iHomeās new iW2 ($200) is an AirPlay-enabled speaker that allows you to send audio from any iOS (4.2 and up) device right to it with the click of a button. It has finally untethered me from my white-wired earbuds, and transformed my living room into a place of musical bliss.
Do you yearn for the time when your music required a hulking great box to play it? When that music came not in convenient playlists but separated out onto various discs and mechanical cartridges (aka ātapesā)? Do you wish to relive those wonderful days of the Midi System, the Mini System and even, back in the depths of the 1970s, the Music Center?
Then youāre in luck. By applying the latest in touch-screen technology and cutting edge software design, you can now have all the inconvenience of old-school recorded music rendered with the convenience of multi-touch. Behold: The BeatBlaster.
Arqball Spin is a curious mix of hardware and software, with a very niche but very cool purpose: to create interactive 3-D photos. By combining an iOS app with a hardware turntable, Arqball is able to āfilmā a spinning object and then render it as a touchable 3-D model which can be spun using your fingers.
Apple recently began prompting users to select three security questions for their iTunes Store accounts. The move helps to ensure that youāre the authorized account holder if you have problems or forget your password.
The idea is well intentioned and a sensible protection for Apple and its customers. Unfortunately, Appleās way of rolling out these security questions and the questions themselves highlight the old adage about the way to hell being paved with good intentions.
For a few people, Dark Sky is going to be the most useful weather app ever
As an Englishman, I know all about rain. Iām intimate with sleet, drizzle, and driving rain both horizontal and vertical. I know about rain that slowly soaks you even though it seems that none is falling, about freezing rain that stings as hard as hail, about the rain that seems to ignore your umbrella and creep into even the best-sealed seams of your clothes.
Other countries might have spectacular monsoons, or driving rainstorms that flow for days, but for variety and ubiquity of precipitation, itās hard to beat the British Isles. Which is why Iām sad that Dark Sky ā an app that predicts the rain forecast for the next hour only ā currently only works in the continental United States.
Microsoft changes Windows licensing rules to spur Windows RT tablet sales
Microsoft is using its home field advantage in the business market to alter the playing field between its upcoming low cost Windows RT tablets (formerly called Windows on ARM or WOA tablets) and the iPad. To date, the iPad has been the business and enterprise tablet of choice and that gives Apple a significant leg up over competing Windows RT tablets.
Aiming to neutralize that advantage, Microsoft has written Windows 8 licensing for enterprise organizations in a way that makes supporting the iPad and other non-Microsoft devices more expensive ā essentially penalizing companies that opt for the iPad and want to use a virtual desktop (VDI) solution such as those from Citrix and VMWare for remote access to a Windows desktop.
SkyDrive is even better on iOS with the app's latest update.
With the widely-rumored Google Drive service set to launch sometime this week, its rivals are scrambling to ensure they still have the upper hand when it comes to cloud-based storage. Weāve already seen an update to Dropbox this week, and now Microsoft is bringing new features to its SkyDrive app for iOS.
In addition to support for the iPad and its high-resolution Retina display, SkyDrive 2.0 also offers a number of handy new features.
Photogene is like Lightroom and Photoshop rolled into one. Now with Retina support
Photoshop Touch is a great iPad app, but itās tightly focused on quickly gussying up your images and sharing them to the Facebook. To replicate the desktop Photoshop experience on your iPad you need to go somewhere else, and for me that āsomewhere elseā is Photogene, which this weekend was updated to v3.4. There are a few other additions, but the main new feature is compatibility with the new iPadās Retina Display.
Meet Cargo-Bot, the first game to ever be made on the Apple tablet it was created for.
App studio Two Lives Left has launched its first App Store game for the iPad, called Cargo-Bot. What makes this release different from the thousands of other iPad games that came before it? Well, Cargo-Bot is the worldās first game to be coded entirely on an iPad itself.
Using a coding app for the iPad they created prior to Cargo-Bot, the guys from Two Lives Left designed and coded their new game on the iPadās 9.7-inch screen.
Meet Sharleen ā the terrifying quadrocopter that youāll want on your side during Armageddon or the impending zombieĀ apocalypse. Made by the guys at FPSRussia, Sharleen is a modified quadrocopter that has been equipped with a submachine and a 100-round magazine. Sharleen is built to thrill and kill, and itās also completely controlled with an iPad so you can squash your enemies from the comfort of your lazy boy while mayhem spreads on your city streets. Just check out how insane this robot is in the video below.
Broncos opt for iPad-PlayerLync app combo (photo by Denver Post)
Over the past two years, the iPad has shown up in a wide variety of workplaces. Some of those iPad at work are areas the come immediately to mind like salespeople using iPads to demo solutions and prepare quotes on the fly. Other places are ones that you might never expect like large combines in industrial agriculture.
One of the most recent employers to embrace the iPad is the Denver Broncos. The football team will replace its existing paper playbooks with iPads.
Pop creates a dead simple writing environment on the iPhone and iPad.
Minimalism is a fascinating thing. Our world is getting increasingly loud and busy, yet many are starting to want more minimal and distraction-free experiences. Apps specifically are another way that the minimalism trend can be observed; more and more applications are getting back to the roots by cutting away superfluous effects and features.
Pop is a perfect example of how minimalism manifests itself in a basic iOS app. Unlike other writing apps for the iPhone and iPad, Pop is just a blank pad to jot down text. Nothing else. Nothing at all⦠But really, thatās all there is.
Sony's latest speaker dock not only looks good, but it also packs some impressive features.
Sony has announced two new all-in-one speaker docks for the iPhone, iPad, and iPod today, which claim to be the worldās first speakers to use magnetic fluid for dampening. Both devices also feature built-in DAB radios and CD players, while one also offers wireless Bluetooth connectivity and your own light show.
Microsoft plans to expand Intune to manage iOS devices
Microsoft has decided to jump into the mobile management marketplace. The company has announced plans to retool its Intune cloud-based desktop management service to manage iPhones, iPads, and some Android devices. The news follows RIMās similar decision to include iOS and Android management in the new BlackBerry Mobile Fusion console that it designed for its PlayBook tablet.
Microsoftās Brad Anderson, corporate vice president of the companyās management and security division division showed off the new version of Intune at Microsoft Management Summit (MMS) in Las Vegas. Andersonās presentation, however, wasnāt able to illustrate Intuneās upcoming iOS management capabilities because the iPhone used in his demo failed to perform properly with the Intune release being used ā an event that The Register reported as seeming āas though the spirit of Steve Jobs was in the room.ā
Month view in Awesome Calendar - but where's the new event button?
Awesome Calendar is a Google Calendar client for iOS, priced at three dollars on the iOS App Store (although a free Lite version is also available). Is it as awesome as its name implies? I wouldnāt say so.
The Audio Cube really is a go-anywhere Bluetooth speaker
Way back in the dark days of the 1990s, when smartphones had styluses and mobile apps were made from Java, I yearned for a way to stream music from my Sony Ericsson P900 to my stereo via Bluetooth. At the time, it was impossible.
Fast forward to the present day (by drilling down through several hard-to-navigate menus and hitting the tiny āskipā button with the tip of the stylus) and there is an embarrassment of choice. These days Iād rather pick up my JamBox and carry it into the living room rather than fire up the proper stereo thatās already in there.
Joining this wealth of wirelessness is the Audio Cube from Satechi, an inexpensive, pocket-sized Bluetooth speaker with all of the features youād expect.
The iPad is hands-down, one of the best platforms to play video games on. Games just seem to envelop you in a wave of child-like wonder once you start playing. One of our favorite types of iPad apps are Tower Defense games that force users to employ strategy combined with realtime action. There are hundreds of games out there, but one of the coolest and unique games weāve played isĀ Tesla WarsĀ by Synaptic Wave.
The padcaster turns your iPad 3 into a movie-making powerhouse. Photo The Verge
Remember the Padcaster? It was a photography rig made to turn the new iPad into a shallow-focusing movie camera, and it was [teased](https://www.cultofmac.com/156157/padcaster-turns-new-ipad-into-shallow-focusing-movie-camera/) by the makers Manhattan Edit Workshop last month. Now, the Padcaster has been revealed at NAB 2012, and it is just what we thought it would be ā a way to mount big lenses on the iPad 3 and turn it onto a movie camera.
Larry Ellison acknowledged recently that Oracle considered buying RIM
One of the interesting tidbits to emerge from testimony during Oracle panent infringment trial against Google is that Oracle had considered producing its own smartphone and buying either RIM or Palm. The testimony came from Oracle chief Larry Ellison, who was a close personal friend of Steve Jobs. Ellison is, in fact, quoted as describing their relationship as ābest friendsā in Walter Isaacsonās biography of Jobs.
The news raises some interesting questions ā not the least of which are whether Jobs knew of the plan and what impact Oracle jumping into the smartphone game against the iPhone might have had on their friendship. Jobs was obsessed with the idea that Google and its former CEO Eric Schmidt (also a former Apple board member) had ripped off Appleās iOS design work in creating Android.
As you may know, Apple is being targeted by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission for calling the new iPad ā4G-capableā when Australia not only doesnāt have any LTE networks, it will never have LTE networks compatible with the new iPad.
Appleās already changed the wording on its website in response to the complaints to make it clear that Australian customers buying an iPad WiFi + 4G are only getting HSPA+ speeds at best, but that may not be good enough. Regulators are now targeting Apple in a lawsuit over their use of the term 4G, and Appleās already preparing its defense.
That defense? That 4G doesnāt actually refer to any specific technology, but is just a marketing term. And honestly, at this point, thatās about right?
PicPlayPost makes diptycs from your photos and movies
PicPlayPost is supposedly a way to make video diptychs of your precious moments, and then share them via the usual social networks. But if you grew up in (or otherwise managed to live through) the 1980s, youāll know exactly what this app is for: remaking the cheesy title sequences of 1980s TV shows like Dallas.
Popular music recognition app Shazam released a standalone music player for the iPhone back in January. The app lets you scan your iPhoneās library and play back tracks with Shazamās lyric service, LyricPlay. You can also queue tracks and create playlists specifically for the Shazam Player.
As of today Shazam has updated its music player app for the iPad. The latest update packs LyricPlay and Retina graphics.
Featuring the original Apple logo designed by Ron Wayne, this iPad case is fit for kings.
Holy crap. Check out this amazing custom iPad cover Redditor 44 Oz. had made for him by Australian-based leatherworking firm High On Glue, made with premium leather, suede lining, a kangaroo leather spine and embossed with the original Apple logo designed by Ron Wayne back in 1976, featuring Sir Isaac Newton resting under an Apple tree.
I donāt usually like folio-style cases, but Iām sliming myself with thick ropes of drool here. Covetous ropes of drool. This is a thing of beauty. Beat the rush and go give High On Glue your business, theyāre going to be backed-up for months after this case goes viral.
Apperian's app management system now let's employees help develop company apps
Mobile app management company Apperian announced two new features for companies looking to expand the use of iOS, Android, and BlackBerry apps as part of an overall mobile strategy. One feature aims to connect end Ā users within a company with IT staff and developers for collaboration on new and existing apps. The other is designed to give employees an easy way to rate and comment on apps already in use.
Apperian provides app management and deployment services for business and enterprise customers. The companyās EASE platform allows IT to create internal app stores showcasing both internal apps and public apps that are available through the iOS App Store. The company also provides a range of related services including the ability to push out apps and updates to devices over the air.
With the right iOS tools, IT pros can manage a datacenter from anyplace
The iPhone and iPad are great mobile work solutions for many professions and IT is no exception. With the right collection of apps, virtually every IT job role can become mobile. Systems administrators, user interface designers, and even help desk agents can use their iOS devices to keep tabs on the technologies that they manage and resolve problem at any time from almost anyplace.
IT tools for iOS cover a wide range of ground from basic remote access to network diagramming. Here are a set of tools that no IT department should be without.