sitting on the fence waiting to see if it’ll be able to participate in the updates to iOS 4.2 regarding Apple’s new AirPlay. While competition is still healthy among GameCenter’s competing services, iAd is starting to pick up some steam as it continues to innovate in the smartphone advertising space.

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Books and Video Win on the iPad, and Users Are Buying

Although the iPad is still relatively new, early indications are that a majority of users are willing to pay for content on the tablet — whether it’s apps or games — and that books and video are the two most popular forms of media they choose to consume on the iPad, with magazines a close third. Those are the highlights of a Nielsen study on connected devices released today. The survey also found something that will likely pique the interest of advertisers looking to the iPad as a new opportunity: Users said they spent longer with the content they were reading, watching or listening to on the iPad vs. the iPhone (the survey didn’t compare content consumption on either device to offline behavior or content consumed on other devices).

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New MacBook Air Hits the Web Working Sweet Spot

Let’s talk about portability. The iPad is a great small computing device. A 9.7-inch screen is small enough to not take up much space in your bag, but also provides a decent amount of screen real estate so that you won’t find yourself squinting. And it only weighs 1.5 pounds (1.6 if you spring for the 3G-capable model). But, that weight doesn’t factor in a case, stand or keyboard, all of which are pretty much required if you plan to use it to do work on the road.

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How Android Developers Can Implement In-App Purchases Now

Android-Market-300x300.jpgAndroid developers waiting for Google to implement an official method for in-app purchases finally have some alternatives. This week, there was good news from Papaya Mobile, a mobile social platform with 3 million users. The company partnered with Zong, an international mobile payments company to offer in-app virtual goods purchases within its gaming platform.

But Zong isn't the only company operating in this space. Another mobile payment startup, Boku, is offering a similar solution, active now in 60 countries and 198 carriers through its beta program. And PayPal announced in-app billing back in April. If you're a developer waiting on Google to offer in-app purchases, it's time to consider your alternatives.

According to news from GigaOm, Zong allows Papaya Mobile customers to buy virtual goods which are charged to their carrier bill.

Although the Zong Android program is still in beta, its aim is to provide a one-click "buy" button for apps. Instead of having to enter in a credit card number and other billing information, the purchase just shows up on the customer's monthly statement. Interested developers can request access here.

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Netflix Streaming Accounts for 20% of Peak Internet Traffic

It's no surprise that Netflix is preparing to make a move to a streaming-only service. As we reported earlier today, demand for Netflix's streaming service is on the rise.

Netflix's roughly 16 million subscribers can access streaming content from a variety of devices - XBox 360, iPads, laptops (and that's just in my household). And that adds up to a substantial A recent study has found that Netflix makes up more than 20% of downstream Internet traffic during peak times in the U.S. These peak times, during primetime hours,

netflix-streaming.jpgAccording to the study, North America still trails other areas in the world for bandwidth consumption. And in North America, the average time a connection is active is 3 hours, while in Asia, it's closer to 5.5 hours.

As Netflix weighs increasing its streaming-services, it may well be that no longer do we tap our feet impatiently, waiting for the DVD to arrive. After all, we already have to wait almost a month for new releases to arrive in the mail.

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2010년 10월 21일 목요일

Google Won't Resume Its Street View Wi-Fi Collection

google_logo2.jpgGoogle won't be resuming its use of Street View cars to collect information about Wi-Fi networks. So says the fine print of the Canadian Office of Privacy Commissioner's statement today, that as we reported earlier, found that Google had violated Canadians' privacy.

Google's Street View project has raised a number of privacy concerns, most notably in May when the company announced that it had mistakenly included code in its Street View software that collected Wi-Fi payload data. Google halted the Wi-Fi data collection, but it was unclear if this was a permanent decision.

In the report issued today, Canadian privacy commissioner Jennifer Stoddart said that the "collection is discontinued and Google has no plans to resume it." The plans, according to Stoddart, are to rely on users' smartphones to collect the information on the location of Wi-Fi networks. Google uses this to build out its location-based services database, particularly in those areas with limited celltower strength.

The report does add that "although it has no tracking tool to keep records of a customer's locations (and does not intend to create one), Google acknowledges that it does need to examine the potential privacy concerns of this method of collection."

Currently, Google's mobile privacy policy reads that "If you use location-enabled products and services, such as Google Maps for mobile, you may be sending us location information. This information may reveal your actual location, such as GPS data, or it may not, such as when you submit a partial address to look at a map of the area."

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New MacBook Air Is the Future of Notebooks

Beginning his presentation by waxing philosophical on the impact of iOS devices on Apple industrial design, Jobs rhetorically asked what would happen if an iPad and a MacBook Air “hooked up?” The result is the new MacBook Air. Proving the rumormongers right, the new MacBook Air will come in two distinct models, with screen sizes of 13.3 inches and 11.6 inches respectively.

Both models will share the aluminum unibody construction design, and a number of features, including Core 2 Duo CPUs, NVIDIA GeForce 320M GPUs, full-size keyboards, multi-touch trackpads (no button) and a FaceTime (not iSight any longer) camera.

The biggest internal change will be the use of solid-state storage across the lineup, which was a major rumor circulating about the new MacBook Air. The new storage system, which doesn’t appear to be upgradable, will have “instant on” capabilities similar to iOS devices, and be up to twice as fast as standard hard drives. This will also allow for a standby time of 30-freaking-amazing days.

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Back to the Mac: FaceTime on the Mac

Jobs started the announcement of the feature by talking about the number of users who already have a FaceTime enabled device: already 19 million since debut of the iPhone 4, the first with the feature, four months ago.

He then went on to demo the new Mac application. Note that this isn’t built into iChat; it’s a standalone app. Sitting down at the demo Mac, he fired up the program and initiated a FaceTime call to Phil Schiller. During this call, he demonstrated a couple of great features.

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Do iPhone or Android Users Watch More Video? (And Other Video Trends)

Mobile video optimization firm Bytemobile has just released its most recent "Mobile Minute Metrics" report, a look at wireless users' video consumption trends and behavior based on metrics from a cross-section of nearly 2 billion Bytemobile customers in 58 countries around the world.

According to the new report, which focuses on Q3 2010 mobile traffic, mobile operators are seeing "unprecedented" levels of mobile data traffic, an increase heavily impacted by increased demand for video. Some interesting stats were revealed, too - like whether it's Android or iPhone users who watch more video, what sites get the most views and more.

Bytemobile found that, on a per-user average, it's iPhone users generating the most video traffic. 42% of total data traffic generated by the iPhone is video, while only 32% on Android is video.

bytemobile_chart1_android_iphone.png

The most popular and most watched videos are still those coming from user-generated content sites like YouTube and Google Video, which account for 48% of total network video traffic. The second-largest category of video is adult content, accounting for 30% of total traffic. Combined, these two categories - user-gen and adult - make up nearly 80% of total video traffic.

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Read Their Lips: Steve Jobs, and Measuring CEO Truthiness

jobs_102010.jpgBefore today's Apple press event and all its announcements, Apple CEO Steve Jobs took the opportunity at Apple's earnings call yesterday to quell rumors that a 7" iPad was on the way. What Jobs said was true: so why are some people still calling Jobs a liar?

Perhaps it's the usual mistrust people assign to corporate executives. Yet Jobs is no stranger to controversy around saying one thing - and then announcing another. As it turns out, two Stanford researchers have recently been studying the truthiness of CEOs and devised a formula for red-flagging deceptive CEO statements. Jobs seems to get a mixed score.

We can evaluate online debate about what Jobs says and what he means, and then what Apple does, until we're weary. Lucky for us, someone else has done this work on a much wider scale. Stanford University researchers Anastasia Zakolyukina and David Larcker set out to find a way to tell when CEO's are lying, and studied thousands of earnings calls for definitive patterns.

In How Can You Tell When A CEO Is Lying? the researchers present us with a few indicators:

  • Lying executives tend to overuse words like "we" and "our team" when they talk about their company and avoid saying "I"
  • Overuse of words that express positive emotion ('fantastic,' 'superb,' 'outstanding,' 'excellent')
  • When the CEO does not answer the question directly; refers to others
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2010년 10월 20일 수요일

Beam me up autonomous car

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kyk1VLTSH_U&feature=player_embedded#!

Apple TV: 250,000 Sold In Six Weeks

Apple didn’t announce the number of Apple TVs sold as part of its earnings release, but Steve Jobs was on the company’s investor call today and gave the first official numbers for how many of the brand new set-top box have seen purchased. So far, the sales are pretty good: Jobs reported that the company has sold more than 250,000 Apple TVs since the company first made the product available in early September.

Apple first announced the new Apple TV broadband set-top box on September 1, pricing it at $99 and announcing a new business model for streaming rentals of TV episodes and movie files. With the new streaming model, Apple rents TV episodes from Fox and ABC for 99 cents, compared to the $1.99 price for standard definition episode downloads and HD downloads for $2.99.

To put that into perspective: Roku reported at the beginning of this year that it had sold 500,000 of its set-top devices after about a year-and-a-half on the market, and hopes to have sold more than a million of its box by the end of the year. So Apple is tracking well ahead of other, similar devices already in the market.

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HP Reveals webOS 2.0, Arriving Friday on Palm Pre 2

PRE_2.pngHP today has officially introduced webOS 2.0, the biggest update to what was formerly Palm's mobile operating system, one of the assets gained by HP back in April when it acquired Palm, Inc for $1.2 billion. Now called HP webOS, the updated operating system will make its debut this Friday on the new Palm Pre 2 smartphone. The phone will be available first in France and then, in later months, in the U.S. and Canada on Verizon's network.

What's New, Pre 2?

In September, HP pushed a beta of the webOS SDK (software development kit) to developers, allowing them to experiment with all the new features of the updated operating system. These features included a multi-tasking user interface improvement called "stacks" (for stacking open screens like a deck of cards), the introduction of "Just Type" quick actions for common tasks like Facebook status updates, adding items to a list or starting an email, an improved Universal Search feature which extends phone-based searches to the Web, a screensaver-like "Exhibition" mode customizable through apps and various under-the-hood improvements including HTML5 support, PDK plugins and more.

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Open Thread: What Joyous Treasures Will Apple Announce Tomorrow?

apple_logo_jan09.pngWhen I was a kid, Christmas Eve was the most excruciating night of the year. I couldn't sleep and I couldn't think about anything else besides what would be waiting for me under a tree the next morning (it was usually something in the Star Wars, G.I. Joe or Transformers universe). Now, at the youthful age of 35, my Peter Pan complex is rarely as strong as when Apple sets a date to announce a new product. Bang 'a Rang!

Tomorrow, Apple is at it again. Their event, titled "Back to the Mac," has been rumored to cover a number of tantalizing things. While the tech press is notorious for not even coming close to predicting Apple's product announcements correctly, that doesn't stop us from trying!

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Pay Any Bill From Your iPhone, Android or Blackberry

There's something about paying bills - the checkbook, the stamps, the envelopes, the taste of the adhesive - that just rubs me the wrong way. It isn't even the money making a one-way march out of my account, that's just inevitable. If I never had to deal with a paper bill again, my life would be happier.

My world may have just gotten a little rosier, as one company has just released a tool to make paying those paper bills possible by iPhone, Android and Blackberry.

Mitek Mobile has developed an app that lets you pay your bills by simply taking a picture of the bill you want to pay and verifying your payment information.

According to the demo video, the app scans the bill for basic information, such as address, company name and payment amount. It then allows you to verify the information before completing the transaction through your bank account.

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2010년 10월 19일 화요일

Google Dominates Mobile Searches on the iPhone

Google holds both the number 1 and number 2 slots in a ranking of search engines on the iPhone, accounting for an estimated 97 percent of all searches, according to figures from ad network Chitika. The firm looked at search volume on the iPhone and found that Google has search pretty much locked up, with 49.08 percent of searches coming through the Safari tool bar, 42.24 percent coming from its home page and other minor sources and 8.68 percent from its dedicated Google app. If you count the app and the regular search as two sources, Google has both of the top two search engines on the iPhone.

The numbers aren’t completely accurate with respect to Bing, which is hard to track because it doesn’t offer referral URLs. Chitika estimates that Bing searches through its app, its home page and through its access to the Safari tool bar represent anywhere from 1-4 percent of searches on the iPhone.

This suggests that Yahoo and Microsoft are having a tough time dislodging Google from its top spot or even duplicating their current success in desktop searches on mobile. With mobile searches only expected to grow, it supports Google’s move to launch Google Instant on phones soon, giving the company yet another edge in facilitating mobile searches. It also points out how valuable the toolbar search engine is. Greg Sterling at Search Engine Land said less than 20 percent of searches happen through a PC tool bar.

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Apple Developing iAds for Video

Apple will be adding a video angle to its advertising offerings in the coming months, with a new product that will deliver in-stream ads to videos shown on the iPhone, iPad and (potentially) the Apple TV, according to multiple sources. The new product would not just expand Apple’s advertising capabilities and boost revenue, but could help convince more content owners to make their videos available on its iOS devices.

Many publishers have been slow to bring their videos to the iPhone and iPad, due in part to the lack of mature tools available for monetizing content on those devices. Because iOS devices don’t support Adobe Flash, publishers need to do additional work to make their current ad-serving systems work with the HTML5 video delivery required for the iPhone and iPad. That’s caused many publishers to think twice before delivering video to those devices. (For Adobe’s view on the HTML5-Flash battle, come see Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch at NewTeeVee Live on November 10, 2010 in San Francisco.)

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잡스 애플 CEO, "갤럭시탭 美도착 즉시 사망"


애플 최고경영자(CEO) 스티브 잡스가 18일(현지시간) 가진 실적 발표 행사에서 "삼성 7인치 갤럭시탭이 미국 출시와 함께 사망할 것"이라고 독설을 내쏟았다.

스티브 잡스 CEO는 미국 소비자들이 7인치의 작은 화면에 크게 실망을 하게 될 것이라며 갤럭시탭의 화면 크기를 문제삼았다. 그는 이런 문제 때문에 아이패드 화면을 9.7인치로 결정한 것이라고 덧붙였다.

7인치 태블릿PC는 스마트폰 시장과 결국 충돌할 수 밖에 없고, 화면이 작아 PC용으로 적합하지 않다는 것. 그는 차기 PC 시장으로 넘보고 있는 법인용 시장을 공략하기 위해서도 7인치는 적합하지 않다고 판단을 내린 것이다. 적어도 10인치 정도는 돼야 기업용 태블릿 PC로 공급할 수 있다는 설명이다.

일부 언론은 애플이 내년에 출시할 차세대 아이패드 제품을 7인치와 기존 9.7인치 모델을 함께 개발했으나 기업시장 공략과 고객 혼란(아이폰 시장과 충돌) 방지를 위해 7인치 아이패드 출시를 포기했다고 전했다.

애플은 이번 4분기에 419만대의 아이패드를 판매했다. 하지만 이는 당초 월가의 전망치인 450만대에 크게 못미치는 수치다. 부품 조달 문제로 제품 물량이 제때 공급되지 못했다고 하지만 예상을 밑도는 수치로 인해 이날 애플 주가는 6%나 하락했다.
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BlackBerry Style 9670 - Coming soon

Technology: CDMA
Announced Carrier: Sprint
Announced Release Date: The Steel Grey model will be available 10/31/10 while the Royal Purple will be out sometime in November.

The BlackBerry Style clamshell with full QWERTY device offers a 5MP camera with video capture, built-in GPS and WiFi, 512 MB Flash, BlackBerry 6, and BlackBerry App World pre-loaded.  We will update complete specs when they become available.  

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iPad won't be coming in a 7-inch model

Steve Jobs iPad

Ever since Apple released their 9.7-inch iPad, rumors have been flying about a possible 7-inch model to accompany its bigger brother and compete against the wave of 7-inch Android tablets.  However, today Apple CEO Steve Jobs shot down any possibility of an iPad Nano ever hitting the market.  Speaking during the company's earnings call, Jobs said that the 7-inch size "is useless unless you include sandpaper so users can sand their fingers down to a quarter of their size."  His reasoning behind that statement?  The software just isn't a good fit for the smaller screen, and people don't want a small tablet when they've already got a smartphone that can fit in their pocket.

It's interesting that Apple doesn't plan to release a 7-inch device to help compete against the impending wave of Android tablets like the Samsung Galaxy Tab.  At the same time, though, it's not totally surprising.  Apple has always released the iPhone and iPod Touch with the exact same screen size, so why would that change with the iPad?

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Apple Conference Call: Steve Jobs Goes Wild

Jobs began the Apple earnings conference call today by going on a tear against two of his biggest competitors, Google and RIM. Apple “handily beat RIM,” with 14.1 million iPhones sold last quarter, versus 12.1 million BlackBerry devices, and Jobs doesn’t “see them catching up.” According to Jobs, RIM must move from its “comfort zone” of the enterprise, and woo both the average consumer and developers, and it will be a “challenge.”

Regarding Google, Jobs once again challenged the search giant on Android sales data. Not only did he question the reliability of Google’s claim of activating 200,000 Android devices a day, but he also countered that in the last 30 days Apple was selling an average of 275,000 iOS devices, with a peak of 300,000.

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Google Now Gives You More Control Over Your Location Settings

google_place_marker.jpgGoogle's algorithms take your current location into account when choosing which results to display for searches where your location is relevant. Until now, though, it was rather hard to know where exactly Google thought you were and sometimes Google just doesn't get it right. Starting today, Google will make it easier to see where it thinks you are and to change your location settings manually.

A new setting will now appear in the sidebar when you perform local searches that shows where Google thinks you are and allows you to manually enter a new location. Google is currently rolling this feature out across 40 languages and should be available to all users soon. While this feature is useful when Google can't automatically place you in the right location, it should also be helpful if you are regularly searching for hotels, restaurants and sights while you are preparing for a trip, for example.

google_local_settings.png

Until now, this setting was hidden behind a number of rather cryptic steps ("View customizations," "Change location"). Now, as Google's Mack Lu notes, Google has become so much better at displaying locally relevant information that "it felt like the right time to make this setting easier to find."

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Apple Reports Q4 Earnings, and Guess What, It is Doing Really, Really Well

ipad_jobs_october10.jpgApple announced its earnings and revenue for the fourth quarter of its fiscal year today, and in news that won't surprise those who either monitor the stock market or who own an iPod, iPhone, iPad, and Macbook (um, that would be me) revealed that the company's financial standing is strong - record-breaking strong, that is.

Apple posted a record-setting revenue of $20.34 billion and quarterly profit of $4.31 billion in the fourth quarter. In comparison, Apple posted revenue of $12.21 for the third quarter of 2010.

As we recently reported, the iPad is now the consumer electronic device with the fastest adoption rate ever, but iPad sales were only one part of the sales figures Apple touted today. Most notably the iPhone sales this quarter were up 91% year-over-year. Here's the breakdown for the sales of the major Apple devices this quarter: 3.89 million Macs, 14.1 million iPhones, 9.05 million iPods, and 4.19 million iPads.

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2010년 10월 18일 월요일

Is EMC the Next Step in Oracle’s Journey to $100B?

PathwayOracle bought Sun Microsystems, hired former HP CEO Mark Hurd and declared that as “Oracle continues to grow, we need people experienced in operating a $100 billion business,” and ever since, the technology world has waited to see what other acquisitions Larry Ellison might have up his sleeve. This past week, we saw strong reactions to the rumor that Oracle might make a bid to buy EMC, due to the acquisition’s outlandish nature and monetary mismatch. Oracle will need to more than triple its revenue to reach that $100 billion target, so anything is possible.

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HomeArchivesFeaturesTagsBest of RWWFeatured: ReadWriteCloud Why Buy the Cow? Open Wi-Fi Networks Slow Broadband Adoption

We've all seen it and we've all done it - you're at a friends house with your laptop, and they don't have wireless, so you take a look and sign on to the nearest unsecured wireless network. No biggie, but certainly you wouldn't rely on this open network for all your Internet needs, right?

A report by analyst firm Mintel released this week claims that "Wi-Fi pirating" could be a main reason for the slow growth of broadband adoption over recent years.

According to Mintel, "home Internet services saw revenues increase by only 3% over the past five years", but surely Internet use itself has been on the rise. The firm found that 72% say that they have Internet access at home,  but only 56% report subscribing to a service at home. Where does the discrepancy come from?

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Weekly Poll: Does Android Have a "Dude" Problem?

According to a recent survey of 78,835 mobile phone customers in the U.K., less than 5% of women would select an Android device as their next smartphone. The problem, explains Belinda Parmar, Founder of marketing agency Lady Geek which conducted the survey with YouGov Sixth Sense, is that "Android provides a perfect example of how not to market a platform to women." Few women know or care about what Android is or how it can benefit their lives, she explains.

Parmar plans to detail the survey's findings in a presentation at Droidcon, a London-based Android conference occurring later this month.

Boys Love Droids

According to the survey, less than 5% of women 25-39 would choose Android, while 11.9% of men in the same age range would.

Of course, a survey from a women-centric marketing agency that talks of Android's lack of feminine appeal is a bit suspect, as many company-led surveys today are. But is it wrong?

Anecdotally, I can affirm that my (non-geek) girlfriends are buying iPhones, or feature phones if money is a concern, opting for the iPod Touch as their portal to the world of apps and pocket computing. However, my geek friends, both male and female, are experimenting with both Androids and iPhones and other mobile platforms, too.

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