Posts Tagged ‘More’

Posted by admin at 3 September 2010

Category: Apple

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Analyst Katy Huberty from Morgan Stanley tells All Things D that she believes Apple is ramping up production on the iPad, aiming to build as many as three million a month by the end of this year. That would mean that the company could make 36 million iPads next year, which brings the total close to (but not quite) the whopping 40 million units predicted by her supply chain analysis. Sales estimates for next year started out around 10 million iPads, but have since risen to as high as 42 million units, which would be quite a year for a product that didn’t exist before this past April.

Currently, says Huberty, Apple is producing about two million iPads a month, and that’s brought shipping times on the website down, and helped availability across the board. But the manufacturing process needs to be refined even further, and of course if, as expected earlier next year, the device sees a revision, that may delay things even further. There seems to be one thing most analysts agree on, however: Apple is going to sell a whole lot of iPads in 2011.

TUAWAnalyst: Apple producing more iPads originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 03 Sep 2010 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 2 September 2010

Category: Apple

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If you have a secret love affair with shoulder padded t-shirts (that you wear around the house when no one’s looking), and you instinctively roll up your sleeves when you put on your favourite blazer jacket (and don’t get why people look at you funny), then here’s an app for you.

Back in June Akai Professional released SynthStation for the iPhone / iPod touch, and we got excited. Very excited. Why? Because we love synths, especially when they are the old school type (cue Terminator soundtrack). And it just so happens to be that Akai has got a rather large name for itself when it comes to synths, especially the old school type. So we decided to take a closer look. You know, any opportunity to lay down some ominous beats over a sea of warm pulsating analog synth.

SynthStation is an all-in-one mobile music creation setup. It comprises of three virtual analog synths sonically tailored for melodies, chords and bass lines respectively. To go with your texture, there’s a comprehensive and customizable drum kit, too. Add some awesome sounding synth effects, a sequencer, on the fly input and tweaking, a mixer to pull it all together and you’ve got yourself a package that Thom Yorke may even appreciate for his next solo project.

TUAWCount The Beats: Akai brings the analog synth to your iPhone, and more originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 02 Sep 2010 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 1 September 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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yoxview

YoxView is one of my favorite lightbox implementations. I’ve used it in the past to show you how to add an awesome Picasa or Flickr slideshow to your website. YoxView’s development has progressed by leaps and bounds since then, and version 2.0 brings some interesting improvements to the table, including:

  • Skinning support: I think this one’s pretty unique. There’s not much chrome to skin on a lightbox, but still, it’s nice to be able to brand the lightbox and package it nicely for future use (or for use by other developers).
  • Inline Flash content: You just need to specify an FLV/F4V/SWF file in the link, and YoxView will display it. You can set width, height, and Flash variables.
  • Inline content: You can now display a ton of other inline content (for example, PDFs). I don’t remember seeing a lightbox that can display a PDF file – that’s a neat one, for sure.

There have been lots of other changes, and as per usual with new software releases, a whole bunch of bugs have been squashed.

And of course, YoxView’s core strength remains; it can very easily pull images from Picasa, Flicker, and other online sources and display them right in your site. So, if you ever think of adding a video/image/document gallery to your site, YoxView is one worthy option to check out.

YoxView JavaScript lightbox 2.0 is now out! Skinning, Flash video, and more originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 31 Aug 2010 11:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 30 August 2010

Category: Apple

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On Friday, we had a short piece about some half-off deals on Bodega, the “app store” for OS X. One of the applications that was receiving the discount deal was a popular desktop program from Amuse, Inc. called My Living Desktop (US$34.95).

If you’ve never seen My Living Desktop in action, it’s pretty amazing. Right now, I have a beautiful sunset scene taken at a swimming pool over looking the ocean filling my view on the 27″ iMac screen. The clouds are moving, there’s the constant sound of running water in the pool and the far-off crashing of the waves, and occasionally you’ll hear a seagull. This, and the other scenes that are included with My Living Desktop, are very relaxing and visually stunning.

The app, which has been available for Macs since 2005, replaces your static desktop with videos. Sure, that’s something that Windows Vista and 7 can do out of the box, but for Macs it takes this one little piece of software. My Living Desktop doesn’t use many of the resources of your computer, and you can adjust how often the scenes change, turn off the sound if it’s distracting, and even add your own video scenes. My favorite feature is the “Automatic Serenity Break,”, which reminds you to take a break and smell the virtual flowers every so often.

As if the calming powers of My Living Desktop weren’t enough, the developer has now added a Scene Store. It’s the location to view and purchase additional video scenes for the desktop. The Scene Store features scenes ranging from single scenes to ScenePaks with many related sequences, with prices ranging from $2.95 up to $9.95.

Mac owners who are tired of the static scenes on their desktops now have an ever-growing choice of relaxing video clips to keep their Macs looking good.

TUAWMy Living Desktop’s scene store brings more life to your Mac originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 30 Aug 2010 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 28 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Google had originally pegged December 2010 for the first release of Chrome OS, but it’s been looking like a fall release is now a safe bet. It’s certainly netbook-ready at this point, though some missing features (like an on-screen keyboard) may mean that tablet devices arrive slightly later.

Developers keep plugging ahead, however, and continue to work on tablet-friendly features. Two code revisions have landed in the past couple days which will definitely make Chrome more at home on tablets. The first is device orientation support (think auto-rotating content on your Chrome OS tablet and accelerometer-enabled games) and the other is speech input (hello, voice commands!).

Both features have been part of the Chromium code for a while now, but they’re now enabled by default and it’s typically a very short amount of time between a new Chromium feature being defaulted and its arrival in the official Google Chrome builds. It’s also worth noting that voice input support is only on by default for Chromium’s Windows users — Mac and Linux users would need to add the –enable-speech-input switch to their shortcut for the time being.

Developer Jeremy Selier has posted a simple-yet-cool demo video of device orientation using his Macbook Pro — check it out after the break!




Two more tablet-friendly features on their way to Google Chrome originally appeared on Download Squad on Sat, 28 Aug 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 28 August 2010

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I’ve asked about this before, and I’ll pose the question one more time: if you’re not going to put Chrome themes where the other Chrome themes go, shouldn’t you at least create a category, Google?

Google has introduced half a dozen new official Chrome themes, but you won’t find them if you click the get themes link on your Personal Stuff menu. No, like the scores of user-created themes out there these new themes from Google have been dropped into the Extensions Gallery.

I’m sure the plan is to list everything in the Gallery at some point (possibly once it’s re-branded as the Web Store?), but it really shouldn’t be hard to give themes their own section on the existing Gallery. Or, you know, post them on the page Chrome takes you to when you click get themes.

The new themes are called Modern, Adaptive, Vibrant, Inventive, Fresh, and Orkut_Hudson. They’re artist-created, and generally not for those of you who like Chrome’s interface to be as unobtrusive as possible — some are downright loud.

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder of course — tell us what you think of the new themes in the comments.

Google adds more official themes for Chrome — to the Extensions Gallery? originally appeared on Download Squad on Sat, 28 Aug 2010 08:30:00 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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Here we were, thinking — foolishly, might we add — that this holiday season might not be packed to the gills with games we’re way excited for. And then Ubisoft dropped this walkthrough of Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood from Gamescom, reminding us that there’s one more game to be crazy excited about.

Did someone say “war horse?” Yep, the narrator of the walkthrough certainly did, and he’s talking about that brutal looking dark horse seen around one and a half minutes in. In addition to all the other new stuff Ezio can do in Brotherhood, he’s able to hop from his horse to others — including the war horse, one of several new horse types. If that doesn’t get your pulse going, you may have already been assassinated. Head past the break for the entire video.

Continue reading Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood gameplay walkthrough readies us for more assassinating

JoystiqAssassin’s Creed: Brotherhood gameplay walkthrough readies us for more assassinating originally appeared on Joystiq on Fri, 27 Aug 2010 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 26 August 2010

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Security firm F-Secure has shared some interesting information regarding spam. It’s no secret that Facebook has become a popular platform for spammers and poisoned links (URLs that lead to malware). What you might not realize is how successful spammers are on Facebook.

F-Secure reports click rates as high as 40%. That’s insane. Email spam isn’t even in the same solar system percentage-wise. There have been several highly-publicized Facebook incidents, from the rogue antivirus scare to fake like buttons. These problems aren’t unique to Facebook, of course — but it’s more effective because links and likes appear on a trusted friend’s profile page.

I didn’t really need to read F-Secure’s report to know this was the case — I’ve already heard a familiar tale of woe from dozens of end users:

“My computer was running fine yesterday, and then I got this weird message on Facebook…”

“… And you clicked something you shouldn’t have?”

“I ended up on some page and then Windows told me I had 834 infections on my computer.”

“…”

My guess: people just haven’t come to terms with the fact that Facebook is an Internet petri dish full of rapidly-multiplying spam bacteria. Email? Yeah, they’re well aware of the inherent dangers in their trusty old inbox. They’ve been dealing with Viagra mails and Nigerian princes for years.

Facebook? Not so much. The general public is still laboring under the impression that Facebook is a place for them to socialize with their friends, play games, and like stuff.

Eventually people will figure it out. As for those of you who (like me) earn a living cleaning up after careless clickers? We’ve probably still got several years of reformat and malware removal income on the way.

Facebook spam infinitely more effective than email spam originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 26 Aug 2010 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 26 August 2010

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idrivesync

I’m an avid Dropbox fan. I’ve been using it for a long time now, and it’s one of a handful of applications that I think of as “mission critical” on my system.

But there are a couple of things that have always irked me about Dropbox. First and foremost, there are the rates. It’s US$9.99/month for 50GB. Really? With online backup solutions such as Backblaze and Mozy offering unlimited storage for just $5/month, Dropbox’s price tag seems quite steep.

True, it’s not a backup solution, but space is space. I understand that Dropbox may experience more traffic than a normal backup provider (which is usually upload only), but I really don’t think it justifies twice the price.

That’s one thing. The other thing is more subjective: Dropbox is very simple. In most scenarios, that’s a very positive thing. In fact, I’m sure that, had it been more complex, less people would be using it. It’s elegant, simple, and slick. But when someone uploads a 500MB video file onto a shared folder, while your boss is putting a 70KB DOC file onto another shared folder, and then they wonder why you aren’t getting it, Dropbox’s simplicity gets in the way of productivity.

Enter IDriveSync. This is pretty much the antithesis of Dropbox. It’s only for PC (as compared to Dropbox’s multitude of supported platforms). It doesn’t have an API, and it doesn’t have 10 percent of Dropbox’s sex appeal.

But it does offer fine-grained control and status information, and it lets you easily (if not elegantly) sync files that are outside of its folder. And best of all, $4.95/month will get you unlimited sync space. That’s just the way it should be.

I took IDriveSync for an extensive spin, and I have started using it alongside Dropbox for some of the heavier lifting (video files, etc.). To see the tour, keep on reading after the fold.

First of all, let’s talk about the status window. If a file is syncing, you can see exactly what the file’s name is, if it’s uploading or downloading, what the transfer rate is, and the time estimation (which you get on Dropbox, too). The “Switch to IDriveSync Explorer” button kind of looks like an in-program banner, but it’s not; it’s a button that opens up Windows Explorer within your IDriveSync folder (C:\IDriveSync by default – a bit of an odd location).

Moving on, we see the built-in Bandwidth Upload Test. You also get a Download Test. That’s a nice touch. I think they work directly against IDriveSync’s own servers, so you get a good estimation of how fast or slow program operation would actually be (as opposed to using a third-party bandwidth test with another server).

This is the main program window. They call it “Classic” for some reason. Perhaps that’s because it’s based on IDrive’s existing PC backup solution. It’s a simple, technical-looking interface, where you can see all of your files and their status.

Here’s a view of the file list itself (while a file is uploading). You can see exactly what file is uploading, its current progress, and the queue. I’m not sure if you can modify the queue, though (i.e., push things up or down).

Again, just like Dropbox, you get versioning support. IDriveSync keeps 30 versions of each file, and you can easily restore them from within the program (unlike Dropbox, which forces you to use the Web interface).

Here’s a Session Log window. Again, there are no frills, and it’s very technical. Each transaction is a “session,” and you can see when it happened, what it was, and view session details. It’s very transparent and easy to dig into.

This “Browse My Computer” dialog lets you select any folder for syncing. The way it works isn’t elegant, though. It simply creates a symlink to that folder within your IDriveSync folder; it’s just like what you can do with Dropbox. Here it’s integrated into the program, but it still feels clunky.

This is a young product, and it does have its quirks. I encountered one bug where the Classic interface told me my files weren’t in sync, but they actually were (per the logs and Status window). It also doesn’t have Explorer overlay icons, which let you see what files are in sync.

It will never be as sexy as Dropbox, and I don’t think it will ever be multi-platform or have Dropbox’s wide API support. I am certainly not dumping Dropbox for IDriveSync, but as a second solution, it is very, very good. Also, if these guys can provide unlimited storage for $5/month, why can’t Dropbox do it? They are certainly at least as successful.

DLS Review: IDriveSync is a cheaper, more powerful, Dropbox competitor for Windows originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 25 Aug 2010 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 25 August 2010

Category: Apple

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Well now. The previous rumor about 99 cent rentals for TV episodes on iTunes was just your average, but now that we know there’s an Apple event just around the corner, it’s time to start making hay out of all the chaff floating around. A source now tells the Wall Street Journal that Apple is pushing hard for a deal with Disney to nail down cheaper 48-hour rentals, presumably to come through iTunes and the revamped iTV service. Resistance to the deal is coming from TV companies (surprise, surprise), who are leery about putting too much content out through online services, fearing that people will leave their monthly cable bills behind if another service arises.

What’s funny about that, of course, is that Apple sees that’s already happening. Services like Hulu Plus and Netflix are already making cable customers rethink their monthly fees, and so Apple is finding itself with a limited amount of time to get in on the action. The Wall Street Journal says the company is pushing for agreements “before the new television season starts,” but now that we know there’s an event planned for September 1st, it’s more likely Apple is trying to get agreements set up before the announcement. Of course, as Philip Elmer-DeWitt points out, the real economic tradeoff isn’t between the $0.99 rentals and a more lucrative plan the studios come up with — it’s between Apple’s proven iTunes-based economy and the free-range TV programming on BitTorrent.

And with its ties to Disney, odds are that Apple will definitely have enough to go forward, even if it doesn’t have every channel signing on the dotted line just yet. So here’s the question: if Apple does announce a new iTV, and a way to watch new television on demand right away, will you choose a system like that over whatever cable bill you’re currently paying?

TUAWMore murmuring about 99 cent iTunes TV rentals originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 25 Aug 2010 18:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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