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Air Display Turns Your iPad In To An Additional Display For Your Mac [Review]

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I find my cinema display offers plenty of screen real estate for the things I do everyday, and with my MacBook Pro hooked up, having two displays is a real benefit. It’s nice to have the ability to browse through one document whilst typing up another on a separate screen, or have easy access to my music library or my Twitter feed without having to move or minimize the application I’m working on.

However, I don’t always want to be sat at my desk. I often like to get stuff done from the sofa when I’m feeling a bit lazy, or from the garden on a nice day. Now I can have two displays wherever I’m working thanks to Air Display from Avatron Software on my iPad.

Kudos To Wired: Magazine iPad App Is Gorgeous [Check the Video]

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Against the odds and earlier than expected, Wired magazine has debuted its interactive magazine app for the iPad. And it’s killer.

The Wired app blends the magazine’s superb editorial editorial and high production values with elements that only digital can bring  – interactivity and multimedia. The stories are well-written and beautifully designed with big, gorgeous photos. Navigation is easy and intuitive and there are lots of interactive graphics and supplementary video.

“Wired magazine will be digital from now on, designed from the start as a compelling interactive experience, in parallel with our print edition,” says Chris Anderson, Wired’s editor in chief. “Wired is finally, well, wired.”

Thanks to Apple’s ban on Flash, the app had some birthing troubles, and was expected later this summer. Wired has solved the Flash issue by making the app native to the iPad — it’s not an Adobe Air or Flash port. According to Anderson, it’s made with the same Adobe productions tools used to create the print magazine, so it’s (relatively) easy and quick to produce in parallel. This, of course, is crucial.

It’s not cheap — $4.99 a pop — which has already upset some reviewers on iTunes. Because the digital edition is produced in parallel and distribution costs are near zero, it should cost a lot less than print, critics reason. (The print edition costs less than a dollar with a subscription).

But the price is perhaps one of the most important things about the digital edition. Wired is trying out a new business model, one that many print publishers are praying will work. Me too. If Wired can make it profitable enough to support its editorial costs, that’s good news for everyone — publishers and readers.

Check out CultofMac.com’s quick video tour of the Wired iPad app (This video will play on the iPad, btw):

Daily Deals: $135 iPod nano, $759 MacBook, $1,099 MacBook Pro

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We start off with a deal on a 16GB fourth-generation iPod nano for $135. Next up is a 2.26GHz Core 2 Duo MacBook from the Apple Store for $759. We round out our top picks with a number of MacBook Pros, starting at $1,099 for a 2.4GHz Core 2 Duo and 13.3-inch screen.

Along the way, we check out the latest App Store price drops and freebies, deals on AppleCare plans for 15-inch and 17-inch MacBook Pros, and software for your Mac. As always, details on these and many other items are available on CoM’s “Daily Deals” page after the jump.

iPads Not Street Legal in Japan, Elites Use Anyway

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The iPad launches officially in Japan on May 28, but like lots of countries around the world, jet setters and government members already have them before local stores do.

Apple’s new device hasn’t been declared street legal by Japan’s communication authorities yet so, much like in Israel whose iPad “ban” got supermodel Bar Rafaeli into trouble, until it’s been officially cleared for use, elites who have them must pretend not to use them.

Case in point: Japan’s telecoms minister, Kazuhiro Haraguchi, “borrowed” an iPad from Marc Benioff, customer service exec at Salesforce.com, while visiting the US in May. Haraguchi however, clarified via Twitter that “I’m not illegally using the iPad in Japan.”

Retrevo: 30% of Netbook Shoppers Bought iPad Instead

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There’s a growing number of analysts and pundits who believe that netbooks will increasingly become irrelevant to most customers as tablets This latest Retrevo poll seems to support that opinion.

The Retrevo poll’s sample size was over 1,000 individuals of different genders, ages, incomes and location who considered buying a netbook last year. The question asked was: “Did you hold off on buyinga netbook after the iPad was announced in January?”

The results are quite good for iPad. 40% waited to buy a netbook until after Apple announced the iPad, while 30% didn’t wait at all. The remaining 30%? They all abandoned their netbook plans and went with iPad instead.

Wired Launches iPad App – With Adobe’s Help

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Wired has released a version of their magazine for the iPad. The new version costs $4.99 and is available from iTunes. Ironically, the video used to demonstrate the iPad version, can’t be viewed on an iPad due to its use of Adobe Flash.

The iPad version was released ahead of the scheduled June premiere by publisher Condé Nast. “Wired Magazine will be digital from now on, designed from the start as a compelling interactive experience, in parallel with our print edition,” editor-in-chief Chris Anderson told readers. Earlier this year, Anderson called the iPad a “game changer.”

Flash Fan Sends Hidden Message to Steve Jobs

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In the on-again-off-again Apple/Flash affair many people feel caught in the fray. McCann creative Mat Bisher, perhaps tired of being caught up in this tug- of-war, used his Flash-built site to send a strong message:  “STEVE JOBS HATES YOU.”

Bisher employed a Flash sniffer to send this message, sniffers detect whether users are on Flash-enabled  devices. Try to view Bisher’s “Save Apple” site from an iPhone or iPad you’ll be greeted by Steve Jobs flipping you the bird with a freakishly long middle digit.

Bisher hit on the idea out of frustration:
“I, like many agency creatives, have designed my site using Flash, and as we all know, Apple’s iPads and iPhones are not Flash supported thanks to Mr. Jobs.

New York Times: DoJ Investigating Anti-Trust Case Over iTunes

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Apple’s been under the scrutiny of the U.S. Department of Justice in two anti-trust investigations over the last couple of months: the first in response to complaints by Adobe that Apple wouldn’t allow Flash on iPhone OS, the second in relation to the forthcoming iAd network.

Steve Jobs can’t be happy about either of these investigations, so the prospect of a third must have him massaging his temple as if someone just fired an invisible BB into it: the New York Times claims that the DoJ is launching yet another anti-trust investigation against Apple, focusing on the iTunes hegemony over the digital music market.

Game, Set & Match to First “Real” Tennis Game on iPad – Ace Tennis HD 2010 [Review]

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Billed as the first real tennis game on iPad, Ace Tennis HD 2010 doesn’t disappoint. Boasting gorgeous graphics, Ace Tennis HD has a great multiplayer mode, wich matches you with other players online.

Be warned — this kind of competition really brings out the John McEnroe in you — dominating other players is dangerously addictive.

Report: Latest Foxconn Death Makes 10

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Another worker at China’s Foxconn Technology Group has died. While few details were released by the state-run Xinhua News Agency, the incident is the 10th death in the past year at the electronics maker. Ironically, the death followed an announcement Monday by Foxconn disputing reports of a sweatshop atmosphere.

“We are certainly not running a sweatshop. We are confident we’ll be able to stabilize the situation soon,” the AP quotes Foxconn Chairman Terry Gou.