Splashtop, the company behind various remote desktop apps for the iPad, has really outdone itself by porting the entire Windows 8 tablet Metro UI to the iPad. Kinda. While you can swipe away and use all of Windows 8âs gestures and even run your own Apps on there, youâll need a Windows 8 PC to actually stream the apps to the iPad. In reality, itâs just like a virtual desktop app, only with its own native iPad interface.
Apple has always been considered the underdog of the PC industry, although Mac sales have been on an upwards trend for the last few years while the rest of the industry continues to take a nosedive. The iPad is cannibalizing PC sales, and PC manufacturers are starting to concentrate on the smartphone and tablet space. The âPCâ sales numbers are still not quite matching up with reality: the iPad is a personal computer, and Apple is crushing the competition.
With that in mind, research firm Gartner has released its PC shipments report for the first quarter of 2012. According to the report, Apple sits as the third largest PC maker in the U.S.. And the iPad? Well, no one can touch the iPad.
Voice Actions may not look quite the same, but it think it's Siri on steroids.
Appleâs App Store approval process is a mysterious thing. Sometimes the Cupertino overlords can be incredibly stringent about the guidelines an app has to adhere to in order to be approved for sale onthe App Store, and other times weâre all left scratching our heads wondering how on earth an app like this made it through.
Siri knockoffs are nothing new, of course. In fact, theyâve been a pretty common occurrence in the iOS App Store ever since Apple unveiled the digital assistant alongside the iPhone 4S last October. Weâve seen apps like Evi that piggyback off Siriâs success, but a relatively new app has seen incredible success by riding Siriâs coattails all the way to the top of the App Store charts.
The best part? Not only does it look heavily â ahem â inspired by Siri, even the developer doesnât know how it got approved.
Like a lot of people, I greeted the news that Apple was on the verge of scheduling a press conference for the inevitable third-gen model by scouring the web to discover who would pay me the most for my gently used first-generation iPad.
After poking around a bit, I selected NextWorth, which had a good reputation on various sites (including ours) and was offering $170 for my WiFi 16GB iPad, a solid $30 higher than anyone else. I printed the prepaid UPS label and shipped it off, waiting for the deposit to my PayPal account on the other side.
So imagine my surprise when I received an e-mail two weeks later offering just $70 â effectively the value of the battery and internal electronics alone. Needless to say, I was pissed off. As it turns out, I had good reason to be. Quite ironically, I was getting shorted on my iPad because of a software glitch. As were many others like me.
The FAA to expand iPad use, create internal app store
Thereâs been a lot of news stories this year about iPhone and iPad use by U.S. federal agencies. Most of those stories have been reports of agencies ditching BlackBerries for iPhones and/or iPads.
This weekâs news from the FAA is different in that the FAA already has iPads in the hands of employees and the agency is planning to expand their user dramatically â to the point where employees will be offered a choice between an iPad and a laptop as their mobile computing device.
Quickoffice is finally complete thanks to Powerpoint editing.
Quickoffice Pro HD is one of the App Storeâs best third-party office suites, and until Microsoft Office hits the iPad, itâs the best way to view and edit Word and Excel documents on the go. Its latest update adds Powerpoint editing to that, in addition to native email support, an enhanced visual interface, and more.
Steve Jobs Avenue in Jundiai is located near Foxconn's new iPhone plant.
Brazilâs Jundiai city council has paid tribute to Appleâs late co-founder and former CEO by naming one of its streets Steve Jobs Avenue. The council actually announced that it would commemorate Steve with a street a day after his passing last year, but city officials only confirmed the name this week.
Thomas Fultonâs Donât Panic iPad case started life last year as a Kickstarter project. Now, after sending out cases to all his happy backers, the case is available for you and me to buy.
The case is made from floppy felt and leather, and is designed as much for using as it is for carrying and protecting. When closed, the felt closes up just like any other folio case. Open it up, though, and the fun starts.
With worker overtime now reduced, Foxconn simply can't assemble as many iPads as it used to.
Appleâs new iPad is still selling like hot cakes, and new customers continue to face a 1-2-week shipping delay when purchasing through the Apple online store. But the company is reportedly struggling to meet demand with production constrained by Retina display supply and the recent cuts to factory worker overtime at Foxconn.
Renowned developer Steven Troughton-Smith has released the iPad version of his popular Speed iPhone app. Thanks to the iPadâs larger 9.7-inch display and Retina resolution, Speed for iPad is the perfect GPS for your automobile. Not only does Speed track your location on a map, but the app tells you how fast youâre going and the distance youâve traveled.
Procreate piles on the new features, and yet remains lag-free and easy to use
Procreate, the already excellent iPad drawing app, has been updated to play nice with the iPad 3âs Retina Display. But to dwell on that would be to ignore the massive changes that have gone into this version. Make no mistake: This might be labelled v1.6, but it is much more like a v2.0.
Scanner Pro is my new favorite scanning app for the iPad. It doesnât do OCR, it doesnât grab phone numbers from business cards. It just scans, stores, shares and searches your paper documents, and it does it with a beautifully simple interface.
The app is actually an update to the old iPhone version, but this new version (4.0) is completely redesigned and is now a universal app. And just in time, too, as the new iPadâs 5MP autofocus camera makes it a pretty great scanner.
Whispers have been circulating for months about Apple releasing a larger iPhone later this year. Since the original iPhone launch, Apple has kept the iPhoneâs essential dimensions intact, and we still have the same 3.5-inch display size Steve Jobs demoed at Macworld in 2007. While the rest of the smartphone industry has been experimenting with all kinds of crazy screen sizes and aspect ratios, Apple has stuck with a simple 3:2 aspect ratio and 3.5 inches.
There have been plenty of arguments made for why Apple will release a 4-inch iPhone in the future, but one smart forum user has put together an argument that trumps the rest.
CloudOn updates its cloud-based Office suite with some killer features
Today CloudOn released the first major update to its cloud-based Microsoft Office solution. Like OnLive Desktop, which recently made changes to comply with Microsoftâs Windows licensing model, CloudOn delivers virtual copies of Windows versions the three core Office tools. Unlike OnLive, however, CloudOn doesnât provide a virtual Windows desktop and the company doesnât provide its own cloud storage for user documents.
Instead, CloudOn integrates with Box and Dropbox to provide document storage and sharing. The interface of the companyâs iPad app provides a simple launcher and file browser. When one of the Office apps (or the newly added Adobe Reader app and File Viewer) is launched a virtual instance of that app is provided from the CloudOn servers.
The NoteBookCase for iPad2 is a freaky-deaky Bluetooth keyboard case which turns your iPad into a tiny ten-inch MacBook Pro. Kinda. The case, which looks most authentic with a white iPad inside, adds a keyboard and stand to the iPad within, but it doesnât stop there.
Is RIM's relationship with the U.S. government really as strong as the company says? Probably not.
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2012 hasnât been shaping up to be a good year for RIM. The company has already lost some major enterprise customers, developers have publicly announced theyâre shuttering BlackBerry support, and the new iPad sales beat the total number of BlackBerry PlayBook shipments three times over in one weekend.
The one bright moment, if you can call it that, came during the companyâs recent quarterly financials call when RIMâs newly minted CEO Thorsten Heins told investors that his first action on the job was to seriously evaluate RIMâs business. After months of delusional pep talks, his very sober assessment was like a burst of lucid thinking. Unfortunately, the companyâs executives seem to be covering that lucid moment with more of the delusional spin thatâs become typical of RIM
The latest bout of RIM denying its situation involve comments by executives on the state of the BlackBerry in government.
Wacom's terrific Bamboo stylus now comes with a built-in ballpoint for traditional note-taking.
We firmly believe that Wacomâs Bamboo stylus is one of the best styluses money can buy for the iPad, but that was until this thing came along. The Wacom Bamboo Stylus Duo mixes a traditional ballpoint pen with Wacomâs famous iPad stylus to bring you the best of both worlds, whether youâre sketching a hobbit in Draw Something, or jotting down a phone number on an old envelope.
OnLive Desktop goes from Windows 7 to Windows Server iPad/Android app
We reported last month on the legal and licensing issues surrounding OnLive and its OnLive Desktop for iPad, a freemium offering from the cloud gaming company that offered iPad users a full Windows 7 desktop experience complete with Office and the ability to watch Flash content. The company made a big entrance into the Windows/Office on iPad space in January and announced its premium and business plans the following month.
More recently, however, Microsoft announced that OnLive was violating its licensing agreements. Microsoft even went so far as to accuse OnLive and any OnLive Desktop users of illegally pirating Windows 7.
OnLive appears to have learned the error of its ways. Over the weekend, the company quietly adjusted its service to be compatible with Windows licensing.
Thereâs nothing worse then prepping your app for launch and then finding out you missed one crucial step to ensure it looked solid across all platforms. Keep in mind that just because youâve âbuiltâ a mobile app, that doesnât mean it is going to be ready for market. Without testing, your appâs not going to cut it. Not in the least.
This is why weâve got a video course put together by Robert V. Binder that will teach you ways to test out your software to make sure itâs ready for your audience. The great part? This video course is applicable for Android, Blackberry, iPhone, iPad, Windows Mobile, Palm OS and mobile apps using HTML5. So youâre covered on all fronts. And no background in programming or software testing is required.
The even greater part? Itâs available from Cult of Mac Deals for only $49 â a savings of $80 off the regular price!
Apple's e-textbooks and iPad in education initiative leaves colleges largely out of the picture - for good reasons
Appleâs e-textbook initiative, which the company launched in January along with iBooks Author and a revamped iTunes U service is aimed at K-12 schools rather than higher education. Higher education has a different set of needs when it comes to textbooks, study, and reference materials. There are also big differences in device/platform selection between K-12 and the college market.
In fact, these differences are probably a big part of why Apple decided to focus the majority of its e-textbook (and, by extension its iPad in education) effort on the K-12 market. Itâs a market that yields Apple more growth opportunities now and down the road.Â
Here, ladies and gentlemen, for your viewing pleasure, is an example of open-source âdesignâ at its finest. From the retro desktop-style interface through to the clunky name â Documents Unlimited PDF & Office Editor Apps for iPad â not a single aspect of this experience has been left untouched by the clunky hand of open-source UI design committees.
In fact, I would like to award it the newly-minted title of Ugliest iPad App, Like, Ever (or UiALE for short).
No one's ever going to mistake a Galaxy S for this, are they?
Products can be too popular for their own good. Take zipper, for example. Today, itâs used as a generic term for the interlocking steel teeth that keep you from exposing yourself to the public, but in the 1920âs, it was a distinct brand: the Zipper, invented and marketed by B.F. Goodrich, which was such a successful alternative to the boring old button that it lost its capital âZâ in the mind of the public and became a generic term that lost its trademark⌠and once it lost its trademark, anyone could call their rip-off product a âzipperâ as if it was the real thing.
Itâs a very real issue that many companies spend a good deal of money on every year. They want their brand to be synonymous with a certain type of product, but they donât want it to be so synonymous that they lose ownership of the brand. And itâs why, if you like, say, Jell-O, or Xerox, or Kleenex, you shouldnât refer to similar products from another company by the same name.
Over at The News Virginian, thereâs an interesting think piece by AP writer Mae Anderson if the same thing could happen to the iPad. Itâs a great read on the history of trademarks becoming generic, but itâs not really very likely to happen to the iPad. Hereâs why.
After ripping into the new iPad when it finally landed in their hands on March 16th, a sizable number of customers began to notice their tablet experiencing issues with Wi-Fi. Worse, itâs not an isolated problem with a few bad iPads: in fact, there are enough people complaining that theyâve managed to fill up a huge thread on Appleâs official support forums.
So far, Appleâs remained mum on whatâs causing the issue. However, a repair expert thinks that the issue with the iPadâs Wi-Fi may be caused by bad power management to the Broadcom BCM4330 chip that handles Wi-Fi on the device. While itâs a hardware issue, though, the expert says Apple could probably fix it with a software update.Â
Few iPad publications include interactive or immersive ads (source: Kantar Media)
Itâs pretty clear that digital distribution is going to play a large role in the future of magazines and newspapers. That doesnât mean, however, that print editions are going away any time soon. For the foreseeable future, weâre likely to see print/digital hybrids while consumers and publishers test the waters of both digital products and distribution channels.
The road to digital hasnât been a smooth ride for many publications. Part of the reason is the lack of resources being devoted to creating engaging and immersive digital content that doesnât feel as if youâre simply reading a PDF of the print edition.
One big area where publisher are still failing is advertising â despite excellent interactive ad systems like Apple iAd, publishers are still stuck in a print mentality when it comes to ads. In fact, according to a new study, publications often simply toss the exact same print-formatted ads into digital editions that run in their print counterparts.