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Use Your Old Mac As A Secondary Display [Video How-To]

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If you’re like me, chances are that you have at least one older computer lying around the house. Maybe you just bought a shiny new Mac and your old, not so shiny one is now sitting unused in the corner. Before you throw it away, you may want to take a look at ScreenRecycler, an application designed to help you use your old computer as a secondary monitor. In this video, I’ll show you how to set it up on both computers and get everything up and running.

The iPad is a Wimp. It’s Time for iPad to Grow a Pair!

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The iPad is awesome. I love my iPad 2. I think it’s the single greatest mobile device ever sold. There’s just one problem: The iPad is a dandy fancy boy.

The iPad is for indoor use only, for the most part. Some of us want to go outside and take our iPads with us.

Apple needs to give its millions of users the option to fully integrate the iPad into their lives by making it safe for outdoor use.

How Apple’s iOS Will Conquer the World

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Apple’s iOS is more profitable than Microsoft Windows. It has enabled Apple to sell more smartphone handsets than Nokia. And the tablet that runs iOS is responsible for 100% of the web traffic generated by tablets in Japan.

The iOS is already successful beyond all the predictions. But what’s really fascinating is that the platform is just barely getting started. The iOS is increasingly dominating mobile computing, just as mobile computing is taking over mainstream computing.

Here’s how Apple’s iOS will take over the world.

(Image courtesy of five-G)

The New iOS 5 Beta Has Just Been Released

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Late on a Friday summer afternoon when everyone’s about to get early cocktails, Apple goes and releases the new iOS 5 beta we’ve been waiting all week for.

iOS 5 Beta 2 is now available to registered developers. The build is 9A5248d.

As usual, there’s skimpy release notes; but it looks like WiFi syncing has been turned on.

Macworld Gives Final Cut Pro X a Cautious Thumbs Up

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Macworld magazine has given Apple’s controversial update of Final Cut Pro X a cautious thumbs up.

The new version of Final Cut Pro rocked the video editing world with its ruthless embrace of the new at the expense of the old. Lots of veteran FCP editors are outraged by the update, which has a whole new code base and workflow. The new software can’t even open old FCP projects!

But Macworld says that’s the price to pay for progress. The new software has been rewritten for a tapeless, metadata-based video workflow, and though incomplete, it’s a huge imporvement:

With Final Cut Pro X, Apple is once again out to completely re-invent the video industry. This is a truly groundbreaking release for a 1.0 software version, and I hope that the professional features that many video editors currently use will be made available soon.

Macworld: Review: Final Cut Pro X

Personal Request: Support Leander’s Charity Bike Ride

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I have a personal request: I’d like to ask for your support for a charity bike ride I’m doing in July.

I’m riding the Tour of the California Alps, better known as the Death Ride, to raise money for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s Team in Training program.

I’m $1,000 dollars short of my fundraising minimum ($3,500). I’d like to ask for your support.

If you can help in the fight against blood cancer, please make a pledge using this link (use the “Make a Donation” widget at the right). It’s fast, easy and totally secure. I only need 20 people to make a $50 donation (or one person to make a $1,000 pledge). The deadline is Monday June 27 — just three days away.

The Death Ride is a very challenging 130-mile route that goes up and over five mountain passes in the awesome Sierra Nevada. It  features 15,000 feet of climbing in one day, most of it between 6,000- and 9,000-feet above sea level, where the air is pretty thin. Here’s the elevation map. For an idea of how high that is, see this amazing infographic. It’s a masochistic ordeal.

Many thanks for reading this — and for your support. I’d appreciate you sharing this post via email, Facebook or Twitter. Every penny counts, and it’s for a very good cause.

Spotify Will Launch In The States Between July 5th and July 15th

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Much beloved Spotify has been trying to launch in America for years now. During that time, they’ve faced considerable challenges in convincing a music industry worried about alienating Apple to give the greenlight to their excellent all-you-can-stream subscription service.

But it’s finally come together, and now there’s even a firm date being thrown around: the freemium music service will launch in the States between July 5th and july 15th.

Daily Deals: $929 iMac, Dual i3 iMac, Magic Mouse

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We close out another week of deals with two iMac offers and a bargain on the Magic Mouse. First up is a number of iMacs from the Apple Store, starting with a 3.06GHz iMac running an i3 processor and 22-inch screen for $929. Next is an iMac bundle perfect for photo-editing. The offer includes an iMac running a 3.2GHz Dual i3 processor with a 27-inch screen, plus Parallels Desktop 6 for Mac – just $1,399. Finally, a deal on a wireless Magic Mouse for just $45.

Along the way, we also check out iPhone and iPad cases, as well as accessories and software for your Mac. As always, details on these and many other items can be found at CoM’s “Daily Deals” page right after the jump.

Apple Prepares To Sell 15 Million Fifth-Gen iPhones In First Month Alone

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Apple has initially ordered 15 million iPhone 5 handsets from two manufacturers say reports. If correct, the first-month figure is about five times the number of iPhone 4 units the Cupertino, Calif. company sold during the same four-week period in 2010. Could the iPhone 5 be Apple’s first truly international launch, or merely the launch where supply is least lopsided compared to demand?

UPDATED: iTunes In Cloud Might Not Recognize 80% Of Your Music, Says Expert [Exclusive]

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UPDATE: I totally screwed this one up. When my contact, TuneUp founder Raza Zaidi, told me iTunes in the cloud has only 20% of the all the music listed in Gracenote’s big database of music, I interpreted it to mean that the upcoming iTunes Match service would mirror only a fraction of most music libraries. What I failed to realize was that 20% of music in iTunes represents the most popular 20%. The remaining 80% is all the music in the long tail. So when Apple rolls out iTunes Match in the fall, it will indeed likely mirror most music libraries, just as Apple claims. In a clarifying note, Zaidi says matches will likely be 95% or higher. In addition, the Get Album Artwork feature in iTunes isn’t powered by Gracenote, as the post implies. Sorry for the mistakes. Teach me to post before my morning coffee.

When iTunes Match goes live in September, Apple promises to instantaneously match any of the tracks in your iTunes library to the iCloud… as long as it already has your music in its mega music library. What Apple hasn’t said is that as much of 80% of your music might not be recognized by iTunes Match… and the only way to get that music into the iCloud will be to spend days manually uploading gigabytes at a time.