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John Brownlee - page 178

New iMacs In March With Sandy Bridge, Improved Resolutions and Standard SSDs [Analysis]

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Apple’s product release cycle can seem mysterious if you’re new to the fold, but old hands know roughly when to expect the next refresh of each of Apple’s product lines. So when the Three Guys and a Podcast blogs say that new iMacs should be due in March, they aren’t really saying anything that MacRumors’ Buyer’s Guide couldn’t tell you.

More interesting than the new Macs in March revelation is some of the other predictions Three Guys and a Podcast have put together: they expect that solid state drives will be coming to all Macs starting this year, loading the OS on one drive while pairing them with larger traditional HDDs for storage. The end result should be much, much speedier Macs all around (trust me on this one: my 27-inch top-of-the-line iMac has collected dust ever since I got my 11-inch MacBook Air).

Additionally, we should see Intel’s new Sandy Bridge processors in this year’s Macs, as well as improved (but not Retina Display) resolutions in the 21.5-inch and 27-inch iMacs, thanks to Apple’s ongoing investments in display technology. A modest refresh for right now, but just wait until the next refresh, when Apple tackles the iMac line with more radical redesigns in mind. I can’t wait.

Verizon iPhone Pricing Is Here

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UPDATE: Apple has pulled the Verizon pricing pages. But they were up long enough to get the details.

The prices for the Verizon iPhone are now here. Here’s what we’re looking at.

Launching in the traditional 16GB (MC676LL/A ) and 32GB (MC678LL/A) varieties, the Verizon iPhone 4 will only come in black, which ends speculation for right now that the CDMA iPhone’s debut would afford Apple an opportunity to launch the long-delayed white iPhone 4.

Available talk plans are 450 minutes of talk time per month for $39.99, 900 minutes per month with unlimited calls to five people for $59.99 per month, and unlimited talk time for $69.99 per month.

As previously discussed, data comes all-you-can-eat for $29.99, with an additional 2GB for tethering available for $49.99 per month.

As for text messages, you can either pay-per-use at the rip-off rate of $0.20 per text and $0.25 per video or picture. Plan-wise, you can either opt for 250 messages for $5 per month, 500 messages for $10 per month, or unlimited for $20 per month.

As with the AT&T models, a 16GB iPhone will cost you $199 subsidized, while the 32GB model will cost $299.

Verizon Personal Hotspot for iPhone Will Cost $20 Per Month With 2GB Cap

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When Verizon announced the iPhone was coming to their network in February, there weren’t many surprises waiting for attendees: the Verizon iPhone had been strongly rumored for years, with those rumors solidifying vagueness into near certainty since November of last year, when the New York Times reported the Verizon iPhone’s imminent arrival as fact. The handset itself wasn’t anything special, just an iPhone 4 with CDMA guts. In fact, about the only thing that surprised everyone was that the Verizon iPhone would operate as a mobile hotspot for up to five other devices over WiFi thanks to a new Personal Hotspot app.

Pretty cool… but Verizon was being tight-lipped about how much it would cost, if anything. Well, wonder no more: Verizon has just confirmed that the feature will cost $20 per month on top of your existing data plan.

Honestly, this isn’t really very surprising. Verizon’s other smartphones also charge $20 for personal hotspot privileges. You may grouse that Verizon’s $30 unlimited data plan for smartphones should cover this — what do they care where your phone is offloading its data to — but in truth, laptops suck up a lot more data than iPhones.

With that in mind, probably the most disappointing aspect of Verizon’s Personal Hotspot plan is that it limits you to only 2GB of data, with each gigabyte ove thatr costing up to $20. Note that Verizon is offering unlimited data to iPhones — which actually use less data than laptops — but enforcing the traditional 2GB cap for more data intensive devices. How backwards.

Pixelmator Makes $1MM+ In Just 20 Days On Mac App Store

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Back in 2008, when Apple first opened the iOS App Store, the Apple headlines were full of basement developers reporting unparalleled, million-plus sales. It was easy to chalk that app shopping frenzy up to iPhone fever, but I wondered: would developers do as well when the Mac App Store launched, especially if they’d been selling their wares on Macs for years?

Apparently so. Pixelmator has just announced that they have chalked up $1 million in their first 20 days on the Mac App Store.

Pixelmator is probably the cream of the crop of Photoshop alternatives. A lightweight image manipulation tool with support for layers, layer groups, gradients, transform tools and even 64-bit optimization, Pixelmator is currently on sale for $29.99 on the Mac App Store… several hundred dollars less than what a copy of Photoshop would cost you, and for most people, almost as good.

It’s a fantastic product for people who want something more elegantly Mac-like than GIMP but who don’t quite need Photoshop’s more esoterically advanced feature set (let alone price). The incredible success Pixelmator is enjoying makes me wonder if we can expect the Mac App Store to turn the spotlight on other lesser known alternatives to prestige apps and turn their developers into over night millionaires.

Apple.com Embraces HTML5 With Sleek New Redesign

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As it sometimes does, the Apple Store went down in the wee hours of the morning, its virtual space on the Internet reserved by the yellow post-it — inscrutable sometimes-harbinger of new products — that we all know so well.

When the post-it was yanked off, though, Apple.com wasn’t host to a line of new products, but rather a darker and glossier HTML5 redesign.

Office for Mac 2011 Now Available For 30 Day Free Trial

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Office for Mac 2011 is without a doubt a huge improvement over the frankly terrible 2004 and 2008 versions, but when you’ve been burned twice before, it’s hard to justify dropping $150 to find out.

Now Microsoft sends word that they’re doing something smart and offering a free 30 day trial of the entire Office for Mac 2011 productivity suite, giving unfettered access to Word, PowerPoint, Excel and Outlook 2011.

The download is around 900MB and requires an Intel-based Mac and 2.5GB of space. It can be found on Microsoft’s Office of Mac trial download page.

It’s hard to really recommend a software suite like Office for Mac, especially when there’s free alternatives like Open Office. That said, if you can justify the money and you need what it’s offering, Office for Mac 2011 is a surprisingly excellent suite that feels right at home on the Mac operating system. Why not give it a try?

Verizon Updating 4G Modem Drivers To Work With Mac

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Back in early December as Verizon began to roll out its next generation LTE mobile broadband network in the United States, they offered customers their first taste of 4G not in a handset but with a USB modem, the LG VL600.

The only problem? It didn’t work on the Mac. That earned our ire at the time, since Verizon had suggested that 4G was what was going to “earn” them the iPhone.

Obviously, 4G wasn’t what brought the iPhone 4 to Verizon — it’s 3G only, just like the AT&T model — but it’s still nice to hear that Verizon intends on fixing the LG VL600 to work with Mac through new drivers, just in time for the sudden onslaught of Apple faithful who will be rushing to the network at the beginning of next month.

Next-Gen Peel 520 Turns Your iPod Touch Into A 2G iPhone 4

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Last year, the Apple Peel 520 came along, a neat little kludge of a case that would turn your jailbroken iPod Touch into something a little more iPhone-ish thanks to a build in cell modem and SIM card slot. All told, the Peel 520 would allow you to make and receive calls and texts, while even giving a small boost to your Touch’s battery life.

The only problem? The Peel 520 was a bit bulky. Luckily, it seems like the makers of the original Peel did well enough with their product that they’re going ahead with a second-generation version, which is so noticeably sleeker that it could even be mistaken for a regular iPhone 4.

The improvements don’t end there, though. The Peel 520 couldn’t do data, but the new Peel gets GPRS. No one’s going to mistake EDGE speeds for the real iPhone’s 3G, but even so, it’s certainly nice to have in a pinch.

The next-gen Peel don’t have a price or release date yet, but give it a month or two and you’ll be able to find it through the usual Hong Kong importers soon enough.

Smash Zombies To Atoms On Your Mac With Atom Zombie Smasher

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The Mac and iOS platforms are no stranger to games in which it is up to the player to fight off the zombie apocalypse, whether with a shotgun or a collection of cheerily bobbing anthropomorphic plants.

Atom Zombie Smasher is a different kind of zombie game entirely though. Sure, it’s Z-Day, but you aren’t the guy in the thick of things: you’re the G-Man watching an entire city go red with the undead from above, ordering your troops to secure city blocks and evacuate citizens, while you do everything you can to make sure you don’t need to deploy the nuclear option. Which you will, and which is half the fun anyway.

A procedurally generated RTS with a wicked sense of humor, Blendo Games’ Atom Zombie Smasher also supports up to four player co-op. If you’re interested, there”s a demo available on the official site to download, and the full version will only cost you $15 more.

Google Cloud Print Allows You To Wirelessly Print From Mobile Safari Gmail

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Despite Steve Jobs’ promise that it would get better, AirPrint is currently only “all that and a bag of chips” for people who happen to be lucky enough to own a few specialized printers.

Google’s not waiting for Apple to get AirPrint together, though. They’ve just announced Google Cloud Print, a new service that allows you to register your network-connected printers with Google’s cloud services and connect them to your Gmail account. Once you’ve done so, you can print email and any attachment that Gmail can read (including HTML, DOC, PDF and more) directly from the Mobile Safari Gmail interface.

The ability to wirelessly print from Gmail using an iOS device is a pretty swank offering, but unfortunately, it’s not really Mac friendly right now. Enabling the feature allows of downloading the latest Chrome beta from the Cloud Print Website on the computer connected to the printer you want to use… but it’s Windows only, and because Chrome for Mac betas tend to lag behind the Windows beats in features, OS X users will have to wait for Google Cloud Print support to come to the platform… a timescale the search giant itself will only commit to as “coming soon.”

White iPhone 4s Now Showing Up In AT&T’s System

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If you’d asked me a couple of months ago if we’d ever see the release of the white iPhone 4, I would have laughed: delaying the white model until just three months before the assumed release of the white iPhone 5 just seemed like an empty promise, and I expected another quiet announcement on Apple’s part once March arrived that the white iPhone 4 had been canceled once and for all.

Looks like I’m going to have to swallow my skepticism: white iPhone 4s are now popping up in AT&T’s system. It appears that the white iPhone is a very real product indeed.

Analyst: Apple Requesting Retina Displays From Suppliers For iPad 3

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After months of warrantless speculation that the iPad 2 would have a Retina Display, sanity seems to finally be sinking in, and even analysts are now beginning to temper their predictions by saying something closer to the truth: while Apple is interested in putting a Retina Display in the iPad, it won’t be coming until at least iPad 3.

According to IDC Analyst Tom Mainelli, Apple’s already working on an iPad with a 2048 x 1536 resolution Retina Display, but it’s not a next-gen device.

“Our sources say Apple has requested that manufacturers begin work on displays with that resolution for the iPad 3,” Maintelli told Digital Arts Online. “[But] “I don’t believe anybody is ready to produce that resolution in volumes at this point. And Apple is going to require huge volumes for the iPad 2.”

T-Mobile: 10% Of Departing Customers Leave For The iPhone

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During a presentation to investors in New York on Thursday, T-Mobile CEO Philipp Humm put an explicit percentage on the so-called iPhone effect: how many T-Mobile subscribers leave every month for AT&T just because of Apple’s smartphone.

According to Humm, the churn rate — or number of contract customers lost per month — is sitting at 2 percent right now. Of that 2% leaving the network, a full ten percent are because customers want the iPhone.

To counter, Humm says that T-Mobile will launch a line of sub-$100 Android smartphones with subscription plans starting at just $10 a month. That doesn’t exactly sound like the plan of a company that thinks it’s going to get the iPhone any time soon, does it?

Worse, it reeks of desperation: you can’t retain customers you’re losing for lack of the best handset on Earth by offering them a cheap deal on some of the crummiest.

Aluminum iMacs Survive Burning, Then Dousing

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When you have to fork over a couple of hundred bills to get your Mac repaired, it can sometimes seem like Apple’s pretty desktops and laptops are too fragile for their own good, blowing apart in the path of a sneeze… but actually, Cupertino’s taken great pains to make them some of the toughest laptops around.

Case in point: during a recent wave of arson in Petaling Jaya, Malaysia, the business of one Mac owner was savagely burned down. All of the items inside were destroyed by the fire, save two: a pair of 20-inch 2007 aluminum iMacs.

Even more amazing? Not only did the iMacs survive the fire, they also continued to operate even after being repeatedly sprayed by the hoses of the local fire constabulary.

It occurs to me this story would be great evidence to pull out next time you’re denied warranty coverage for your Mac at the local Genius Bar. In my experience, Geniuses like to deny coverage for both smoking around your Apple products and getting them wet… both of which at least these two iMacs seemed to be immune to.

[via TUAW]

Evidence Mounts That iPhone 5 Will Have Dual GSM/CDMA Radio

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Now that Verizon finally has the iPhone, it makes sense that eventually Apple will try to consolidate both the Verizon and AT&T specific handsets into a single model. But how? One network is CDMA, the other is GSM. They aren’t compatible.

Long before the Verizon iPhone was confirmed, we’d been hearing whispers about a dual CDMA/GSM radio chip manufactured by Qualcomm that would allow future iPhones to connect to both Verizon and AT&T networks. It now looks extremely likely that Apple will be using this Qualcomm-sourced radio component for future iPhones and iPads, instead of the Infineon hardware currently being used.

iOS 4.3 Beta Hints iPad 2 Might Have Only 1MP Rear Camera

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This is pretty mystifying. 9to5Mac has done some more digging around in the latest iOS 4.3 SDK and found some references to the type of camera sensor the iPad 2 will have. Surprisingly, though, it’s not the 5MP sensor found in the iPhone 4, but instead a much lower resolution camera, most similar to the one in the iPod Touch.

Found in the AVCaptureSession.plist file within the K94 directory is mention of a “Back Facing 1MP Photo” string. K94 is rumored to be the iPad 2’s internal codename.

It’s curious that Apple would chose to go with so few megapixels for the iPad 2. In the latest iPod Touch’s case, the decision to go with a smaller megapixel camera had everything to do with the thinness of the device: the iPod Touch is simply two svelte to fit the iPhone 4’s camera modules into, but with a 0.7MP camera module, they just fit. The iPad 2 is a far thicker device than the iPod Touch, though.

Is Apple just trying to save some money here? Do they not think people will use the iPad 2’s rear camera very much because of the unwieldiness of the tablet form factor? Or, like the iPod Touch, is this an issue of physical footprint?

20% Of All Handsets Sold Are “iPhones” And Other Knock-Offs

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Images of cheap Chinese iPhone knock-offs leaking out of Asia are one of the most fun things to write about as an Apple blogger. Who is actually stupid enough to buy an iPhome 5G from Orange when what they really want is an iPhone from Apple? Who are these laughably crappy clones aimed at?

According to Nokia, the answer to that question is twenty percent of the global phone buying population.

Referred to as KIRFs, these fake phones are a huge problem for traditional handset makers. In fact, at least one out of every five cellphones sold around the world — primarily in Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe — is an illegal or unlicensed clone of a more popular prestige phone… and the actual number may be quite a bit higher.

So next time you see a funny post about the latest iFauxn to come out of Shenzhen, remember: that ridiculous little knock-off and its ilk is probably in just as many pockets around the world as the real iPhone itself.

Turn Your iPhone 4 Transparent With A Torx Screwdriver And Some Paint Thinner

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As it turns out, turning your iPhone 4 transparent is as easy as grabbing yourself a pentalobe Torx screwdriver, opening up your iPhone 4’s chassis and applying paint thinner to the inside of the Gorilla Glass to strip off the black undercoat.

What a great looking mod! Too bad it’s going to wreak havok with your iPhone’s photographs. As you might remember, the white iPhone 4 was delayed because the white inner coating underneath the Gorilla Glass caused light to leak onto the camera sensor, washing out your snapshots… and that all happened with a layer of paint. Imagine how unusable your iPhone 4’s camera will be if the case is totally transparent.