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Save or Sell? Collecting Trends in Apple Computers

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A view of the Vintage Mac Museum.

2010 was the year of the hot Apple auctions, with an Apple 1 fetching its highest price ever, $213,000 to an Italian collector.

What’s next?

Cult of Mac’s own Adam Rosen, a Mac consultant whose vintage mac museum collection counts some 36 different models and about 75 total computers, was asked to opine for AntiqueWeek on the going prices for some popular Apple collectibles.

New iTunes Movie Features Let You Search Film Scripts, Share Scenes With Friends

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New features have quietly been introduced to iTunes movies that allow users to search for specific words within a film’s script, and select their favorite clips to share with their friends through social networking sites. The features are being “quietly tested” in recent movies released by Sony Entertainment Pictures, as noted by PaidContent.org.

The movies that are known to include the new features at present are “The Other Guys,” which provides users with a search button enabling them to enter words to be found within the film’s script; and both “Salt” and “Resident Evil: Afterlife,” which include the “clip & share” function that allows users to select their favorite scenes and then share them with their friends through social networking sites. Users also have access to a playlist of songs from the movie and an opportunity to purchase them from iTunes.

The introduction of these new, iTunes-only features gives movie fans an incentive to purchase the latest films through Apple’s iTunes Store, rather than on DVD or Blu-ray. According to PaidContent.org, the capabilities found in the latest Sony movies are unique to iTunes, and not just a repackaging of additional content available on the Blu-ray or DVD counterparts:

“Mind-blowing add-ons? No, but they do represent the intent of studios like Sony, which declined comment, to offer differentiating value on digital platforms from that on DVD, where extras are often nothing more than a collection of additional short videos.”

These new features are only accessible to users who choose to purchase movies from iTunes, rather than rent them.

iPod Nano’s DFU-Like Recovery Mode Discovered

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About a week after the first successful modification to the new iPod Nano’s .plist file was made — whisking away one of the pre-installed icons from the home screen — dev Steven Troughton-Smith has brought the nano one step closer to jailbreaking: he’s figured out how to put his iPod nano into the equivalent of the iPhone or iPod Touch’s DFU recovery mode.

The feat is accomplished by holding down the restart buttons across two separate reboots, at which point iTunes will see the device and alert the user. Once accomplished, Troughton-Smith is apparently able to push firmware files to the device and execute them.

Pretty exciting stuff. For more information on what this means for the possibility of iPod Nano hacking, check out Erica Sadun’s informative post over at TUAW.

Google’s Cr-48 Laptops Are Now Hackintoshable

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Google’s new Cr-48 laptop is supposed to usher in the future of cloud-based operating systems thanks to the search giant’s own Chrome OS, but surprise surprise: a computer made for early developers to hack to their hearts content ends up being Hackintoshable. It’s apparently a lot of work, but honestly, it seems appropriate in a way: the Cr-48 always channeled a lot of the elegance of the old black plastic MacBook, and it’s nice to see a doppelganger of the old girl live again.

As You Were! Verizon’s Buying iPhone Domains, But It Probably Means Nothing

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According to popular theory, we should either have the Verizon iPhone confirmed at CES later this week, or not hear anything and keep on scuttlebutting about it amongst ourselves until it eventually does come out.

The latest fodder for Verizon iPhone rumor mongering? Verizon’s Trademark services department has just snatched up iphoneforverizon.com and iphoneonverizon.com… a couple of two year old domains purchased from the previous owner (and alleged link farmer) Jim Benton.

Honestly, this is probably just business as usual, in which a company protects its trademark and brand by snatching up domains. Still, the very fact that this news hit during the week the Verizon iPhone is rumored (almost definitely wrongly) to debut was pretty choice timing.

Daily Deals: iPhone App Price Cuts, $79 iPhone 4, MacBook Pros

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We start the first week of 2011 with a number of deals for your iPhone, iPad or Mac. First up is the year’s latest crop of price cuts on iPhone applications, including “WeatherNow.” Next is several refurbished iPhone 4 handsets from AT&T, starting at $79 for a slightly-blemished 16GB model that was $129.

Along the way, we also check out a leather case for the iPad, sharply-reduced prices on iPod touch cases and VPN software for the Mac. As usual, details on these and many other bargains can be found at CoM’s “Daily Deals” page right after the jump.

It Isn’t Quite AirPrint — But PrintJinni Gives Epson A Fighting Chance [Review]

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With the release of AirPrint late last year, Apple finally gave iDevice users what they’d been clamoring for (and quite loudly, since the iPad’s debut): the easy ability to print from a wifi connected printer. Hurrah! Problem is, it only works with printers made by HP — owners of Epsons, Canons and the rest were left out in the cold.

However, for Epson owners willing to shell out $10, Thinxtream‘s PrintJinni app already provided a means to print to select Epson wifi-connected printers. In late December PrintJinni became a free download to put itself on even footing with AirPrint, pricewise  — question is, how good of a solution is it?

Analyst Predicts What’s in Store for Apple in 2011

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Apple has settled claims with state regulators who allege the company mishandled electronic waste.
Apple has settled claims with state regulators who allege the company mishandled electronic waste.
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All good things come to those who wait. That could be the motto for Apple fans anxiously awaiting what new goodies emerge from the folks in Cupertino.

If you are looking for Apple to introduce the long-awaited CDMA iPhone for Verizon customers, you will likely need to cool your heels until the March financial quarter of 2011, according to a prominent analyst out with his predictions for the upcoming year. Additionally, if you have your eye on an iPad 2, Apple’s second-generation tablet, you may need to wait until the flowers of Spring.

Samsung Reportedly Sells 10M Galaxy S Smartphones

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Samsung sold 10 million Galaxy S smartphones in 2010, the Suwon, South Korean company announced Monday. Although the handset helped goose Samsung’s third-quarter profits by 20 percent, the Android-powered device still lags behind Apple’s iPhone. The Cupertino, Calif. company sold 14.1 million iPhones in the September quarter.

“For the time being, Apple’s presence in the smartphone market will remain solid,” Seoul-based analyst Young Park told Bloomberg. However, Samsung could continue its rise “based on their brand power and their relationship with telecommunication companies,” Park adds.

Geek Trend – Making Music with Your iDevice

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Where do you characterize the iPad and iPhone in the music making process? They can be your instruments, recording console, video edit system, and playback devices all in one. With new tools comes new talent, taking advantage of what progress has to offer. The Age of the iDevice in Music has only just begun.

Korean musician Yoari and an all-iDevice band performed this cover of Beyonce’s Sweet Dream in June 2010. The apps used in the piece are noted during the performance – a nice touch. And not a bad jam!

Inside Apple: How Steve Jobs and Jonny Ive Work Together to Make Epic Products

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Apple CEO Steve Jobs and design head Jonathan Ive are so close they are called “Jives” around the Cupertino campus for short.

The dynamic duo have been inseparable since the mid-1990s, when Jobs returned to Apple to find a young Ive stuck in a basement surrounded by hundreds of prototypes. Jobs recognized immediately that the company had a great resource that should be put to work.

NPR did a nice piece delving into how Jives have been working together to create some of Apple’s most memorable products.

Predictions for Apple in 2011

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Most tech companies go out of their way to publish product roadmaps, so their customers know what’s coming next. But Apple is not most tech companies. Ask anyone from Steve Jobs to the guy at your local Apple Store, and you’ll hear the same refrain, “we don’t comment on unannounced products.”

It’s this dearth of hard facts on what’s coming next from Cupertino that makes speculation so irresistible. And with the new year now upon us, it’s the perfect time to ponder what Apple may have in store for us in 2011.

Blogger Deon Devine, from Houston, Texas, has sent Cult of Mac some very interesting predictions.

5 Resolutions to Improve Your Mac Experience

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So, you were a very good boy or girl this year and Santa brought you a brand new Mac.

Maybe it was a sleek MacBook Air, perhaps a studly MacBook Pro or a bright and shiny iMac for your desktop. You say it was an old-school Mac Pro workstation? Well, bully for you!

Isn’t it time to make a few resolutions about how you’re going to love and care for your new machine so you can get the most out of it and keep it running in tip-top shape long after your Apple Care subscription runs out?

Here are five suggestions to help you do just that:

1. Have a back-up plan.

The number one mistake made by 99% of the people who wake up one day with an empty feeling in the pit of their stomach as they realize all their photographs, all their music, all their software and the outline for that Oscar-winning screenplay are just…gone — is having no backup.

Fortunately (or unfortunately), Apple has left you no excuse for not having your data backed up, at least since the introduction of Time Capsule and its integration with Time Machine, a built-in backup solution that’s been part of OX X since 2007.

A 1 terabyte Time Capsule is only $299 and unless you are one of those Pirate Bay or LimeWire scofflaws you’re probably never going to fill it up.

Don’t want to pay the Apple premium for seamless integration and “Designed in California” panache? Dozens of excellent third-party backup solutions await from the likes of LaCie and Seagate — there’s even an eco-friendly Green solution from Hitachi subsidiary SimpleTech, the USB 2.0 [Re]Drive, made from bamboo and recycled aluminum.

Regular backups for your computer system are like roughage in your diet: just do it and you’ll never never be sorry you did.

Top 10 Jailbreak Apps And Tweaks For 2011

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Happy new year! Are you interested in learning why you should jailbreak your iDevice in 2011? Or are you just looking for some cool apps and tweaks after recently jailbreaking? Look no further!

In this guide, we’re covering ten of the most popular jailbreak apps and mods you can obtain through Cydia. These usually wouldn’t be possible, but with the help of jailbreaking, they are!

Here we go…

Welcome to 2011 and iPhone Alarm Clockgate

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It’s already being dubbed Apple’s biggest glitch of 2011: iPhone alarm Clockgate.

Apparently, iPhone alarms aren’t ringing as clocks shift into the new year, according to users in Australia, New Zealand and Asia.

“We were the first to find out in New Zealand with thousands of shift workers late to work for relying on their iPhones as alarm clocks!” wrote reader Greg Ball.

Twitter is awash in frustrated users screaming about the problem. Mark Gurman of 9to5Mac has already dubbed it iPhone alarm Clockgate.

It sounds similar to the Daylight Savings Time alarm problem that surfaced in November, except the problem affects with users with one-off alarms, not repeating alarms.

The fix is to set a recurring alarm (select multiple days). See the screenshot:

Apple iPad: the Most Important Product of the Decade

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Incredible technology products have emerged in the last 10 years, from Web 2.0 sites to Twitter, GPS-enabled smart phones to cheap pocket video recorders.

On New Year’s Day, 2001, blogs were still largely unknown to the public. RIM had yet to launch the BlackBerry, and Palm hadn’t yet announced its Treo. Blu-Ray was still several years in the future. Google hadn’t even started working on Gmail. A 3.1 megapixel camera cost $700. Almost nobody had heard of social networking.

There’s no question that technology has completely changed our world in the past ten years. But if I had to pick one product that was more impactful and more culture-changing – in other words, the most important technology product of the decade, it would have to be the Apple iPad.

Daily Deals: iPhone App Price Cuts, Diner Dash, RunKeeper Pro

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We start off the last Daily Deals of 2010 with some New Year-themed apps for your iPhone. First up is a new crop of price drops on selected apps from the iPhone App Store, including the physics-based game “Burn the Rope.” Next is “Diner Dash,” an app seeming ideal for this time of the year when food is the center of our attention. We close out the deal spotlight with an app that might help you keep your New Year’s resolution for more exercise. “RunKeep Pro” keeps track of your fitness activity via the iPhone’s GPS sensor.

Along the way, we take a look at more apps for the iPhone, including “Real Soccer 2011”, as well as deals on the iMac and Mac Pro Xeon workstation.

Like usual, details on these and many other items can be found at CoM’s “Daily Deals” page, which starts right after the jump.
Here’s our wish for a happy, safe and prosperous New Year.

Top Games Of 2010 — Mac and iOS [Year in Review]

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Thanks to the advent of Steam for Mac, the dedication and ingenuity of indie developers and the App Store’s raising of awareness of Apple and its products, 2010 was the best year for Apple gaming since, well, the Big Bang.

We can’t even pretend to have played all the games that came out this year, or even a tenth of them. There were a lot of great games that escaped our radar, or we just didn’t get the time to play. Heck, we don’t even have editorial consensus amongst ourselves.

After the jump, though, you can find at least my list of 2010’s iOS and Mac games that siphoned away most of my time, causing me to miss deadlines, emotionally neglect my girlfriend, and extend my index fingers by three inches through callus mass alone. What were the games that extended yours? Let us know in the comments

‘Double-Click’ Lawsuit Targets Apple iPad, iPhone

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A company has sued Apple and a number of other technology firms, alleging their smartphones and other touch-screen devices violate a patent covering “double-click input.” Apple’s iPad and iPhone were specifically mentioned because the handset and tablet allow users to “double click or double tap a visual element representing content and interact with a second version of the interactive content.”

The lawsuit by Hopewell Culture and Design asks an Eastern Texas District Court to award “adequate damages” for the supposed violations. The U.S. Patent No. 7,171,625 was first filed in 2002. Also named in the lawsuit are Adobe, HTC, Nokia, LG Electronics, Motorola, Opera, Palm, Samsung and Quickoffice.

HTC to Patent ‘Scribe’ for Possible iPad Rival Device

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Following its success built from offering Android-powered iPhone alternatives, Taiwan-based handset maker HTC seems to now have the iPad in its sights. The company reportedly filed a patent application Dec. 26 for a “handheld device, namely a tablet computer.”

According to the report, the device is named the “HTC Scribe” and is seen as the company’s inevitable move into the burgeoning tablet market now controlled by Apple. The HTC device may “provide an alternative to the iPad,” IDC program Will Stofega told Bloomberg. The new tablet would rival the iPad’s price while providing an experience “as good or better” than the device from Cupertino, the analyst adds.

Why Privacy Lawsuits Against Apple Matter More to Google

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Apple is being dragged into court over two separate class-action lawsuits filed last week. Both accuse Apple of violating the privacy of iPhone users.

If Apple loses the suits, it faces damages, plus possible changes in its privacy policy and enforcement.

But if Apple is the company being sued, why does Google care far than Apple does about what happens in court?

Go here to read the whole story.

(Picture courtesy of Funny Or Die)

Daily Deals: GT Racing, QuickSocial, $429 iPads

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We start the day with deals on iPad and iPhone apps, along with more reduced prices on Apple’s tablet.First up is a new crop of reduced prices on iPad apps from the App Store, including “GT Racing: Motoro Academy.” Next is a new series of iPhone freebies, including “QuickSocial,” a social media and messaging utility. We wrap up the deal spotlight with more refurbished iPads, including a 16Gb Wi-Fi model for just $429.

Along the way, we check out cases for the iPhone and iPad, along with hardware, such as iMacs, Mac Pros and MacBooks. As always, details on these and many other items can be found at CoM’s “Daily Deals” page right after the jump.

RIM Denies PlayBook Battery Problems, Promises Tablet’s “Superior Performance”

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Following an analyst note blasting a tablet hoping to compete with the iPad, maker Research in Motion responded, saying its PlayBook tablet “offers superior performance with comparable battery life.”

Tuesday, Kaufman Bros. analyst Shaw Wu told investors RIM’s tablet has a battery life of just a “few hours” compared to the iPad’s 10 hour lifespan or Samsung’s six hours. As a result, RIM has delayed introducing the PlayBook until later in 2011 for “a bit of re-engineering.”

Report: Apple Slows iPad Production, Kindle Moves to Mass Market

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Another analyst is fueling reports Apple will soon shift from the initial iPad design to the unreleased iPad 2. The Cupertino, Calif. company produced 1.6 million of the tablets in December, a sharp drop from the 2.1 million units created in November. The shift has also allowed Amazon’s Kindle e-reader to match iPad shipments.

Amazon’s ability to keep pace with iPad production in December is a sign that the Kindle “is going to mass market from niche market” and that the iPad’s erosion of Kindle’s market “is not obvious,” according to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo of Concord Equity Research.