Posts Tagged ‘from’

Posted by admin at 3 September 2010

Category: Apple

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When Apple released the third-generation iPod shuffle in 2009, I saw it as a perfect example of the design hubris that many Apple detractors point to. From a usability perspective, there really wasn’t anything wrong with the second-generation iPod shuffle — it had a minimal number of buttons, true, but their functions were fairly obvious. In a textbook example of the emphasis of form over function, Apple’s third-generation iPod shuffle removed all of the controls from the device itself and moved them to the headphones’ inline remote. Not only was the remote far more complex to use than the old shuffle’s simple buttons, it also meant that, if you wanted to use third-party headphones, you’d either have to give up all control over the iPod or shell out more money for an inline remote adapter. The third-gen iPod shuffle got savaged in reviews, and it deserved it.

Apple’s fourth-generation iPod shuffle mercifully brought the buttons back. Apple even lists “buttons” as a feature on its page for the iPod shuffle. In a rare departure from typical Apple design, the fourth-generation iPod shuffle is much larger than the third-gen; it’s not that Apple can’t make a music player the size of your thumbnail, but it seems like Apple realized that it shouldn’t. So, the return of buttons to the iPod shuffle proves that Apple doesn’t always emphasize form over function. Right?

Unfortunately, although the iPod shuffle proves that Apple is perfectly capable of learning from its design missteps, the new iPod nano and iPod touch both feature design compromises that are almost as boneheaded as the buttonless third-gen iPod shuffle. Click “Read More” to see the way these new iPods, nice as they are in some respects, are in other ways an example of a “one step forward, two steps back” design.

TUAWHow Apple’s newest iPods prove (and disprove) that it learns from design mistakes originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 03 Sep 2010 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 2 September 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Facebook Connect is missing from Apple’s new social network, iTunes Ping, after it was apparently working on Wednesday night. There seem to be mixed messages coming from Apple, according to interviews that All Things D’s Kara Swisher conducted with Apple honcho Steve Jobs and VP Phil Schiller.

Jobs said Facebook Connect wasn’t in Ping, and gave a dismissive “I guess we could do that.” Meanwhile, Schiller said you can absolutely find your friends on Ping using Facebook Connect. Both are wrong, though: Apple apparently DID do that, and now the feature is gone.

However, there are clues that Facebook Connect was meant to be in iTunes. If you’re following no one, you’ll see a message on your People page that says, “You are not following anyone. Connect with Facebook, search for people, invite friends, or follow recommended people to get started.” Facebook Connect is even mentioned in the Welcome to Ping email you get when you first sign up.

At this point, it’s a mystery whether Facebook Connect will be back, but I hope it will. Although Jobs says Facebook demanded “onerous terms” from Apple, using Facebook Connect is way faster than manually adding all your friends to Ping. Hey Steve, can we get a Twitter or Gmail connect, at least?

[via Engadget]

Facebook Connect pulled from Apple’s iTunes Ping originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 02 Sep 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 27 August 2010

Category: Apple

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Usually, I’m not so hot on the vague teasers, especially for Mac software. If you want me to be interested in your movie or your game or your software, just let me know what it does and how, and I’ll decide if I want it or not. But what the heck, it’s the freakin’ weekend, so here’s a teaser short for a new RealMac app coming soon called Courier — not to be confused with the Microsoft tablet. Frederico at MacStories says it might be one of the best apps of the year, and why not — we’ll take his word for it (at least until we can try it out ourselves).

Plus, the teaser has a nice cover of Stand and Deliver, and I can’t really argue with that. From the look of it, the app will allow you to collect and send whatever you want around the world, from music and movies to pictures, and … toy horses?

We’ll keep an eye out for Courier when it releases sometime next week.

TUAWNew Courier Mac app from RealMac teased originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 27 Aug 2010 21:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 27 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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“We stabbed it,” Valve project manager Erik Johnson tells PC Gamer of the studio’s apparent “flying fairy game,” as Gabe Newell puts it. The conversation with Valve, which includes marketing director Doug Lombardi, provides revealing insight into the creative process of one of the most respected developers in the industry.

Described as an “action fantasy sort of role playing game” featuring fairies, the project went as far as a working prototype (with spells cast by mouse gesturing) and “it was so bad,” says Newell. Still, it was “a useful failure,” adds the Valve co-founder, “because It was so clearly dumb that it made us say, ‘Okay, what are we actually good at that we can do instead?’” Cue the Zombie Apocalypse!

[Image credit: PC Gamer]

JoystiqLeft 4 Dead born from Valve’s killed ‘flying fairy’ game originally appeared on Joystiq on Fri, 27 Aug 2010 16:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 27 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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We can’t say we had too much hope that the futuristic-looking Ciclotte exercise bike concept we saw last year would ever turn into an actual product, but it looks like this is one concept that’s defied the odds. Of course, it’ll set you back more than ten grand, but you will soon be able to order the unicycle-style bike online, and in your choice of three different colors no less (full carbon, silver or purple). Apart from its striking design, the bike also boasts an epicycloid crank system and a magnetized main wheel to generate resistance, a steel and carbon frame, an adjustable seat and handlebars, and a few other modern amenities like a touchscreen display to adjust the settings. Hit up the gallery below for a closer look.

Ciclotte exercise bike goes from concept to product originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Aug 2010 12:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 27 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Now we don’t have much more to go on here than some analyst chatter and a lengthy article from TechCrunch, but if you believe what you read, a major player has just dropped Windows Phone 7 devices from its roadmap. And that player is Dell. According to Jonathan Goldberg, an telecom analyst at Deutsche Bank, the only remaining partners currently working on Windows Phone 7 handsets are HTC, Samsung, and LG. If this is true (and that’s a big if), that means that the seriously awesome looking Dell Lightning that we spied in leaks recently will never see the light of day — as a WP7 device, at least.

We already knew that HP was out of the game (instead focusing on webOS phones), but the casual suggestion that Dell has made for the door here is somewhat suspect. The company itself hasn’t made any statements (we’ve reached out but have yet to hear back), and while Dell has certainly concentrated a lot of effort on Android devices recently, its partnership with Microsoft is long-standing (despite dabbling in the world of open source). If the story turns out to be true, it could spell mixed (if not outright bad) tidings for the Windows Phone 7 launch, which Goldberg alleges may cost Microsoft upwards of half a billion dollars — no small fee. Losing two of the biggest computer-makers in the world can’t feel very good when you’re trying to fight your way back to relevancy, but at least on the bright side, neither HP nor Dell have a track record of making anything other than heroically mediocre handsets. Take this all with a grain of salt right now, however, as the author of the TechCrunch article provides no source for the statements from Goldberg, and… well, he’s an analyst, and they’re prone to making up all kinds of crazy things. We’re investigating, and will let you know as soon as we have more info.

Dell dropping Windows Phone 7 devices from its roadmap? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Aug 2010 10:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 26 August 2010

Category: Apple

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Kaplan Publishing is offering quite a few free eBooks through the iTunes store, but you can only access them on an iPhone, iPad or iPod touch. It’s a great deal if you’re heading back to school or just want to stock up on some quality reference material.

The books are in the categories of college prep, graduate studies, law, medicine, nursing and education. The book are free from now until August 30.

Kaplan first became well known to students preparing for SAT and other exams such as the GRE, GMAT, LSAT and many others. The company then expanded into publishing on many education topics.

TUAWA barrel of free books from Kaplan makes a great back-to-school haul originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 25 Aug 2010 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 24 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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A recent Mozilla Test Pilot study has shone light on an uncomfortable truth: people are using their lunch breaks to masturbate.

Entitled “Understanding Private Browsing,” the findings are remarkably clear; there are four very well-defined peaks in our Private Browsing habits, and most of our Private Browsing “sessions” are around 10 minutes long. Those four peaks are lunch break, after work/school, after dinner, and late at night.

But how did I get to the rather sticky conclusion of people masturbating in their lunch hour? Well, why else would people use Private Browsing Mode for just 10 minutes? Surely checking Facebook, Twitter, and email takes longer than 10 minutes. I mean, I want to believe that people only spend 10 minutes on their computer during lunch, but really, let’s face it, … that can’t be the case.

The other factor that hasn’t been addressed by Mozilla (or Mashable in their diagnosis), is that we must consider who opted into this Test Pilot study. I would guess that most Test Pilot users are bearded geeky types, academics, and students. I don’t think there will be many Test Pilot users that work in secluded office cubicles. Mind you, university lecturers usually have their own offices, right …? Ew…

Having said that, the idea of millions of Firefox users shutting their office doors at lunch break for a quick 10-minute stress reliever is completely disgusting. If anyone has another possible hypothesis about what people are doing with that 10 minute window, please let me know.

Finally, a reputable study from Mozilla highlights our Firefox porn-surfing habits originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 24 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Augmented reality, at the moment, is a bit kitsch. It’s a technology that’s been threatening to emerge for years but, like “virtual reality,” it’s always been held back by technological constraints. Until the last year or two, most AR and VR implementations involved you wheeling around a laptop (or strapping it to your back!) — and VR still requires a silly pair of glasses. That’s all about to change, however, with the gigahertz-in-our-pocket smartphones.

In the next few years, almost everyone in the Western world will have a handheld device that’s capable of displaying rich 3D graphics. GPS will pinpoint your location and elevation in real-time, and 3G and 4G (5, 6, 7 …) networks will make both topological data and the Internet’s wealth of contextual data available at any time and any place. But enough talking, let me show you what I’m talking about: check out the Marmota project. It hides behind such subtitles as “visual environment monitoring” and “semantic image labelling,” but in essence, it’s the next step in augmented reality.

The best thing would be for you to read through the Marmota website and check out the pictures, but I’ll give you an example of what Marmota will let you do. Right now, you can pull down Flickr photos from a given geolocation — that’s pretty cool, … but that’s also about it for the current state of augmented reality. With Marmota, you point your camera at a landscape (or cityscape!), and the server sends you topological and contextual information for the scene you’re looking at. So, if you hold your smartphone up in front of a mountain, the mountain’s name and elevation are shown on the screen (here’s a larger version of the image above) — the software can also show you roads, landmarks, and so on. Using topological information, the 2D image on your phone can even be converted into a 3D image (watch the video, it’s very cool), and presumably you can then see over a range of mountains and down into the valley beyond!

The coolest thing is, this technology is actually ready to go. The project has used Android phones as its test bed, and the app should be available in the “immediate future.” I’ll keep you updated and bring you a proper review as soon as possible.

[via ReadWriteWeb]

The Marmota project shows off what we can expect from augmented reality in the next few years originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 23 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Alright, so this isn’t quite like seeing Duke Nukem Forever popping up on Walmart shelves, but the Cowon X7 has been a long time in the making. Rumored since 2007, the Korean company’s portable media player has now finally sauntered up to America’s Communications Commission to dot some Is and cross some Ts. We’re let into the knowledge that it’ll come with a Bluetooth radio and a HDD of some kind, which GenerationMP3 speculates will be a 1.8-inch unit. Really now, a spinny thing in our PMP feels better suited to good old ‘07, but then if Cowon can combine some capacious storage with a large screen, it could still have a winner on its hands. Particularly if the rumblings of Android as the OS turn out to be true.

Cowon X7 materializes from the ether into a real life FCC applicant originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Aug 2010 07:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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