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Is Apple Prepping Ad-Supported Operating System?

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Pop-up Mac OS Credit: Engadget
Pop-up Mac OS Credit: Engadget

Talk is swirling around a 2008 Apple patent that could point to an ad-supported version of Mac OS X. The patent, credited to Apple CEO Steve Jobs, would permit embedding “one or more” ads in an operating system in exchange for goods or services.

“The presentation of the advertisement(s) can be made as part of an approach where the user obtains a good or service, such as an operating system, for free or at reduced cost,” Apple explained in the application.

Review: Why Aadvark’s iPhone App Is Great For Questions and Answers

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Have a question? Aardvark Mobile is a great iPhone app that will find a real person to answer it – usually within minutes. It is a wonderfully useful app and has the potential to be an iPhone mainstay for years to come.

Aardvark Mobile is the latest addition to Aardvark: a social question and answer service that emerged from its beta phase earlier this year. Before Aardvark Mobile, users could only communicate with Aardvark through IM or email. The upshot of this was that if you needed a question answered from your iPhone, you had to go through your email or instant messaging app. In most circumstances you were better off finding an answer on your own using Google – even on an iPhone 2G.

But now Aardvark Mobile makes using Aardvark with an iPhone a cinch. So easy in fact, it makes Googling questions from your iPhone seem cumbersome and antiquated.

Do Monster’s $250 ‘In-Ear’ Headphones Have The Golden Touch?

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Monster’s $250 Turbine Pro ear buds are a far cry from the $50 ‘buds we wrote about Thursday. The most noticeable difference: the iFrogz Timbre earbuds are encased in wood, while the Turbine Pro is wrapped in 24k gold.

Then there is Monster’s branding campaign, describing the Turbine Pro as “in-ear speakers” rather than your run-of-the-mill earbuds. Essentially, the company has stuffed in a full-fledged driver one would expect to find in Monster’s larger home speakers. Before the Turbine Pro began shipping, reviewers, such as Boing Boing, explained earbuds typically use armature drivers which sit “directly inside a magnet, producing a considerable amount of sound without a lot of power—the low impedance is perfect for portable music players which don’t have the luxury of power pouring limitlessly from the wall,” wrote Joel Johnson.

The promotional copy strips away the technical jargon, proclaiming the Turbine Pro is “like a subwoofer for your ears.” Unlike iFrogz’ product, which hopes to infer wood equals better-quality tones, the Turbine Pro employs a high-density metal casing to absorb unwanted vibration while providing an “inert,non-resonant acoustic chamber.” To get that perfect fit, the unit comes with five isolating ear tips.

As Griffin pointed out last month with its line of MyPhones headsets for children, the cable between your iPod and your ears is the weakest link. Monster said it is shipping the Turbine Pro with the company’s patented Magnetic FluxTube technology.

If reading technical data isn’t your cup of tea, Monster’s promotional campaign is using the latest tactic to sway consumer opinion: a YouTube video. The video includes testimonials from several recording engineers and producers.

[Via Monster and Amazon Orders]

MovieWedge: A $10 Beanbag for Your iPhone

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How far can marketers ride on the iPhone’s coattails? Quite a distance, if MovieWedge is any gauge. Marketed as the “best iPhone, iPod and portable media device holder/stand in the world!”, the $10 patent-pending product bears a striking resemblance to a 98-cent bean bag. But there has to be more to it, right? Well, yes – more marketing-speak.

The MovieWedge’s features include:

  • “Variable viewing angle” – in other words, it molds to your iPhone’s shape, like an, erm, bean bag.
  • “Compatible with virtually any case or enclosure.”
  • “Soft microsuede covering perfect for wiping screen.”
  • The company includes links to favorable press, including CrunchGear: “this is such a good idea.” What is more interesting is the reviews were written in March and mentioned MovieWedge would be available any day. Why the delay?

    Nearly six months later, the second-coming of MovieWedge is appearing.

    “It’s probably a little chunky for the minimalist traveler, but we like it anyway,” wrote Gadget Lab’s Charlie Sorrel. The Wired site noted MovieWedge offers a “plush lip” for devices plus that micro-fiber material that’s perfect to “quickly polish away greasy smears from grubby thumbs.”

    But $10 to wipe your hands? “But, it’s a bean bag with branding,” noted Giz.

    [Via Company Page, Gadget Lab and Gizmodo]

    Gallery: Gelaskins’ Coolest New Designs

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    Gelaskins put fine art protection on your iPhone.

    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.

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Apple’s New Anti-Virus Spotter

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    The British security firm Intego has published a security memo that provides a clear and detailed view of Apple’s new XProtect anti-virus system in Snow Leopard.

    There are several interesting tidbits: Apple’s new XProtect system cannot recognize all the variants of the Trojans it is supposed to protect against, for example.

    Also, the XProtect system does not spot Trojans hidden inside .mpkg files downloaded from the internet, a major weakness, according to Intego. (Apple’s installer recognizes two types of files — .pkg files for simple packages, and .mpkg files that contain multiple packages to be installed.)

    The memo is patently self-serving — Intego sells several anti-virus and privacy packages for the Mac — but nonetheless provides a clear and detailed view of what Apple’s new XProtect system does — and doesn’t do.

    The full memo after the jump.

    Bright Idea of The Day: Tangle-Proof Ziploc Earbuds

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    Design student Lee Washington wants to make earbuds tangle proof by zippong them together like the seal of a sandwich bag.

    Here’s a great idea for making tangle-proof earbuds. It’s so simple, I’m surprised no one has thought of it before.

    To prevent your earbud wires from tangling when not in use, join them together using a Ziploc-like zipper.

    By pinching the two wires together into a single wire, they become tangle-proof, like a piece of thick, rubbery string. The two wires are simply unzipped when you want to use them.

    The idea was dreamed up by London design student Lee Washington, who has made a short video to demonstrate them in action — see below.

    “The prototype was made very basically with a sandwich bag seal,” says Washington. “It was just designed to demonstrate the concept.”

    As yet, Washington doesn’t have a manufacturer. He’s talking to his professors this week about patenting the idea. He now regrets making the video, which is fast becoming popular. He’s afraid his idea will be ripped off.

    “This could go either way,” he says. “Either the video will get very popular and someone at Apple will eventually see it or someone will do the idea themselves. That would be a pity.”

    Indeed. We wish Washington the best finding someone to market his brilliantly simple idea.

    Turn Any Surface Into An iPod Speaker

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    Turn any surface into an iPod speaker with the $74 K-box.

    If you’ve forgotten those sweet new iPod speakers, but still want to jam out to your favorite tunes, turn any available surface into an impromptu sound system. The K-box ($74.50, pictured) includes an audio input jack and patented technology to send sound waves through the floor, table or whatever is below the cell phone-size unit.

    New iPhone Spy Shot Emerges, Shows Forward-Facing Camera

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    A new spy shot claiming to show the next-generation iPhone has emerged, and it appears to show a forward-facing camera.

    If the spyshot does indeed show the new iPhone, a forward-facing camera would be a cool but surprising feature. Although high on many iPhone users’ wishlists — it would enable iChat videoconferencing from anywhere — the feature seems too Dick Tracy to be true, especially with AT&T’s bandwidth-challenged 3G network.

    A forward-facing camera was mentioned in a recent Apple patent granted April 16 — although this doesn’t mean much. Apple patents everything, and a ton of patented features never see the light of day.

    Apple’s Tablet Delayed to 2010 Thanks To New OS, Report

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    Apple will launch a $700 touchscreen tablet with a new operating system and optimized apps in 2010, new research claims.

    Apple’s response to the fast-growing netbook market will a touchscreen tablet like an outsized iPod touch. It will have a touchscreen measuring 7- and 10-inches; will cost between $500 to $700; and may have built-in 3G wireless, claims Wall Street analyst Gene Munster of investment bank Piper Jaffrey.

    But thanks to the complexity of the tablet’s hardware and, more importantly, the new version of OS X and the apps it will run — it will not be ready until early 2010, Munster said i.

    In a long and detailed research note to clients, Munster cited “mounting evidence” for his claims: