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Analyst: Apple Plans New iPhones With Larger and Smaller Displays

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Over in the world of Android smartphones, one form factor that has been seeing an increasing push from handset makers is the 4.3 inch touchscreen phone, best exemplified by the likes of the Motorola Droid X and HTC EVO 4G. That’s significantly larger than the iPhone’s 3.5-inch touchscreen.

While many companies are embracing this larger display, which makes internet browsing a lot easier at the expense of pocketability, it’s unclear if consumers really prefer it… which makes the claims of one Wall Street analyst that Apple will expand the iPhone line with a series of handsets with larger displays pretty suspect.

According to Shaw Wu, a Wall Street analyst from Kaufman Brothers, sources familiar with Apple’s overseas suppliers say that Apple is considering larger as well as smaller displays for its iPhone line.

Motorola Sue Apple For Patent Infringement, Asks ITC To Ban iPhone, iPad and Mac Sales

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The file cabinets of mobile companies are always filled with patents, but it’s only recently they have started going to war over them. Before 2007, in fact, most patent disputes were handled behind closed doors with smiles and handshakes. Then the iPhone came along, and all of a sudden, it was sue or die.

Motorola’s the latest company to launch into the smartphone patent lawsuit fray, lodging
a series of patent infringement complaints against Apple in both Northern Illinois and Southern Florida federal district courts, as well as asking the International Trade Commission to ban Apple from importing, marketing or selling all iOS devices, as well as some Mac products. They’re out for blood.

Analyst Raises Apple Fourth Quarter to $18.71B

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Credit: epicharmus/Flickr
Credit: epicharmus/Flickr

Apple received more good news from Wall Street, ahead of its expected Oct. 18 quarterly financial report. J.P. Morgan Thursday raised its revenue estimate for the fourth quarter to $18.71 billion, up from $18.13 billion. Despite Apple’s overwhelming success with the iPhone and iPad, the Cupertino, Calif. company has”plenty of growth” left, analyst Mark Moskowitz assured investors.

Indeed, Apple could earn $81.53 billion for fiscal 2011, up from Moskowitz’ previously estimated $78.84 billion. The increasing talk of a CDMA iPhone could add up to $2 per share next year, he estimated. The analyst expects Apple will introduce a CDMA iPhone for Verizon in early 2011 with a version aimed at China by mid-2011.

What the Sony/Google TV Remote Coulda, Shoulda Been [Opinion]

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Hello readers. Look at this remote. Now at your hands. Now back to the remote. Now back to your hands.

Maybe it’s a joke. Maybe it’s a clever ruse. Maybe it’s a prototype. Maybe it’s clever CGI like they used for Gollum. I have no idea. But the picture here (sourced from Engadget) is supposedly the remote control shipping with Sony’s TVs that have Google TV integrated inside. It is, in a word, a monstrosity (my friend MG said it best, “My God, it’s full of buttons!”).

Here are all the things wrong with it, in a nutshell:

Star Wars: Battle For Hoth Should Just Be Abandoned To The Empire [Review]

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I figure there’re two ways an iOS tower-defense game set in the Star Wars universe might succeed: by being an excellent example of the genre, like TowerMadness Zero, or by immersing the player in the Star Wars universe, like Star Wars: Trench Run.

Unfortunately, Star Wars: Battle for Hoth (by THQ, who also put out Trench Run) does neither, and ends up being only slightly more pleasant than crawling into the slit belly of a dead Tauntaun.

First Impressions of Logitech Revue Google TV Box: It’s Way Too Geeky

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This is the controller for Logitech's Revue Google TV box. Minimalist it is not.

SAN FRANCISCO: Google is not to be underestimated, but sitting here watching a demo of the first Google TV, I’m not sure it has mainstream appeal.

Built by Logitech and running Google’s Android software, the Logitech Revue Google TV has definite geek appeal. It does everything: the $299 box connects to satellite and cable TV, compatible DVRs and Web video, as well as other online multimedia. You can search for content using your voice and control it with a smartphone. It has apps, HD videoconferencing, and functions as a universal Harmony remote, controlling all your home theater devices. (For a detailed breakdown of how it compares to Apple TV, see here)

But there’s no way my mother will go for it.

The hardware of Logitech's Revue Google TV box looks good and capable, but search isn't a good UI paradigm for TV. There's too much crap to sift through.

Apple To Deliver Verizon-Ready iPhone By End of Year, iPhone 5 in the Works

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Plans have emerged today from people briefed by Apple that the company is to begin mass producing a new iPhone by the end of 2010 that will allow Verizon Wireless to sell its popular smartphone early next year.

The new iPhone will be no different externally to the iPhone 4 in shops today, however, internally it will feature an alternative wireless technology called CDMA used by Verizon. According to the same people, the key chip will be provided by Qualcomm, and the device is expected to be released in the first quarter of next year.

A CDMA iPhone would spell the end of Apple’s exclusive arrangement with AT&T in the U.S., a deal that has been in place since the iPhone made its debut in 2007.

The same people have also spilled some beans on the fifth-generation iPhone, which they claim is currently being developed by the Cupertino computer giant. One person familiar with the plan claims that the next model will feature a different form factor from the iPhones currently available, however, it was unclear how soon this version will be available to Verizon.

Spokeswomen for both Apple and Qualcomm have unsurprisingly declined to comment on the matter, and so has a spokesman for Verizon Wireless.

[via WSJ]

AppleTV vs. Google TV: An In-Depth Comparison

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Little more than a week after Apple started shipping their all-new AppleTV, Google announced that they too would join the home entertainment party and offer a TV service of their own. It’s iOS vs. Android all over again, but this time the battle’s in your living room, not in your pocket.

The first product to offer Google’s new TV service is the Logitech Revue. It’s a black set-top box, just like you’d get for AppleTV, but it’s not as pretty, obviously. So, let’s take a look at how the two devices compare.

Shift Instantly Between iPhone 4 Cameras While Shooting Video [New App]

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Yes that’s right, now you can capture yourself throwing up while filming a first-person view of the rails as you fly through that new 120 mph ride at Six Flags — all with the same iPhone (so long as it’s an iPhone 4).

Flexicorder ($1) features on-the-fly switching from shooting video normally with the rear camera to shooting with the front facing camera; it also lets the user adjust video resolution.and aspect ratio. Images captured through the forward-facing camera normally appear horizontally flipped, so the app also flips the image to look as if they were shot with the rear-facing lens.

Daily Deals: Mac Pro Xeon Workstation, iPhone 4 Case, iPhone/iPod Clock Radio

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We start the day with a deal on an 8-Core Mac Pro Xeon Workstation. The model is powered by 2.4GHz processors and includes 16GB of memory for $3,879. Also, there is a deal on an iPhone 4Superleggera case from Acase with two screen protectors. The final deal in today’s spotlight is an iP9 Clock radio for the iPhone or iPod.

Along the way, we’ll also check out other hardware and software deals for the iPhone, iPod or Mac. As usual, details on these and many other items can be found at CoM’s “Daily Deals” page after the jump.

Mobile Giants Battle for Market, Profit Share: a Graphic View

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Who knew it might turn into infographic week? Here’s another visualization of the battle raging among companies in the mobile communications universe. This one plots the contestants’ current positioning and trend directions on XY axes of profit share and market share — and it raises some interesting questions:

Should we be talking about manufacturers or platforms? Is the ultimate success of one dependent on the success of the other (ie: can HTC thrive and Motorola whither if Android’s popularity continues to increase)? Do consumers have manufacturer, platform or carrier loyalty — some combination thereof, or no loyalty whatsoever?

And perhaps most crucial of all, can we get George Kokkinidis to re-do this chart?

Via [Horace Dediu]

Tough Questions Await Apple at Oct. 18 Quarterly Financial Report

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Photo by Klearchos Kapoutsis - http://flic.kr/p/6Chqty
Photo by Klearchos Kapoutsis - http://flic.kr/p/6Chqty

Apple is known for its tight control of the message, so the announcement that Apple will release its fourth-quarter financial results has the media in high anticipation. With a company threatening to knock energy giant Exxon off the S&P 500 leaderboard, potential questions are not hard to find.

The iPad is heralded as the “fastest selling electronic device in history” and the Cupertino, Calif. company sold 100,000 iPhone 4s in the first four days in China. Little wonder then that analysts like BMO Capital’s Keith Bachman keeps raising forecasts for the September quarter. Wednesday, Bachman forecast 11.5 million handsets were sold in September, up from his previously-expected 10.4 million. However, that increase may be too tepid. Apple could sell more than 12 million iPhones in the three-month period, the analyst suggests.

Although Apple had little to say in the midst of the so-called ‘Antennagate‘ hoopla, the frenzy of reports of signal trouble and the company’s response will likely be a subject when the firm’s executives face the media. How much did the problem hurt Apple?

Steve Jobs Again Tops Teen Popularity Poll, Few “Like” Zuckerberg

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For the second year in a row, Apple CEO Steve Jobs tops a list of teens’ most admired entrepreneur.

His popularity slipped somewhat from last year, when 35 percent of  1,000 12 to 17-year olds polled said they looked up to him in the Junior Achievement Teens and Entrepreneurship survey.

Now the man who creates the gadgets teens fight to keep in schools is admired by 23 percent of them.

Sonic the Hedgehog 4 for iPhone and iPad Coming To The App Store Tomorrow

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Sega’s long-awaited return to the 2D roots of their most famous speedster rodent is coming to the App Store tomorrow, and as you can see in the trailer above, Sonic the Hedgehog 4 looks pretty faithful to the original Sonic games for the Sega Genesis… you know, before the whole franchise leapt into 3D and was marketed predominantly at furries with masturbatory echidna fantasies.

Looking pretty good, and I know loads of iPhone gamers will be excited about this, but on my part, I’ve never found running at 1000 miles per hour into an undodgable wall of spikes very fun, which seems to be the defining element of the series. I think I’ll probably give Sonic 4 a pass.

A $900 Hackintosh… In A Moist Cardboard Box

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I sometimes wonder what monsters haunt the nightmares of Apple’s resident designer, Mr. Jonathan Ive. He’s so prim, so meticulous, so clean and proper, but on those nights when he has a slice of pepperoni pizza a little too close to bed time, what horrors does he dream up? Some horrible Cenobite iMac dragging itself bloodily across the floor whispering “Make way for the new flesh:” a biomechanical monstrosity of Foxconn components crammed into the pulsating sack of some skinless, cancerous stomach?

Or is it something more like this cardboard box Hackintosh, put together by the guys over at One Block Off the Grid — a cooperative for buying photovoltaic solar panels at a group discount — after one of their Macs proved too slow to run Adobe After Effects?

Forgotten Doom Engine Game ‘HacX’ Now Available On The App Store… For Free

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Up until 1996, id software’s Doom engine was pretty much the de facto technology driving the best and most advanced PC computer games on the market, including Doom, Doom 2, Heretic, Hexen and Strife. Then id software released their next game engine, Quake, which boasted true 3D environments, and any game that still ran on Doom’s 2.5D engine was barely worth a laugh.

That was very unfortunate for HacX when it was released in 1997. The last commercial game using the Doom engine, HacX boasted some incredible enemy, weapons and level design, but was ultimately as ignored at retail (where it was passed over for flashier games running on truly 3D engines) as it has been forgotten by all but the most die-hard retro gamers.

I was delighted to hear, then, that HacX has gotten a new lease on life, as it has been ported as a free app for the iPhone and iPad. It’s still using the Doom engine, just this time it’s using the updated iPhone engine released by id software’s own lead programmer, John Carmack.

Here’s hoping that HacX can finally get some of the recognition it deserves this time around.

Infographic: Who’s Suing Whom In Mobile… As Re-Imagined By A Competent Designer

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We absolutely loved that fantastic chart we posted yesterday showing off the litigious melee amongst smartphone companies as they all try to figure out which of their thousands of patents are enforceable and which are nonsense… but, infographically, it was a bit ugly, like a particularly inelegant illustration of magnetic repulsion found in a 70s-era high school physics book.

The updated chart by George Kokkinidis above conveys the same information more attractively, with clean geometric precision, sexy fonts and color coded arcs.

We approve. Maybe the Guardian should hire this guy instead of doing all of their infographics in Powerpoint ’97.

Report: Vodafone iPhone 4 in Germany May Launch Oct. 28

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For some time we’ve heard talk that T-Mobile in Germany would get the iPhone 3GS, ending that nation’s exclusivity for Apple’s popular handset. Now comes word that Vodafone will launch the iPhone 4 in Germany on October 28. The report from a German Mac site said the carrier will begin airing ads for the iPhone 4 on Oct. 18.

We have also independently confirmed the report with a T-Mobile employee in Germany. Although the Vodafone iPhone 4 is expected to be locked to the second-place carrier, O2 is also believed to be preparing to sell an unlocked version in Germany soon, according to the report. Deutsche Telekom, T-Mobile’s parent, has 37 million German customers. Vodafone has 34.9 million subscribers and O2 has 16.3 million members.

Latest iPhone 4 Commercial Is All About The Retina Display

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Sharp has just matched the iPhone 4’s touchscreen pixel for pixel with their new IS03 Phone, but that’s not going to stop Apple from crowing about the Retina Display in their latest ad, highlighting the fact that the world’s “highest-resolution phone screen ever” will make “every freckle, every wrinkle” (and presumably every wart, every melanoma, and every port wine stain) look clearer and more beautiful than ever before.

For extra points, check out those impossibly beautiful Twitter friends the iPhone 4 hand model has. Compared to that, my Twitter friends are a sad collection of hobos.

Rumor: Apple Looking to Hire Blogger for News Site

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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.
Photo: Thomas Dohmke

Readers should rightly file the following tidbit under “highly-speculative”: a rumor site suggests this morning Apple is looking to hire a blogger. The Cupertino, Calif. company supposedly met publicly with a mobile editor for Tech Crunch, now owned by AOL. A tipster thought he saw the usually-secretive Apple PR team hand the blogger what was described as “an offer packet.”

Before someone takes the report hook, line and sinker, there are caution flags waving and warning sirens blaring. For starters, there was the Keystone Cops incident over the lost (or stolen?) iPhone 4 prototype. Remember how Gizmodo’s possession and eventual return of the device triggered a police investigation amid Apple’s claims the handset was stolen? Remember how Apple sued (then settled) with the blogger behind thinksecret.com over unauthorized leaks?

Still, Apple CEO Steve Jobs has almost become a regular contributor to some blogs, firing off short missives on products and services. Other mobile companies, such as Nokia and Orange, have also hired professional bloggers to tout their brands. However, doesn’t Apple already have a wide array of bloggers commenting on every major (as well as minor) announcements impacting the company and its millions of customers?

[via: Gawker, 9to5]