Lkahney - page 2

Moving to WordPress — And A New RSS Feed

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Later tonight I’ll be moving the Cult of Mac blog to WordPress, which means there’ll be less outages, less spam and less squinting at the teeny weeny type.

The blog is currently run on b2evolution, which has some nice features and has been pretty straightforward to use, but unfortunately has a serious spam problem. B2evolution is not much good managing comments and attracts a ton of spam. It’s the number one problem b2evo users complain about, and maddeningly, there’s no easy fix.

In addition, the b2evo developer community is small and there’s not many plugins and extras keeping it current. It’s also a hackers’ system. If you’re happy tinkering with code, this system’s for you. But I’m not, and it isn’t.

WordPress, on the other hand, seems to be a very slick. It’s mature and flexible and it’s going places. It’s 20-times more popular than b2evo, and already I’ve benefetted from a fantastic B2evo-to-WP import script, and a lot of easy-to-follow setup tutorials — the kind of stuff that popularity brings.

The big problem is the old RSS feed, which will no longer work.

The new RSS WordPress feed can be found here, though it may be an hour or two before it’s working:

https://cultofmac.com/?feed=rss2

Get Real Audiophile Sound From an iPod

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It is possible to get audiophile quality sound out of an iPod, but probably not from Apple’s iPod Hi-Fi boombox, says technologist Tim Bray.

“I gather that on stage today, Mr. Jobs freely flung about the word ‘audiophile’ while pitching the new iPod Hi-Fi. Well, I’m one of those: wrote for the mags, have gear from obscure British manufacturers, turn off a fridge thirty feet away to listen. I’ll look forward to giving the Hi-Fi a listen. It seems fantastically dubious that something 43 cm wide, with a listed bass floor of 53Hz (the bottom string on a bass is 42Hz), weighing 6.6kg, and costing $349, could actually produce ‘audiophile’ sound.”

Bray, Sun’s Director of Web Technologies, suggests instead plugging in a good pair of in-ear canalphones. Bray recommends Etymotics or Shure. I have a pair of Xtrememac FS1, which have heartier bass than the Shure or Etymotic. But Bray says most important of all…

… get your music off CDs and use lossless compression. The D/A in an iPod is really not bad at all; if you send all of the music through it and play it through first-class transducers, you’ll be happy.

All the Web’s Free iPod Porn

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Anna of iPorn Directory (definitely not safe for work) writes via email:

“I wanted to let you know that I’ve started a new site (totally free) that indexes all of the web’s free iPod porn — https://www.iporndirectory.com.

There are videos and links to podcasts, etc. as well as reviews and ratings of each site.

I started this site for fun, after getting my video iPod and finding out how difficult it was to find porn in mp4 format!”

StevesOutfit.com

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Stevesoutfit is a website where you can buy a wardrobe just like Steve’s — all three items of it.

The site is an Amazon affiliate with links to a black St. Croix shirt, a pair of Levi 501s, and New Balance 991 sneakers.

The best part? The email link at bottom right that says, “Click here to sue.”

Apple Buys Huge Data Center — For iFlix Perhaps?

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Apple has bought a giant data center in Newark, Calif., the San Jose Business Journal reports:

The 107,000-square-foot facility, originally conceived for communications company MCI WorldCom before getting mothballed after its 2001 completion…

… Data centers generally house computing, data-storage and networking equipment assisting in Web-based services and transactions.

… Apple, with Mr. von Thaden’s assistance, also just signed deals for the entire 116,830-square-foot office complex at 10400-10450 Ridgeview Ct. in Cupertino. This includes about 56,315 square feet leased directly from property owner Grosvenor International (represented by Brad Martin and Rich Hardy of Cushman & Wakefield) and 60,515 subleased from IBM (represented by CBRE’s Frank Friedrich, Don Lonsinger and Doug Beck).

A datacenter this size seems like overkill for .Mac. Perhaps it’ll house Apple’s widely-expected iFlix online movie store?

Photo shows an XServe RAID cluster at University of Wisconsin, courtesy of alienRAID.org.

iFixit Guide For MacBook Pro

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iFixit has published a disassembly guide for the new MacBook Pro.

iFixit publishes a series of Fixit Guides for Apple laptop owners who want to fix their own machines. iFixit makes the guides in the hope customers will buy the spare parts from them. The guides are exceptional — well illustrated and very clear.
IFixit’s CEO Kyle Wiens writes:

We made some notes in the Guide about new and interesting things. Here’s the highlights:

* All major parts are new, and not backwards-compatible with
PowerBooks. This specifically includes the hard drive (SATA 9mm), and
the SuperDrive (4x Matsushita 9.5mm vs the previous 8x 12.7mm drive).
* I think Apple’s using Intel’s 945PM chipset (see
https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/85.1.16.html)
* Apple is using an Intel SATA controller
* The processor is soldered on, so it will be more difficult to
upgrade than the socketed Intel iMac
* The RAM is new, PC2-5300 DDR2
* Speedy 667 MHz bus and 2MB cache on the Core Duo
* The case is easier to get into than the PowerBook G4 15″.
Replacing some parts, like the hard drive or superdrive, will be easier.
Others are about the same, like the keyboard and display.
* Airport and bluetooth are on two separate cards again (they were
previously combined)
* Apple put temperature sensor boards on the heatsink and lower case
assembly:

* iSight, infrared, and bluetooth are all USB.
* The internal case design is different from the PowerBook G4, but
not extensively so. I can tell it was inspired by a combination of the
15″ and 17″ designs.

I’m curious to see what people come up with off the part numbers on
the inside chips. We posted hi-res photos of the logic board:
Logic board top
Logic board bottom

MacBook chip detail

Will Kevin Rose Strike Again?

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On the eve of Macworld, who totally nailed the products Steve Jobs unveiled? Was it Think Secret, or Mac Rumors?

No. It was Kevin Rose, founder of Digg and a former presenter of the Screen Savers TV show.

The night before Jobs unveiled the intel iMac and the MacBook Pro, Rose had it all, including the pissy iPod FM radio/remote.

Rose also claimed to have been tipped off to the iPod nano two days before his Jobness pulled it from his hat.

Will Rose and his secret tipster bag Apple’s “fun products” event on Tuesday morning?

Photo of Rose and friends at Macworld pinched from Leo Laporte.

An Apple Store in Second Life

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There’s an Apple retail store in the Second Life virtual world that sells iPods, iMacs and even Newtons.

Trent Lapinski at AppleXnet reports:

“Even in an online world the allure of an iPod and those sexy white earbuds exists. Much like the Apple Store down the street, there is an user created Apple Store in the online world of SecondLife. At the store one can purchase wannabe Macs that display video, as well as iPods, or even a Newton.”

Run by Linden Labs, Second Life is a massive 3-D virtual world filled with buildings and objects built by its “residents.” Its “Linden dollar” economy is worth about $2 million a month, according to Wikipedia.

Inside the Apple Store in Second Life

Infoworld Agrees: OS X “Threats” Overblown

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It’s nice for once not to be utterly alone in my opinions.

Earlier this week I wrote the recent security “threats” to OS X are overblown in a column entitled Mac Attacks a Load of Crap.

Most people disagreed. John Dvorak, for example, says malware is “good news for Mac users because now security holes will be fixed early, and users will learn to become aware of these things. It’s a little bit like getting the mumps. You do not want to get this ailment as an adult.”

But veteran tech reporter Tom Yager at Infoworld, who’s as sober and levelheaded as they come, says the panic is much ado about nothing. He writes:

“… rather than marking the first viruses to infiltrate the Mac OS X fortress, as many press reports claimed, the vulnerabilities are among many potential security risks that Apple continuously and proactively tracks. Furthermore, the “critical” label affixed to the viruses by security vendors are alarmist, inciting a code-red threat level for potential security risks that Mac users can avoid through commonsense precautions.

A media feeding frenzy has erupted over the OS X Leap.A worm and the Safari browser filesystem metadata proof-of-concept exploit. It is a nonstory that has been given legs by virus software vendors that get their names in the papers by branding as extremely critical malware that’s been harmless to date — the very same vendors that then admit that one check box’s worth of tilting the balance between convenience and safety is all that’s required.”

Another Phony iPod — But Pretty!

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Also in the comments to the MacShrine post below is a link to a news story about this obviously phony iPod/Newton hybrid, which purports to sport a 260GB hard drive, runs “OS X for Handhelds,” is loaded with a bunch of lite iLife aps, and has WiFi and Bluetooth.

Wasn’t this posted a couple of years ago to the iLounge mockup galleries or The Apple Collection? I don’t have time to go look, but I’m sure I’ve seen this before.

Anyway, from the MacShrine comments comes the following translation:

G5 (imagine display? I guess it’s a new apple product line)

260GB 128MB FLASH EPROM
capacity:260GB, stores 1202000songs; 128MB FLASH EPROM

500MHz
CPU: Motorola Dragonball 500MHZ

MAC OS X for Handhelds 7.1
OS:MAC OS X for Handhelds 7.1

Safari 1.1 Quicktime player Handheld Editon 7.1 iTunes 5 Address Book 1.3 iPhoto 4 Handheld Editon Salling Cliker 2.1 Apple Media Manager 2.1
Firmware software: Safari 1.1 Quicktime player Handheld Editon 7.1 iTunes 5 Address Book 1.3 iPhoto 4 Handheld Editon Salling Cliker 2.1 Apple Media Manager 2.1

WiFi
Connectivity: Wifi, bluetooth, firewire

[ ]
The dude’s name. Mr. Liu

Spy Shots of iPod Video — Good, But No Cigar — Photoshop!

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Is this picture from MacShrine the new video iPod — the one that may be unveiled next Tuesday at Apple’s secret “fun products” event?

One analysis at Flickr pegs the pic as genuine — the reflections on the edges match up, and the light bleeding through the label is hard to fake.

But at MacShrine, most commentators think it’s phony. One says:

“Good way to check authenticity in Photoshop is to remove distracting color information, and make the image B&W. Then adjust the Levels in real-time, this usually highlights copy and paste: luminosity is often a problem for fakers. The horizontal black line at top and bottom of the screen and the two black areas are much darker than any other black in the picture, this points towards fake: i.e. the colour screen in the middle being pasted in.

The light blooms around the bright whites are well done if faked, as are the red and cyan colour illuminating the sticker.”

Another Engadget commentator adds:

“I am 95% sure this is a fake.

The artist mirrored an ipod video to get black around the edges, and cloned the middle. Then overlayed a colorbars photo and painted the diffusion. If you gamma-up, you will see the erasure of the dense blacks in the color bars, revealing the lifted blacks of the ipod video screen. If you gamma-down, the whites crush and reveal weird artifacts. FAKE.

The quality of the handwritting is amature – not the way someone who is fluent in chinese would write it.”

Perhaps this pic from TechEBlog is the real thing? The comment consensus over there though is that it’s a pocket mirror or some such trickery.

Or is this it?

Is This Why Apple Recalls Bad Batteries?

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This is what an exploded PowerBook battery looks like. You wouldn’t want that in your lap when it happens.

Unfortunately, I’ve no idea how it happened. The pictures were posted to the forums at 99Mac, a Swedish website. Not only do the forums require a lengthy registration procedure, they’re in Swedish.

However, there’s a post about it in German at Fscklog, which when translated with Babelfish says:

“A Forumsthread with 99mac (registration necessarily) shows pictures of a PowerBook Akkus exploded. The associated text is in, to that extent Swedish held I unfortunately not too smart from it, was hurt however hopefully nothing and nobody. Whether the Akku was part of Apples of last recall action, might be able to be determined with the current density hardly posthum. It obviously concerned in June 2005 acquired 1,67GHz a PowerBook G4.”

UPDATE: Adrian from 99mac kindly translated the original forum post. Here’s the full, terrifying story!

“The PowerBook G4 1,67 MHz was bought on the 16th of June 2005. It was the best thing he ever bought until the incident happend about two weeks ago. The PowerBook was charging and he was in his bed when he heard a sound, like when you pour water in a hot fry-pan. A thick white smoke rose from the PowerBook. He pulls the power cord quickly and removes the battery with a coin. When he lifts the PowerBook there are burn marks on the desk. There are also burn marks indicating flames from the ports on the right side of the PowerBook.

With a towel he carries the still smoking battery to the kitchen. The smoke doesn’t feel healthy, so he opens a window. He went back to the PowerBook to check it out, but it doesn’t take long until he hears more sounds from the kitchen. He rushes in to the kitchen just in time to see a large flame, about half a meter high, bursting from the battery! More smoke, but after that flame it doesn’t happen anything else, and the battery is cool an hour and a half later.

He points out that he has received good response from Apple (Store). They cared about the problem and was serious about it. He got to talk to people up the chain. Maybe he’ll get a MacBook Pro instead, although he says he’d actually prefers the tested G4 over a rev. A MacBook Pro. But Apple hasn’t decided yet how to compensate him.

The serial number on the battery was destroyed, so he couldn’t check it against Apple’s list of recalled batteries, but he bought it after those problem should have ended.

No one got hurt this time, but he says he doesn’t want to think about what would have been the result if this would have happened when he had the PowerBook in his lap or if he wasn’t at home at the time.”

What’s Inside the Nano?

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There’s a nifty iPod teardown at MIT Technology Review showing the internal components of the weeny player. Unfortunately, there’s no direct link — Hit the “Click here” link in the last paragraph.

Media Mac Mockup

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The latest mockup Mac from amateur Apple designer Isamu Sanada is a reimagining of the Mac mini with iBook styling.

There’s no info on Sanada’s site, but I guess this is how he imagines the anticipated media Mac will look. Maybe we’ll see it at Apple’s “fun products” launch event next Tuesday.

Mac Media Cube?

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UPDATE: I’m kinda late to clue into this, but as Trent Lapinsky of AppleXnet pointed out in the comments, this looks suspiciously like one of Apple’s Design Award trophies. Thanks Trent!

MacDailyNews has a totally fishy but intriguing picture of what purports to be an Apple-branded media cube.

Supposedly, the blurry picture was snapped with a camera-phone and sent to the site anonymously with the following note:

“I was only able to snap one quick shot of this as I was only in there for about 30 seconds. I sort of stumbled upon it – can’t say more about how or why. I only got about half a sec to look around back – there are a bunch of ports (and maybe a button or two) neatly arranged on the back (?) of the cube in a line along the bottom edge. It’s about 8-inches square and 8-inches tall – a perfect cube. It seems to be made out of a similar material as a Power Mac – aluminum perforated with a round hole pattern, but they’re smaller holes than found on a Power Mac. The top is the same material as the sides with the addition of the Apple logo, even though it doesn’t look like it in the photo – I had to snap it quick, sorry.

I don’t have any real detail on exactly what it’s designed to do, but I know from other things I can’t mention that it’s media-related. Apple “Media Cube,” maybe? Anyway, thought you guys would be interested.

iTab Tablet Pricey and Crippled, But Plays Motion-Sensing Games

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With all the speculation about a tablet Mac from Apple, it may soon be possible to buy one from a small company that plans to convert a batch of iBooks into tablets.

Though it has not yet been built, the iTab is a 12-inch iBook with the screen removed and the keyboard replaced with a touch-sensitive screen. The company plans build 100 iTabs as it sells them on eBay, starting at $1,500.

According to the iTab website:

“The iTab is built one at a time from modified Apple iBooks. It has the same specs and hardware as the originating iBook (except for the touchscreen and the lack of keyboard, trackpad, and one less USB port). Its screen will be fastened to the body of the originating iBook, making it more durable. The width and depth of the iTab is the same as the iBook. Its height should also be the same, but might vary slightly.

As well as missing a bunch of hardware, the iTab will have no warranty (Apple’s not going to fix it) and the touch-screen doesn’t work with Apple’s highly-regarded InkWell handwriting recognition, which seems like a major drawback. Isn’t that one of the key features of a tablet? To enter text, users are recommended to buy the KeyStrokes virtual keyboard.

There is one cool feature though. Thanks to the iBook’s built-in sudden-motion sensors, which are designed to park the hard drive heads in the event of a fall, the iTab will play the Labyrin3D maze game simply by moving it up and down and backwards and forwards in space. (You can also play the same way on any of Apple’s new laptops, but you won’t have to deal with the screen flapping about).

Labyrin3D motion-sensing game

First Mac OS X Worm a Wake-Up Call

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UPDATE: There’s a lot of debate about whether this is a real worm, or merely an elaborate, executable script that the user is tricked into running. It appears to be a worm — it’s self-containing code that replicates itself over the Net (def.). But it also requires the user to agree to accept it as an iChat file transfer, which is a Trojan trait. It does not require the user to enter a password to be installed, like an OS X application. Nor does it warn the user they may be dealing with an executable file, as Safari does when downloading software off the Net. So it’s more than a simple script-kiddie Applescript. Also, it may be mostly harmless now, but will likely lead to much nastier versions in the future, according to this analysis from the programmers at Rixstep: “Future versions of the same worm or spin-offs from it are bound to be destructive and much more intrusive. By exploiting several weaknesses in Apple’s file system, (Leap-A) and its successors will work.”

One more thing: there was talk a while back that Apple’s move to Intel chips would make the platform more susceptible to malware like this. But Leap-A is a PowerPC worm. Does that make Intel-Macs invulnerable? Will it run in Rosetta?

Oh yeah, the graphic comes from the Symantec website.

The first Mac OS X malware has been spotted in the wild, but it appears to be something of a damp squib.

Called Leap-A by anti-virus companies, the worm appears as a JPEG file that spreads via iChat to contacts on the infected user’s buddy list.

According to a Symantec press release:

The worm makes use of the Spotlight search program, included in OSX, and will run each time the machine boots. It identifies any applications being started, and if iChat begins to run, the worm uses iChat to send the infected file — latestpics.tgz — to all contacts on the infected user’s buddy list. Those on the buddy list will then be asked to accept the file. If they do, the file will subsequently be saved to their hard drive. Files infected by OSX.Leap.A may be corrupted and may not run correctly.

There is some disagreement about what the worm does. Anti-virus firm Sophos says it deletes files and leaves other “non-infected” files on the computer. An email press release from Computer Malware Enumeration says it “prevents Macintosh OS X from working properly and infected applications from launching correctly.”

Nonetheless, Leap-A appears to be the first OS X malware “in the wild.” A previous OS X nasty — a Trojan horse dubed MP3Concept — turned out to be a proof of concept only.

Leap-A first appeared earlier this week as a link on the forums of Mac Rumors that purported to be spy screenshots of Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard).

Symantec classes the worm is a low threat because it doesn’t automatically infect other’s machines. The company says it has infected less than 50 machines.

“… this worm will not automatically infect, but will ask users to accept the file, giving potential victims a heads up and the opportunity to avoid infection,” the company said. “The important piece of advice for any iChat users running OSX 10.4 is not to accept file transfers, even if they come from someone on a buddy list.”

However, as CME notes in its statement, the worm is a wake-up call for OS X users with a false sense of OS X’s invulnerability: “Now that Leap.A has been discovered in the wild, copycat media-craving individuals will likely launch similar attacks in 2006.”

If Apple’s Working on a Tablet PC, Here’s Video of What the Interface Should Look Like

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There’s talk over at ThinkSecret that the next video iPod may feature a big screen covering the entire front of the device. The screen will be touch-sensitive, allowing the iPod to be controlled by a virtual click wheel that will appear when a finger brushes the screen.

Apple was recently granted several touch-screen patents. The filings (here, here and here) include illustrations of a hand making circular motions as if it were using an iPod clickwheel.

But the patents may also refer to a tablet PC. They mention rotating and centering pages, zooming in and out of documents — and recognizing complex gestures from multiple touch points on the screen — all of which sounds like a multipoint gesture interface developed at NYU.

In New York, researchers have created a working prototype of an amazing touch-screen interface for a computer that, unlike most touch screens, supports multiple touch points — or multiple people.

Running on OS X, the interface is reminiscent of Steven Spielberg’s fictional, gesture-based UI in Minority Report — but much cooler.

In a demonstration video (You Tube link), a user can be seen rearranging digital pictures scattered across a virtual desktop, and resizing them by squeezing their fingers together or splaying them apart. The user also creates some digital art, zooms in on a map and scoots around, and types rapidly on a virtual keyboard.

I’m not a tablet expert, but all the tablet PCs I’ve seen present a standard UI with some gesture controls, substituting the mouse cursor for a greasy finger.

The NYU research seems like a radical rethink — a real haptic interface, appropriate to hand control.

There’s been lots of rumors of an Apple tablet lately. If it has this kind of interface — it’d be a killer.

(Via Robot Wisdom)

Woz, Hardware Philosophy and Philonumerical Triumphs

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Picture courtesy of Geek Culture.

There’s a couple of data points about today’s Cult of Mac column on Wired News that didn’t make the cut because of length, so I’ll post them here.

The column concludes with an anecdote about the opposing design philosophies of Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs. While Woz advocated open, commodity hardware, Jobs pursued closed, proprietary designs. And this of course, is the story of the PC industry. While Intel-compatible PC makers developed a standard, open hardware platform, Apple plowed a closed, proprietary route.

Apple has always been criticized for this, of course, but Woz eventually came to sympathize with Jobs’ approach. As he told Macworld in an interview:

“… I see two things that make Apple successful now where others aren’t. They are really a tight monopoly. They’re a hardware monopoly, and there’s no hardware monopoly on the other side. So that gives them some advantages in control and in pricing to have profits. A company isn’t going to be a good company and really develop better and better things if it can barely squeak by and doesn’t have good profits. Apple can have the profits that it needs to make these great, exciting products that are steps forward, instead of just kind of sitting in the competitive consumer throwaway product category everyone else is.”

The other thing I’d like to have included in the column is the delightful story Gary Wolf tells at the end of his insightful Wired magazine profile of Woz from 1998. The tale is the most appropriate I’ve read about the man:

“Among his other activities, Woz collects phone numbers, and his longtime goal has been to acquire a number with seven matching digits… after more months of scheming and waiting, he had it: 888-8888. This was his new cell-phone number, and his greatest philonumerical triumph.

The number proved unusable. It received more than a hundred wrong numbers a day. Given that the number is virtually impossible to misdial, this traffic was baffling. More strange still, there was never anybody talking on the other end of the line. Just silence. Or, not silence really, but dead air, sometimes with the sound of a television in the background, or somebody talking softly in English or Spanish, or bizarre gurgling noises. Woz listened intently.

Then, one day, with the phone pressed to his ear, Woz heard a woman say, at a distance, “Hey, what are you doing with that?” The receiver was snatched up and slammed down.

Suddenly, it all made sense: the hundreds of calls, the dead air, the gurgling sounds. Babies. They were picking up the receiver and pressing a button at the bottom of the handset. Again and again. It made a noise: “Beep beep beep beep beep beep beep.”

The children of America were making their first prank call.

And the person who answered the phone was Woz.”

Public Radio Interview About iPod Nation

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An interview I did with the charming Dr. Moira Gunn of Tech Nation about iPod mania, iPod culture, and my Cult of iPod book is currently airing on various NPR stations. Dr. Gunn is such a skilled interviewer, she even makes a stuttering idiot like me sound reasonable.

The interview is also available as an MP3 download from the IT Conversations website.

Turn iPod Earbuds Into a Cell Phone Headset

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The Blueye is a clever iPod/PSP accessory that turns your earbuds into a cell phone headset.

Pair the Bluetooth device with your cell phone and plug it in between your iPod and your earbuds.

When a call comes in, the Blueye mutes the music, and a built-in microphone transmits your voice. The Blueye has voice recognition — answer a call with a voice command.
When the call’s done, the music resumes.

It has standard 3.5mm audio jacks and is compatible with most music players, the company says. It’s available from the UK for about $60 ($100) — the company says it ships overseas.

Blueye detail

New Cheaper Nano: 1 Gig for $150

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The iPod nano is now shipping in a smaller, cheaper version. Available immediately is a 1 Gigabyte model for $150, Apple said in a release.

This is a great deal. The nano is a fully functional iPod and a gorgeous piece of electronic jewelery. With a fabulous little color screen, the 1 gigabyte nano holds up to 240 songs or 15,000 photographs.

Apple also cut the price of the screen-less iPod shuffle: the 512 megabyte version now costs $70 and the 1 gigabyte model costs $100.

Postal Service Video Top of the Pops at iTMS

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Worth noting quickly: The Postal Service’s “Such Great Heights” video is number one on the iTunes Music Store.

Says Bryan Chaffin at MacObserver:

Postal Service may be unhappy with Apple about the shot-for-shot creation of their video made for Apple’s Intel Mac commercial, but the resulting attention has led to that video, originally released in 2003, being the #1 download on Apple’s iTunes Music Store.