Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Apple prepping budget-friendly, 8GB iPhone 4?


Apple prepping budget-friendly, 8GB iPhone 4?

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Is another iPhone 4 model set to launch?
Is another iPhone 4 model set to launch?
(Credit: Apple)
All the talk surrounding an imminent iPhone 5 hasn't caused Apple to forget about the iPhone 4, a new report claims.
Citing anonymous sources, Reuters is reporting this morning that Apple is planning to launch an 8GB iPhone 4 model "within weeks." According to the news service, Apple wants to offer the 8GB model to folks in emerging markets and those who want to get their hands on the latest device from the company at a more affordable price.
The exact price of the new model hasn't been disclosed, but Reuters is reporting that it will be cheaper than the current models.
Apple launched its iPhone 4 in June 2010. The device was the first from the company to come with the Retina Display, delivering higher-quality visuals than iPhone owners had been accustomed to seeing. At launch, the company offered 16GB and 32GB models priced at $199 and $299 with a two-year agreement with AT&T. Earlier this year, Apple launched CDMA versions capable of running on Verizon Wireless' network. It followed that up with the launch of a white version a couple months later.
All along, Apple has offered a cheaper iPhone for those on a budget: the iPhone 3GS. Priced at $99 last year and then slashed down to $49 earlier this year, the iPhone 4's predecessor is designed to appeal to those looking to save a few bucks--a role the rumored 8GB iPhone 4 would ostensibly take on, as well.
 Related stories:
• CNET's review of the iPhone 4
• iPhone 5: 20 most-wanted features
• iPhone 5 rumor roundup
Even with all those smartphones available now, much of the talk across the iPhone ecosystem has surrounded the long-awaited iPhone 5. In recent years, Apple has announced new versions of its iPhone at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June. However, this year, the company didn't do so, prompting some to wonder if it actually has a device planned for this year.
Rumors are cropping up on a nearly daily basis about the eventual launch of the iPhone 5. Some reports claim the device will launch in September, while others say Apple will wait until October to release its new smartphone. Other reports even suggest that Apple won't be offering an iPhone 5 this year, and instead will be delivering a new and improved version of the iPhone 4.
At this point, there's no telling what Apple has planned.
But that hasn't stopped Reuters' sources from speculating. The news service said today that Apple is readying the new iPhone for a late-September launch. The device, a Reuters source claims, will come with a larger touch screen, improved antenna, and an 8-megapixel camera. Apple has requested production capacity of 45 million units, Reuters says.
Apple did not immediately respond to CNET's request for comment.


Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-20095877-17/apple-prepping-budget-friendly-8gb-iphone-4/#ixzz1VxLa5rTf

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

RIP, TouchPad. Can any non-iPad tablet survive - ever?


RIP, TouchPad. Can any non-iPad tablet survive - ever?

@CNNMoneyTech August 22, 2011: 3:27 PM ET
ipad touchpadScores of would-be iPad rivals have hit the tablet market, but Apple is steamrolling the competition.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- In the pre-iPad world, skeptics predicted that consumers would have no need for tablets. Then Apple unleashed the iPad -- and immediately sold millions of them.
OK, the critics acquiesced, there's a tablet market after all. Apple's rivals raced to get into the hot new space. Most of those devices flopped critically and commercially, culminating in HP (HPQ, Fortune 500)'s move last week to kill off its 49-day-old TouchPad tablet.
The assumption all along has been that others will eventually get the hang of tablets, making the field diverse and fiercely competitive. The model here is the iPhone: Apple mastered it first and still holds a lucrative slice of the smartphone market, but lots of vendors have carved off a piece for themselves.
But here's another scenario: What if the tablet market never materializes? What if it's an iPad-only market, now and forever?
There's precedent for that too, as wild as it sounds. It's what happened with the iPod.
When Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) unveiled its revolutionary music player in 2001, it blew away the competition. Others got to the market years earlier, but Apple's slick design and vast storage capacity was unmatchable. Priced at a fairly steep $399, the iPod sold 125,000 units in its first two months on the market.
Rivals immediately moved to copy Apple's playbook. Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500), Sony (SNE) and scores of smaller companies threw tons of R&D and marketing money at building a better iPod -- and failed. No one else ever got a meaningful toehold. Ten years after its debut, Apple's iPod line still holds at least 65% of the U.S. market, according to the latest estimates from IDC's Tom Mainelli, the firm's research director for mobile connected devices.
If tablets follow that model, you end up with a field where "the iPad dominates indefinitely and every competitor squabbles over one tiny piece of the market-share pie," Time.com gadget columnist Harry McCracken wrote the day the TouchPad died.
At the start of this year, more than 100 non-iPad tablets were on sale or in the works. But now the field is littered with outright failures, devices that never came to be -- and, at best, a few very mild successes.
"The HP TouchPad is the sharpest example of the huge stumbles in the market," says Rhoda Alexander, director of monitor research at IHS iSuppli. "It was abrupt, and definitely a shocker, but struggles are going on all over."
The Apple edge: "So far most other tablets are offering a hardware solution or a software solution, but not both," Alexander says. "Even if each one is good on its own, it takes work to put them together. Apple did that beautifully."
That approach helped Apple cannonball into the media-player market.
"It was elegant, it was fun to use, and they were very careful about what they put in and what they left out," Mainelli says of the iPod. "So while there were plenty of MP3 players in the market that were arguably 'better' than the iPod, none were easier to use, and none had the Apple cachet."
That's what's happening with tablet market, says Ken Dulaney, Gartner's vice president of mobility.
"When it really comes down to it, the tablet market had been around 20 years and hadn't yet sold a million units," he says. "Then the iPad comes in and changes everything."
That happened with the iPhone, too -- Apple essentially invented the modern smartphone. But in that field, rivals were able to catch up.
So what makes the phone market different than the music-player market? And which one better foreshadows the tablet field?
Daring Fireball blogger John Gruber, a veteran Apple observer, thinks signs point to the latter.
"Most people today still buy phones the same way they did in 2006: they go to their local mobile carrier store and buy whatever the sales staff there convinces them to buy. Over 100 million times, that's been an Android phone," he wrote recently. "[But] the tablet market doesn't today look anything like the smartphone market ever did. The iPad didn't enter the tablet market. It created the tablet market."

PC sales continue slump amid iPad takeover

Apple has sold more than 28 million iPads -- and for many tablet buyers, it's still the only game in town. About 93% of current tablet users are iPad owners, and a whopping 94% of potential buyers are looking at the iPad, according to a report this month from R.W. Baird. Second place for potential buyers, with a distant 10%, is the now-dead TouchPad.
IDC's Mainelli cites two key reasons for Apple's iPod dominance: Its design superiority and iTunes. By making it cheap, convenient and easy to get music, Apple created an entire gadget-and-content ecosystem its rivals couldn't match.
The App Store faces more obstacles -- especially if Apple keeps alienating major content publishers by demanding a big cut of their in-app sales -- but it's already stocked with an unmatched software lineup.
"Apple has built an entire ecosystem to support and enrich the iPad for both customers and developers," says Instapaper creator Marco Arment. "A successful mass-market iPad competitor needs to be so good that people will ignore all of that, buy it in large quantities, and let it develop its own entire ecosystem."
Who could challenge Apple: There's a dark horse in the tablet race: Amazon (AMZN, Fortune 500).
The e-commerce Goliath is reportedly working on a tablet expected to debut this fall.
"Amazon could make tons of money selling you the services, which means they can afford to sell you a tablet at cost," Mainelli says.
The "give 'em the razor, make money on the blades" business model could be the key to beating the iPad: undercutting Apple on price.
"The conventional wisdom is if you can buy No. 1, the iPad, for the same price, then why would you buy anything else?" Mainelli says. "People will pay more for Apple devices and the Apple experience, period. So to beat them, you've got to come in significantly cheaper."
But until someone finds that secret sauce, analysts are dialing back their forecasts about the tablet market's diversity. Earlier this year, IHS iSuppli predicted that Apple's tablet market share would drop below 50% in late 2012. Now, the firm thinks that won't happen until 2014.
"This isn't the type of thing where the competition can sit back and say, 'we're not going to play,'" says IHS iSuppli's Alexander. "An initial failure doesn't necessarily mean long-term failure."
"Eventually, it will be more than an Apple market," agrees IDC's Mainelli. "What's less clear is when the competitors will start to come in."
But the real question may not be "when" a real rival will emerge. It's "if."  To top of page

Report: Second, cheaper iPhone set to launch in weeks


Report: Second, cheaper iPhone set to launch in weeks

August 23, 2011: 8:07 AM ET
Reuters adds detail -- and its authority -- to rumors of an 8GB "iCloud iPhone"
Image: Apple'N'Apps
Stories have been floating around for months that Apple (AAPL) was building not one but two new iPhones -- the widely expected iPhone 5 and a lower-cost phone that's basically the current iPhone 4 with less on-board memory. According to an item posted two weeks ago by Apple'N'Apps' Trevor Sheridan, company insiders are calling the second device the "iCloud iPhone."
On Tuesday, in a report flagged EXCLUSIVE, Reuters threw its weight behind Sheridan's scoop, adding fresh details based on two unnamed sources "with knowledge of the matter." Reuters doesn't call it the new device the iCloud iPhone, but it sure sounds like the same thing.
The new details:
  • 8 GB of Flash memory (down from 16 or 32 in the current iPhone 4)
  • Flash purchased from a new Korean suppler (as opposed to Samsung or Toshiba)
  • Hon Hai and Pegatron (the iPhone 5's reputed suppliers) told to prepare capacity to build 45 million units between them
  • End of September launch for both the iPhone 5 and its smaller brother
That last bullet point puts Reuters' account at odds with the Wall Street Journal's All Things D, which has repeatedly assured us that the launch won't happen before October.

Monday, August 22, 2011

TouchPad fire sale sets off flurry of purchases


TouchPad fire sale sets off flurry of purchases
Updated 2h 52m ago
By Eric Risberg, AP
By Mark W. Smith, Detroit Free Press
HP sent crowds of geeks to queue in front of retailers over the weekend after itabandoned the TouchPad, a tablet computer, and retailers were forced to sell them for $99 -- a $300 discount and well below cost.
On Saturday, I made calls to about a dozen metro Detroit retailers in search of a TouchPad. All of them had sold out early that morning.
Then, word came overnight that stores, namely Best Buy, would have some inventory this morning. Who can turn down a $99 tablet? Not me.
I started at one Best Buy location, arriving about 30 minutes before the store was to open at 11 a.m.
Others clearly had the same idea. I was No. 37 in the line.
After a short wait, a Best Buy employee came out to tell us that the store had no TouchPads in stock.
"But we do have a bunch of netbooks you could take a look at," he said.
The crowd quickly dispersed.
At the next-closest Best Buy, just eight people were waiting. I made myself No. 9, hoping this store would have some in stock.
They did.
So now I have an HP TouchPad.
What am I going to do with it?
I'm not sure yet.
I'm still exploring the device, but check back for my take after a few days with it.
Here's hoping I didn't just buy an expensive clock.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Reports: iPad 3 coming early next year



Reports: iPad 3 coming early next year

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Apple may start manufacturing the iPad 3 in the fall for a release date sometime early next year,according to reports.
The Wall Street Journal first reported this latest Apple rumor.
According to the newspaper, the iPad 3 “is expected to feature a high resolution display—2048 by 1536 compared with 1024 by 768 in the iPad 2.”
The screen will remain the same size, however.
This matches the ongoing rumors that the iPad 3 will have a so-called “retina display” made famous on the iPhone 4.
Apple is expected to release iOS 5 this fall, which will be a major update to Apple’s mobile operating system which purports to have interoperability with Twitter and a messaging app similar to BlackBerry Messenger.
The iPad 3 is also expected to be thinner and lighter than the iPad 2, according to ABC News. That report also mentions that AT&T is leaking news of an iPhone 5 release in October.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Game Review: EA Sports NHL 2012

This is Technology Today's first game review and in the spirit of breaking news, this is a pre-release review.  While I am not big time enough to get an advance copy, I have watched some reviews and know a lot about EA Sports games.  EA Sports NHL 2012 comes out September 9, 2011.  Check back later for the full review.

NHL 12 looks to be an improvement from NHL 11.  You can't always say that about EA Sports games (i.e. College Football 2012).  There are some features that they seems to take out and put back in from year to year...one of which is legends or greats of the past.  If you watch the review, they are making a big deal about the "Legends".  They are also releasing who the legends are, two at a time.  So far, they are showing, Gretzky, Bourke, Chelios, Yzerman, Salming, Roy and Roenick with two more slots.  My bets for the lat two slots are on Sakic and Lemieux.  

The other cool feature they have this year is the Winter Classic.  You can play with last year's winter classic teams or add your own.  The game is shown at Heinz Field in Pittsburgh at night with snow coming down.  They even show the players breath in the cold at the intro.

From the review, it seems that they are also more focused on in-game stats and making the presentation slicker.   If they don't mess with the game too much and just make it look better, this should be the best NHL Game ever...You can see more about EA Sports NHL 12 here:http://www.ea.com/nhl

Again, check back in Sept for a 2nd review...

Product Review: Logitech Harmony 1100 Universal Remote

So, I will start this out by saying, that this product has been out for two years and I am just now hearing about it.  The good news is also that the price has come down since its introduction and it seems that they have worked out some of the bugs.  I think even a $250 price tag might be a bit much for a lot of people, but it looks like a pretty cool product if you are into gadgets.

I like most people have many devices and many remotes to go with them.  In my main entertainment area, basement/rec room, I have 4 remotes:  TV, cable, Bose speakers and Apple TV.  The Logitech Harmony Universal Remote is the king of all universal remotes and will allow me to put them all in a drawer.  It is compatible with more than 225,000 devices, so I am sure it will work.  The coolest part of it, is the size and screen.  While it is a little larger and more square than usual remotes, it has a touch screen that can be programmed to do almost anything.  Switching from TV, to DVD, to Apple TV to Video games, seems to be the coolest part, but changing channels, volume, etc are all done on the touch screen.

I do hear you have to do all the set up on line, through your computer then sync the device for it to accept the changes.  I am hoping that this is not too tough.

While I have not bought it yet, I have done a lot of research and am getting it this weekend.  Stay tunes for the post-purchase review...

You can see a cool review of the Logitech Harmony 1100 here:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVwmu9WLVvo

Sunday, August 14, 2011

App Review: HBO Go

Not exactly breaking news, but a lot of people are not aware of the powerful App HBO Go.  If you have HBO and a mobile device (iPhone, iPad or Android) you need to get HBO Go.  It is a free App that streams all HBO content to your device regardless of whether or not you are connected to WiFi.

Every movie, every show, everything in the HBO library is available to you at anytime.  You have to have signed up for the streaming service from your cable provider (i.e. Xfinity).  At install, HBO Go will ask you to log in through that on-line service.  The word is that is will also be available soon directly through game consoles and TV's.  Not sure why you would need to access it though console when you could just go On-Demand.

Other than that, it is easy to use and a very cool app.  You can download the HBO Go app through the Appstore.  You can see more about it here  http://www.hbogo.com/

You can also see a review of HBO Go here:  http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technology-blog/review-hbo-235519480.html

iPhone 5 coming Sept 7th?

Rumors abound that Apple will announce the iPhone5 on September 7th.  CNet is reporting that "sources in the know" have said that that Apple plans an announcement for that day.  It does not mean that you can buy the iPhone 5 on that day, just that they will announce it.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Using your iPhone as a projector


By:  
A phone next to a notebook computer, projecting onto the same workspace.
A phone next to a notebook computer, projecting onto the same work space
(Credit: USPTO/Apple)
A newly published Apple patent application has provided additional hints that projectors could one day end up in future Apple products, including the company's phones, tablets, and as an accessory for notebook computers to help make it easier to share content with one another.
The application "Projected display shared workspaces" was filed in February 2010 and pulled up this morning by Patently Apple. It outlines a system for taking what's on screen and projecting it onto a nearby surface. What's interesting about the system proposed in this particular patent filing is that it can combine projections from multiple devices into one screen, in what's dubbed the "shared workspace."
The application notes that "consumers frequently share data stored on electronic devices with other people," but that portable devices typically come with small screens, making it difficult to share with a group. The company's solution promises to solve that by offering a way for devices with projectors to link up to one another in order. The end result is a larger canvas for presenting media and other documents, using a sever or a close-range transfer medium like Bluetooth, ZigBee, or near-field communications (NFC) to ferry the data back and forth between the devices.
Of special note is that Apple has been tied to the domain name of Applepico.com, something blog Macrumors discovered last week. Handheld projectors--which have cropped up on a number of point-and-shoot cameras, cell phones, and as standalone devices--are commonly referred to as "pico" projectors.
This is not the first Apple patent application to touch on integrating projectors into portable devices. A filing uncovered in April 2010 detailed building a projector into a notebook computer. Just a month before that, another filing had detailed how projectors might be used if attached to phones, building on a 2007 patent application that detailed using attached or built-in projectors to display media.
Miniaturization with pico projectors continues, with newer technologies bringing down the physical space and power needed to put built-in projectors into portable electronics. A new lens announced last week by Alps Electric is on the edge of that trend, measuring just under a millimeter squared. The company plans to produce those units in bulk by the end of next year.


Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-27076_3-20091265-248/apple-patent-filing-details-devices-with-linked-projectors/#ixzz1Ul00Mg5h