Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Apple Co-Founder Wozniak Wants to Be Aussie Citizen
Apple Inc. (AAPL) co-founder Steve Wozniak wants to become an Australian citizen and lists the government’s planned national broadband network as one of the factors behind his decision, the Australian Financial Review reported.
Wozniak, who built the first Apple computer (AAPL) with Steve Jobs and co-founded the company with him in 1976, told the newspaper he supports the roll-out of the mainly fiber-optic network and had discussed the project with Communications Minister Stephen Conroy.
“I support it very much,” the Financial Review cited Wozniak, in Australia for the launch of the iPhone 5 and to speak at business forums, as saying in an interview. “It’s one of the reasons why I actually like this country and want to become a citizen.”
Wozniak told a local radio station in Brisbane that he was “underway to become an Australian citizen,” according to the report. “It turns out I can keep my American citizenship,” he told Brisbane’s 4BC breakfast radio, the newspaper said. “I intend to call myself an Australian and feel an Australian, and study the history and become as much of a real citizen here as I can.”
Wozniak is chief scientist at Fusion-io Inc. (FIO), a Salt Lake City-based maker of flash-memory technology.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Apple Sells Five Million New iPhones
Apple on Monday said it had sold five million new iPhones just three days after the phone’s release, beating first-weekend sales of its predecessor, the iPhone 4S, by about one million, but still missing some analysts’ forecasts.
Still, the number sold over the weekend is about as many smartphones as some competitors, like Nokia, can say they’ve sold over all.
Apple said that demand for the iPhone 5 exceeded expectations, and many early orders of the smartphone have been scheduled for October. Though weekend sales of the iPhone 5 exceeded Apple’s expectations, they came below some analysts’ estimates. Gene Munster, a financial analyst with Piper Jaffray, had predicted eight million sales the first weekend. He made his guess by counting the number of people waiting in line outside some Apple stores and comparing it to the number of people in line last year.
Though five million iPhones wasn’t in line with Mr. Munster’s algebraic guesswork, the number shows that the iPhone has not lost momentum despite the wave of new smartphones recently introduced by Apple’s competitors. Nokia, HTC, Samsung and Motorola Mobility each unveiled new smartphones this month, but most of them failed to release their phones before the iPhone 5 went on sale.
Nokia, a former industry leader, faces an uphill battle. The company has sold only about seven million of its new Lumia phones since they were released in November, said Jan Dawson, an analyst with Ovum, the research firm.
“It’s just a reminder of how far ahead Apple is of pretty much everyone else here,” Mr. Dawson said. He added that Samsung is the one company that sells smartphones in similar quantities, but across many different models of phones. Also, the iPhone is the only smartphone that sells out so quickly.
The strong early sales of the new iPhone also suggest that, despite widespread criticism of the new maps software included with the phone, enthusiasm for Apple’s phone has not waned.
In early trading, shares of Apple were down 1.4 percent at $690.68.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Apple’s Feud With Google Is Now Felt on iPhone
SAN FRANCISCO — Once the best of friends, Google and Apple
have become foes, battling in courtrooms and in the consumer
marketplace. Last week, the hostilities took a new turn when they
spilled right onto smartphone screens.
In the latest version of Apple’s iPhone software, which became available Wednesday, Apple removed two mainstay apps, both Google products — Maps and YouTube.
The disappearing apps show just how far-reaching the companies’ rivalry
has become, as well as the importance of mobile users to their
businesses.
“It’s the two big kids kicking sand in the sandbox,” said Colin Gillis,
an analyst who covers Google and Apple for BGC Partners. “They’re now
competing against each other with phones, with maps, with content, with
search. They’re going head-to-head.”
Maps are particularly crucial on mobile devices, where location-based
services and ads have emerged as the pathway to making money. Google and
Apple are not the only warriors in the fight. Amazon, Nokia, Microsoft,
AOL and Yahoo are competing, too.
“If you own a mobile ecology, as Google does, the other mobile ecology
owners are not going to allow you to own tons of data in their world,”
said Scott Rafer, chief executive of Lumatic,
which makes city map apps. “And so neither Apple nor Amazon were going
to let Google know where every one of their users was at every time.”
Being kicked off the iPhone has potentially significant consequences for
Google, whose Maps service earns more than half its traffic from mobile
devices, and almost half of that mobile traffic has been from iPhone
users. Apple’s move strikes at the heart of Google’s core business,
search, because about 40 percent of mobile searches are for local places
or things.
“Local is a huge thing for Google in terms of advertising dollars, and
search is very tied to that,” said Barry Schwartz, an editor at Search Engine Land,
an industry blog. “Knowing where you are, when you search for coffee,
it can bring up local coffee shops and ads that are much more relevant
for the user.”
Consumers are innocent bystanders of the brawl. IPhone users now have an
extra step to download the YouTube app from the App Store and, so far,
Google has given no indication that it will offer a maps app. Apple’s
maps, meanwhile, are littered with flaws, some laughable, like a bridge that appears to collapse crossing the Tacoma Narrows Strait of Puget Sound.
Some analysts say, however, that Apple’s maps will quickly improve, and
that the long-term result of heightened competition will be better maps
all around.
“Apple Maps are apparently not ready for prime time, and that’s a loss,”
said Peter Krasilovsky, the program director for marketplaces at
BIA/Kelsey, a local media research firm. “But a long-term loss? No. With
all the incredible technology being developed by everybody, consumers
are the winner.”
The war between Google and Apple
escalated abruptly before breaking out on the iPhone screen. At the
height of their friendship, their chief executives together unveiled the
first iPhone, packed with Google services like maps, search and
YouTube. But since Google introduced its own mobile operating system, Android, the companies have battled over everything mobile, from patents to ads and apps.
The brawl has played out most publicly in the courtroom, where Apple and
phone manufacturers that use Google’s Android software have sued one
another. Most recently, on Friday and Saturday, Apple and Samsung each
filed papers to amend or overturn a jury verdict that awarded Apple $1
billion in a patent trial with Samsung. Apple wants more money and
Samsung wants a new trial. The companies will return to court Dec. 6 to
discuss their demands.
Though Apple’s rejection of YouTube is part of its effort to cut ties
with its former friend, it is different from the battle over maps
because Apple has no competing video service. Google has introduced a
new YouTube app in the App Store, which has become the No. 1 free app.
But with maps, Google, which has long been the dominant digital
mapmaker, now must adjust to a new rival, along with the loss of
valuable iPhone users.
Even though Android phones far outnumber iPhones — 60 percent of
smartphones run Android, versus 34 percent for iPhones, according to
Canalys, a research firm — iPhone users account for almost half of
mobile traffic to Google Maps.
In July, according to comScore Mobile Metrix, 12.6 million iPhone users
visited Maps each day, versus 7.6 million on Android phones. And iPhone
users spent an hour and a half using Maps during the month, while
Android users spent just an hour.
Those users are a valuable source for Google, because it relies on their
data to determine things like which businesses or landmarks are most
important and whether maps have errors.
Google also risks losing the allegiance of app developers who build apps that tie in to maps.
“Overnight, Apple has really taken out a significant chunk of Google’s
market, and it’s much harder for Google to say to developers, ‘We’re the
only game in town, come play with us,’ ” said Tony Costa, a senior
analyst who studies mobile phones at Forrester. “It will affect the
Google ecosystem, putting it back in the same game of their apps lagging
behind Apple, and that’s not a good position for them to be in.”
Still, Google is no doubt feeling a bit of satisfaction as Apple is loudly criticized for the errors in its maps.
Apple Maps users have been tallying its blunders. A Tumblr devoted to the topic
included a missing lake in Hyderabad, India, misplaced restaurants in
Cambridge, Mass., and the placement of Berlin in Antarctica.
Apple responded Thursday with a statement that its map service was a
work in progress and would improve as more people used it.
Google, meanwhile, has been reminding people of its seven years of experience in mapping.
But the company would not say whether it was building an iPhone app for
users to download. Its only public statement on the matter has been
vague: “Our goal is to make Google Maps available to everyone who wants
to use it, regardless of device, browser, or operating system.”
Google could decide not to build an app, as a gamble that iPhone users
depend on its maps so much that they might switch to Android.
If it does build an app, Apple would have to approve it. Its guidelines
for developers are ambiguous, but exclude apps that “appear confusingly
similar to an existing Apple product.”
Rejecting Google’s app would most likely set off a brouhaha similar to
that over the Google Voice app, which Apple rejected in 2009, prompting
an investigation by the Federal Communications Commission, and a year
later was approved.
More likely, analysts say, Google is waiting for the right time to swoop
in and save the day by offering its own iPhone app. One benefit of
making its own app: It could add features and sell ads, which it could
not do on the old app because Apple controlled it. The situation with
the YouTube app was the same.
In the meantime, Google is encouraging people to use maps on the
iPhone’s browser, where it shows instructions to install it on their
home screen.
Brian X. Chen contributed reporting from New York.
Apple - iPhone 5 - TV Ad - Cheese
Introducing the iPhone 5. Now taking beautiful photos in panorama is as simple as saying "cheese".
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Monday, September 17, 2012
Apple iPhone 5 likely to spur record lines
Apple is "blown away" by consumer response to the next-generation
of its popular smartphone, which sold out for pre-orders in just minutes
on Friday, spokeswoman Natalie Kerris says. And when iPhone 5 goes on
sale in stores later this week, analysts predict lines as long as the
record queues seen for the iPhone's debut in 2007.
"It will be a madhouse," says Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster.
Richard Doherty, an independent tech analyst at Envisioneering Group, says the immediate sellout for the pre-order makes for an "awkward" launch for the new phone.
"Apple expected the pre-orders to be a one-day cycle, and they were shocked that it was just one hour. They clearly were caught by surprise by the size of the orders," Doherty says. Had they continued fulfilling online orders, "they might have only had two phones available at stores on Friday."
Phones ordered online won't be delivered until Oct. 5 at the earliest, according to Apple's website. And analysts say phones available at retail, starting at 8 a.m. Friday, will probably be sold out by Sunday.
Munster projects sales of 6 million to 10 million iPhone 5s in the first week, most of which will be in the Friday-Sunday time period. That compares to sales of 4 million of the iPhone 4S on its first weekend last October.
Munster says the iPhone 5 probably won't be back in stock for weeks. "For the iPhone 4 and iPad 2, they were gone after the first weekend, and there were lines for weeks afterwards," he says.
The iPhone 5 starts at $199 with a new or extended two-year contract. If you're not yet eligible for the upgrade, the iPhone starts at $649.
Here's where to get the phone:
Apple: Brave the line at an Apple retail store (Munster thinks fans will start lining up earlier in the week.) Doors open at 8 a.m. (local time) on Friday.
Walmart: You can pre-order in the store with a $25 deposit, and return to pick it up. Calls to random Walmart stores said the phone might be available Friday or later, depending upon the size of its shipment. The chain throws in a free movie rental from its Vudu digital service.
Best Buy: The iPhone 5 goes on sale Friday, in-store. The online site isn't taking orders or pre-orders, but is taking them in-store, with a $50 deposit. It hopes to fulfill orders on Friday.
Radio Shack: Pre-order in store with a $50 deposit, and come back for the phone. Calls to stores said buyers should get their phones, if not by Friday, then by Monday.
The wireless carriers: AT&T (ships within 14-21 business days), Verizon (ships Oct. 5) and Sprint (ships Oct. 5) online with pre-orders. Or purchase at stores on Friday.
"I'd recommend consumers skip the carrier stores on Friday because they'll try to upsell you on services, and the line will go really slow," Doherty says. "They might find more satisfaction at a retailer."
Doherty believes the line for the iPhone 5 will be the longest and most intense since the first iPhone went on sale in 2007, attracting as many as 1 million folks. But there's more to it than just heavy consumer demand in the U.S.
Consumers in other countries where the iPhone 5 won't be on sale until later also want to be first on the block with the hot new device, and will pay handsomely for it. Doherty thinks every other person on the line will be buying phones to ship out to buyers elsewhere.
"We expect a lot of FedEx and UPS boxes to be going out to China, Europe and the Middle East that day," Doherty says.
"It will be a madhouse," says Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster.
Richard Doherty, an independent tech analyst at Envisioneering Group, says the immediate sellout for the pre-order makes for an "awkward" launch for the new phone.
"Apple expected the pre-orders to be a one-day cycle, and they were shocked that it was just one hour. They clearly were caught by surprise by the size of the orders," Doherty says. Had they continued fulfilling online orders, "they might have only had two phones available at stores on Friday."
Phones ordered online won't be delivered until Oct. 5 at the earliest, according to Apple's website. And analysts say phones available at retail, starting at 8 a.m. Friday, will probably be sold out by Sunday.
Munster projects sales of 6 million to 10 million iPhone 5s in the first week, most of which will be in the Friday-Sunday time period. That compares to sales of 4 million of the iPhone 4S on its first weekend last October.
Munster says the iPhone 5 probably won't be back in stock for weeks. "For the iPhone 4 and iPad 2, they were gone after the first weekend, and there were lines for weeks afterwards," he says.
The iPhone 5 starts at $199 with a new or extended two-year contract. If you're not yet eligible for the upgrade, the iPhone starts at $649.
Here's where to get the phone:
Apple: Brave the line at an Apple retail store (Munster thinks fans will start lining up earlier in the week.) Doors open at 8 a.m. (local time) on Friday.
Walmart: You can pre-order in the store with a $25 deposit, and return to pick it up. Calls to random Walmart stores said the phone might be available Friday or later, depending upon the size of its shipment. The chain throws in a free movie rental from its Vudu digital service.
Best Buy: The iPhone 5 goes on sale Friday, in-store. The online site isn't taking orders or pre-orders, but is taking them in-store, with a $50 deposit. It hopes to fulfill orders on Friday.
Radio Shack: Pre-order in store with a $50 deposit, and come back for the phone. Calls to stores said buyers should get their phones, if not by Friday, then by Monday.
The wireless carriers: AT&T (ships within 14-21 business days), Verizon (ships Oct. 5) and Sprint (ships Oct. 5) online with pre-orders. Or purchase at stores on Friday.
"I'd recommend consumers skip the carrier stores on Friday because they'll try to upsell you on services, and the line will go really slow," Doherty says. "They might find more satisfaction at a retailer."
Doherty believes the line for the iPhone 5 will be the longest and most intense since the first iPhone went on sale in 2007, attracting as many as 1 million folks. But there's more to it than just heavy consumer demand in the U.S.
Consumers in other countries where the iPhone 5 won't be on sale until later also want to be first on the block with the hot new device, and will pay handsomely for it. Doherty thinks every other person on the line will be buying phones to ship out to buyers elsewhere.
"We expect a lot of FedEx and UPS boxes to be going out to China, Europe and the Middle East that day," Doherty says.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Apple new headphones
But they’re not just designed for the perfect fit. They’re designed for the perfect sound, too. You’ll hear deeper, richer bass and better audio all around. And they’re incredibly stable in your ear. Which means they stay in, even when you’re out and about.
iPhone 5
Apple iPhone 5 With Bigger Screen and Better Performance
All Apple fans and users wait for the fifth generation iPhone is over now because Apple iPhone 5 is released officially in the market. It is available in both CSMA and GSM models with Wi-Fi connectivity. The new iPhone 5 comes with a 4.0 inches Display and it is pretty much thinner and lighter than the previous iPhone 4S. Its 4.0 inches Retina Display with resolution 1136x640 pixels and IPS LCD technology, this improves picture quality, video watching experience and reading eBook. This larger display is Multi-touch and also features light sensor and proximity sensor.Apple iPhone 5 runs on the latest Apple A6 chipset and a very powerful Dual-core ARM Cortex-A15 processor is used in this device which gives two times faster processing and graphics performance. And it comes with the latest iOS 6 with these upgrades iPhone 5 is capable for smooth multitasking, Full HD video playback and smooth gaming with better graphics performance.
Rear facing high resolution 8 MP camera with LED flash of iPhone 5 is same as the iPhone 4S but some new features are added in this camera like Back-illuminated sensor (BSI) and much more. Apple launch iPhone 5 with improved front facing which is now supports 720 pixels HD recording and it is also good for video calling.
Apple Introduces iPhone 5
Thinnest, Lightest iPhone Ever Features All-New Aluminum Design, Stunning 4-Inch Retina Display, A6 Chip & Ultrafast Wireless
SAN FRANCISCO—September 12, 2012—Apple® today announced iPhone® 5, the thinnest and lightest iPhone ever, completely redesigned to feature a stunning new 4-inch Retina™ display; an Apple-designed A6 chip for blazing fast performance; and ultrafast wireless technology*—all while delivering even better battery life.** iPhone 5 comes with iOS 6, the world’s most advanced mobile operating system with over 200 new features including: the all new Maps app with Apple-designed cartography and turn-by-turn navigation; Facebook integration; Passbook® organization; and even more Siri® features and languages.
iPhone 5 is the thinnest smartphone in the world, with an all-new 7.6 mm anodized aluminum body that is 18 percent thinner and 20 percent lighter than iPhone 4S. Designed with an unprecedented level of precision, iPhone 5 combines an anodized aluminum body with diamond cut chamfered edges and glass inlays for a truly incredible fit and finish.
Pricing & Availability
iPhone 5 comes in either white & silver or black & slate, and will be available in the US for a suggested retail price of $199 (US) for the 16GB model and $299 (US) for the 32GB model and $399 (US) for the 64GB model. iPhone 5 will be available from the Apple Online Store (www.apple.com), Apple’s retail stores, and through AT&T, Sprint, Verizon Wireless and select Apple Authorized Resellers. iPhone 5 will be available in the US, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and the UK on Friday, September 21, and customers can pre-order their iPhone 5 beginning Friday, September 14. iPhone 4S will also be available for just $99 (US) and iPhone 4 will be available for free with a two-year contract.****** iOS 6 software will be available on Wednesday, September 19 as a free software update.** Battery life depends on device settings, usage and other factors. Actual results vary.
*** Based on theoretical speeds, actual speeds may vary.
**** Sold separately.
***** Not all features are supported in all countries.
****** Availability varies by carrier.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Apple teases its fans... As the iPhone 5 countdown begins, fans claim 'secret message' has been hidden on a banner on the launch venue
The long-awaited unveiling of the iPhone 5 is just days away.
In fact, Apple has spent the weekend preparing San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center for the grand launch, which will see CEO Tim Cook take to the stage to launch the first new iPhone since the death of Steve Jobs last October.
Apple stays quiet before the launches, but eagle-eyed Apple fans have already looked for cryptic clues in the colourful banner draped outside the building - and they appear to have found one.
For when fans started playing around with the shrink tools on Photoshop, they saw that the multi-coloured strips are apparently the iPhone's iconic deck of icons stretched upwards.
Considering the rumours flying around Apple's latest device, it is not just the conspiracy theorists who see this as a clue that the next iPhone will come with a bigger screen - for why else would the icons be stretched?
The images are on the front of the Yerva Buena Centre, an apt location for Apple as it is often used for visual arts and media events.
The cryptologists on the website MacRumours spotted how the banner took the form of Apple icons - in particular Game Centre, iTunes, and the Music and App Store - when you shrunk the image down.
While sceptics might not see a hidden meaning in the image, it does appear a quite elongated and time-consuming process by Apple's PR team if it is one without purpose.
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The iPhone 5 has been the subject of heated debate over the last six months.
Apple keeps notoriously tight-lipped about products until they are ready for launch, and the vacuum has been filled by plenty of speculation.
However, reliable leaks from within the Apple supply chain have given away some of what we are likely to expect.
This includes a re-designed dock port for connecting to other devices - which may infuriate users of older models - and a larger four-inch screen.
Apple's iconic headphones are also getting their first redesign since 2008, and the headphone socket has allegedly moved to the base of the device.
Unconfirmed but rumoured additions include an NFC chip, which allows swipeless payments at the till, and, following Apple's acquisition of a company called AuthenTec, the possibility that 'swipe to unlock' will become reality with an in-built fingerprint scanner.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
iWoz PDF
iWoz: From Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and Had Fun Doing It (ISBN 0-393-06143-4) is a 2006 autobiography of Steve Wozniak. It was authored by Wozniak and California author and journalist Gina Smith and published by W. W. Norton & Company.
In iWoz, Wozniak gives a short history of his life, the founding of Apple Computer and some of his other ventures. Near the end of the book, Wozniak explains that he wrote the book in order to dispel some misconceptions that have been spread about him, his relationship with Steve Jobs and his relationship with and feelings towards Apple. Wozniak presents his story in short vignettes, never longer than a few pages, and most no longer than just a few paragraphs.
Steve Jobs Biography PDF
Based on more than forty interviews with Jobs conducted over two years—in addition to interviews with more than one hundred family members, friends, adversaries, competitors, and colleagues—Isaacson was given "exclusive and unprecedented" access to Jobs's life.Jobs is said to have encouraged the people interviewed to speak honestly. Although Jobs cooperated with the book, he asked for no control over its content other than the book's cover, and waived the right to read it before it was published.[4]
Originally planned for release on March 6, 2012, its release date was moved forward to November 21, 2011 due to Jobs's deteriorating health, and again following Jobs's death on October 5, 2011. The book was released on October 24, 2011 by Simon & Schuster in the United States
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iPhone 4 - TV Ad - iBooks
f you don't have an iPhone, you don't have the iBooks on your phone, where a good book is just a tap away.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Iphone 5
Apple on Tuesday announced it would be holding a media event on Sept.
12 and hinted that it would include the launch of the iPhone 5,
confirming weeks of rumours that had mentioned that date as the most
likely for the unveiling of the company's new smartphone.
Email invitations sent to media displayed the number 12 casting a
large shadow of a 5 with the words 'It's almost here" written above, an
obvious reference to the much-anticipated new version of Apple's popular
iPhone.
The event will be held at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco starting at 10 a.m. PT.
Tuesday's announcement confirms months of speculation about when
Apple might announce the new version of its smartphone. Sept. 12 had
been mentioned on numerous technology websites and blogs as the most
likely date for the announcement.
Many have also speculated the company will announce a mini version of its tablet, the iPad, at a later date in October.
Photos of purported iPhone 5 circulating
Numerous photos of purported iPhone 5 parts and handsets have appeared online.
The latest were posted last week
on a Chinese technology website. They showed a handset that is longer
and narrower than the current version of the iPhone. The new phone is
also rumoured to have a smaller dock connector, which links up iPhone
accessories.
The last version of the iPhone, the iPhone 4S, was released in October 2011.
According to U.S. sales figures released in documents filed during the recent patent trial
between Apple and rival cellphone maker Samsung in California, Apple
has sold 85 million iPhones in the U.S. since the device came on the
market in 2007 and generated more than $50 billion US in revenue from
U.S. sales.
It has sold 34 million iPads in the U.S. between 2010 and the second quarter of 2012, generating revenue of $19 billion.
Apple shares rose 1.5 per cent on Tuesday, closing at $674.97 US on the NASDAQ.
The company's market capitalization is around $630 billion US, making it the most valuable publicly traded company
in the world. Much of that value is fuelled by its iPhone sales, which
accounted for almost half its product sales in the third quarter of
2012.
Two other cellphone makers, Nokia and Motorola, are holding their own product launches in New York Wednesday.
Nokia, which is co-hosting its event with Microsoft, is expected to
launch a new smartphone running the Windows 8 operating systems, which
Microsoft hopes will rival Apple's iOS and Google's Android operating
systems.
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