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Review: Ditch Wires Forever With Altec Lansing’s Backbeat 906 Bluetooth Headphones

It’s dangerous and illegal, but I like listening to music when I’m riding my bicycle. Nothing like a bit of techno to get the blood pumping on a foggy morning. Trouble is, sound-isolating earbuds — the ones you jam deep in your ear canals — can get you killed. They sound great, but they block that [...]

Pic of the Day: Disgruntled Designer Quits Via Custom Warning Dialog


A freelance designer quit his job in the most original way yet. He created a custom warning dialog resembling the unexpected quit dialogs in OS X.
The message, posted on his work machine, says:
“The designer you treat like shit has quit unexpectedly.
Your company and other employees are not affected.
Click Renegotiate to discuss terms for new contract. [...]

CoPilot Live GPS App On Sale For $20 Over Thanskgiving Weekend

More Thanksgiving iPhone app sale action.
At 8:00am ET tomorrow, the CoPilot Live turn-by-turn GPS navigation app will go on sale for $19.99. The app is normally $35 and has got generally good reviews. Gizmodo calls it the best cheap GPS app (it has some quirks, but what do you expect for $35? I mean $20?).
The [...]

Review: Ommwriter Text Editor

Ommwriter is different. It’s a text editor, perhaps better described as a “writing environment” because text editor makes it sound like something you could write code in. And I can’t see many people using it for that.
Ommwriter plays ambient music and soundscapes while you work. The splash screen encourages you to stick headphones on while [...]

Opinion: Understanding the Apple Rumor Mill is a Matter of Trust

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Image courtesy of Gizmodo

With new rumors about the much anticipated Apple tablet hitting Monday, it seems fair to ask how one is supposed to decode the storms of speculation that have long whirled around the company and its products.

Some thrive on rumor and innuendo about Apple – the largely well-regarded Macrumors attracts over 6 million unique visitors per month, AppleInsider nearly a million – and with Apple’s penchant for absolute secrecy over its design department and product development it’s no surprise whispers and baseless fantasy comprise much of what passes for “news” about Apple.

If Apple really is coming out with a tablet in October, or AT&T really is going to open tethering to the US iPhone market in September (a persistent rumor AT&T continues to deny with respect to both price and timing), does it benefit anyone to know about it now? And if it turns out there is (again) no tablet, or that tethering comes tomorrow for free (you wish), how does that affect the way one is supposed to receive the next rumored news item about what they’re up to in Cupertino?

These questions are one small aspect of the larger debate about the ways news and journalism are changing in the Internet age. Traditional news organizations have been cutting resources for true investigative journalism for years, in favor of selling ads and eyeballs with cheap sensationalism, in part because it often seems that’s what the public wants, but also because it’s easier to publish a rumor than it is to get at the truth or to take time to think about and craft a well-reasoned opinion piece.

Monday’s rumor about the Apple tablet originated with a report at the China Times, which is no tabloid sheet, and appears to be based on information about companies high up in the Apple supply chain that a respectable news organization would be able to source and confirm before printing as news. Do standards of journalistic ethics prevail at major news organizations in Asia? Have budgets for investigative journalism survived the impulse to feed the public’s insatiable desire for knowing what the future holds?

The answer to such questions holds the key to understanding how to receive a report about what Apple has up its sleeve. What you believe comes down to whatever you can know for yourself and who you can trust to tell you the truth. Ultimately, no one really knows until the lights come up at the next Apple “event” – and, after all, anticipation is more intoxicating than feeling you already know what’s coming.

About the author

Lonnie Lazar

Lonnie Lazar is a writer, musician, web designer attorney. He writes about Apple for Cult of Mac and Mac|Life, and about VoIP and telecommunications for Voxilla. Follow Lonnie on Twitter @LonnieLazar, join the Cult of Mac on Facebook, and find Lonnie's photos on Flickr.

Email the author | Read more posts by Lonnie Lazar.

6 comments

    I’d add 9to5mac.com to the Apple rumor sites you list.

    umm… free iphone tethering can be had on your iphone.. its very easy. (shhh!!! don’t tell AT&T…)

    just go here on your iphone safari browser and follow the instructions.. poof, iphone tethering…
    http://help.benm.at/help.php

    @Cleve: 9to5 certainly works the rumor angle as stock-in-trade.

    @iphone user: I think the more interesting question is whether, when they do roll it out officially, AT&T will begin charging those who tether without signing up. They certainly have ways of finding out who we are. ;-)

    WELL SAID!!!

    Here in Canada we have no Pandora, no Hulu, and no beer at 7-11. But we do have free iPhone tethering.

    I’ve turned completely around on netbooks.
    I can absolutely see a purpose for them.

    PRATICALITY
    LapTops are useful, but they have a I’m-Carrying-Something burden to them.
    It’s not like an iPhone where you can just throw it in your pocket.

    PORTABILITY
    iPhones are unobtrusive, but it’s netsurfing on a tiny screen.
    It’s not like a laptop where you can actually get stuff done.

    A tablet, let’s say the size of a KIndle 2, would be *perfect*.
    The usefulness of a laptop with the unobtrusiveness of an iPhone — Kindle 2s *do* fit in your pocket.

    So yeah, an Apple iPad would SO-HO-HOOOO rock !
    But $800 fuckin’ beans ?
    C’mon, Steve …. you can’t do $350-400, somethin’ like that ?

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