The scenario is familiar: you’re rockin’ out to your favorite tunes and you have to answer a phone or converse with someone, requiring you to pause the iPod, remove an earbud, then the reverse to get back to the music. Apple took a stab at easing this annoyance by including a pause and volume switch on the earphone’s cord. However, Sony Ericsson has come along with an even more intuitive solution: motion-sensitive earbuds.
The MH907 ($55) automatically pauses music when one earbud is removed, restarting when the SenseMe technology detects human contact. The technology sounds fantastic, except it requires Sony Ericcson’s fast port connector, currently not available for the iPhone.
It’s fall in the U.S., the leaves are beginning to turn color, but the deals keep coming. Today we highlight hardware, software and a discount duo for iPod touch owners. Apple is selling MacBooks starting at $849, while iPhone owners can grab Spore Origins for just a buck. Meanwhile, you can take a stroll through Mac hardware history with deals on early iMacs, PowerBooks and more.
For details on these and other products, check out CoM’s Daily Deals page.
Among the many dozens (hundreds?) of companies in the cottage industry that makes cases and other protective doo dads for your iPhone, Totonto-based Gelaskins probably produces the most arresting and beautiful of them all.
Actually, just saying they produce protective devices for the iPhone is selling the company way short since they adapt fine art from a deep roster of global artists working in a broad range of styles, putting photo quality prints on thin, but tough, scratch-resistant polymer with a patented 3M adhesive, allowing you to personalize and protect everything from iPhone to the full range of Apple iPods and laptops.
The iPhone covers go for about $15, while iPod protection runs a little less and laptop protective art will set you back about $30. Not that Apple’s industrial design isn’t beautiful itself, but all the Gelaskins art is distinctive – and any of it is guaranteed to make your device stand out from the crowd.
Hit the jump for a gallery of 10 of the newest designs that we think are among the coolest.
As a result of this Cult of Mac interview, Trichotomy Media attributed our coverage of the iPhone app promo code refusal as instrumental in their reinstatement. In celebration, we posted a weekend giveaway contest where the winner gets a single download code of the controversial app.
On second though, naughty dice are more fun for two, so let’s give away two codes!
Freebies go to Freddys Garcia and CG for their randomly chosen comments.
Like Apple, Microsoft is rumored to be working on a touchscreen tablet. Hopefully it won't resemble this earlier effort.
Like Apple, Microsoft is developing on a touchscreen tablet, several sources say.
CoM has heard rumors that Microsoft has a touchscreen tablet in the works. 9to5Mac is reporting that Microsoft is working on a tablet (and two touchscreen phones to compete with the iPhone).
Mary-Jo Foley at ZDNet has some details: Microsoft’s tablet effort is being led by James Allard, the Microsoft executive in charge of the XBox and Zune, and members of Microsoft’s Surface team, Foley reports.
Back in the mid-1990s, there was one thing incredibly obvious to anyone using a Mac: Apple wasn’t ever going to develop a modern successor to the classic Mac Operating System. Despite screenshots of the planned Copland system, the ship date kept getting pushed out, and the pages of MacWeek, MacUser, and MacWorld all started devoting more time to other possible replacements for the core Mac experience. Some mentioned NeXT (the true eventual source of Mac OS X), others ludicrously suggested Windows NT on PowerPC might suffice (seriously), but the consensus was that Jean-Louis Gassee’s BeOS would be the winner.
The upstart operating system had a lot going for it: Native PowerPC support, remarkable multiprocessor optimization (this thing screamed on dual PPC 603s), and, of course, the requisite modern multi-tasking support. Though it ended up losing out to Steve Jobs, a fact almost no one mourns, a lot of us longtime Mac-heads still have a soft spot for the Be-fueled Macs that never were. The software is now mainly found on embedded devices (Palm tried to make it the next Palm OS long before the creation of the Pre) and has no real future.
But you can relive the glory days of the BeOS today, now, on any Intel Mac, provided you have VMWare, Parallels, or VirtualBox (caveat: I’ve only gotten this working on VMWare — the others should work, though). Meet the Haiku Project, an open-source effort to recreate the magic of Be for the modern era. That’s pretty much the pitch — and it mostly delivers. It’s fairly impressive for what it is, though it’s more novelty than anything else for the time-being.
Any true Be-lievers out there? Head to Haiku to get your install disks. If you’re on VMWare, just get the VM file here and go to.
Kyle Wiens, the CEO of iFixit, which cleverly uses product teardowns to make the company a household name among tech geeks.
Last Thursday, iFixit’s CEO Kyle Wiens spent all day in San Francisco trying to buy the new fifth-generation iPod nano. It was the day after Steve Jobs introduced the new iPod, but none of Apple’s stores in the city had them. So that evening, Wiens sent iFixit’s summer intern on a red eye to the east coast with orders to buy one and immediately tear it apart.
The intern’s teardown was reported all over, generating massive attention for iFixit. The next day, iFixit got a genuine scoop with a teardown of the new iPod Touch, which surprisingly doesn’t feature a camera. But iFixit’s dis-assembly revealed space for a camera. Apparently, the Touch was supposed to get one after all.
Between the two teardowns, iFixit generated literally thousands of news stories — from Gizmodo to the Los Angeles Times. Not bad for little repair shop started by a pair of college students in San Louis Obispo, Calif.
iFixit makes its money by selling spare parts for Macs, iPods and iPhones. Its mission is to help people fix their own devices. It publishes free and easy-to-follow repair guides, but it gets the most attention for it’s superb product teardowns.
This is internet marketing par excellence. Not only are the teardowns creating genuine news for the tech press, they are efficiently executed and beautifully documented. The photos are superb, and the walkthroughs are clear and informative. Best of all, Wiens is a genius at sending the media timely and informative emails about the teardowns that all but write the stories for reporters.
“Our goal at the end of the day is to keep devices working longer,” said Wiens modestly in an email to me earlier this week. “Anything that we can do to make repair sexy and gadgets feel less like a black box, the better.”
My friend Brian Chen over at Wired.com has a great story today with a lot more detail about Wiens and his teardowns. Read it here.
When news appeared of a iPhone holster that also gave Apple’s sleek design a bulky BlackBerry keyboard, the gadget press was beside itself with indignation. “iTwinge Is the Stupidest iPhone Accessory Of All Time, Ever,” roared Gizmodo Wednesday.
How opinions change in just two days and a bit of viral video. That YouTube clip from gadget’s maker “Makes Me Cringe a Little Less,” is Giz’s revised opinion on the iTwinge.
“We’ve been overwhelmed by the amount of interest (Positive and negative) in the iTwinge,” Michael Nykoluk, Partner in Mobile Mechatronics, told CoM by email. The company reports it will have “limited preproduction quantities available” the week of October 5th.
To answer some of those negative reviews, Mechatronics released a YouTube video Thursday showing the iTwinge in action and listing some of its benefits, including fewer typos due to the $30 gadget’s physical keyboard.
News of Apple’s refusal to allow 17+ app promo codes broke with this Cult of Mac interview with James Miller, Director of Marketing for Trichotomy Media. Naughty LOADED Dice, a foreplay game with a secret menu to dictate dice rolls, snuck past the Apple censors and made its way onto our iPhones and into our bedrooms.
In a recent email to Cult of Mac, Trichotomy Media attributed our coverage of the promo code refusal as instrumental in their reinstatement. To celebrate free love and free iPhone apps, we’re giving away a Naughty LOADED Dice promo code.
Just comment on this post with your favorite dictator, fascist, suppressor of freedom, book burner or other comment and you’ll be entered to win. Contest ends midnight, September 20th.