hardware - page 28

Jobs: WiFi iPhone Sync Coming “Someday”

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When Apple rejected WiFi Sync from the App Store, speculation was that their reasons had a lot to do with future Cupertino’s own plans to allow iDevices to sync with Macs wirelessly.

The latest Jobs’ email lends some credence to that theory. Rick Proctor wrote Jobs and asked, “Do you think you will ever allow syncing iPhone to Mac over wifi?”

Jobs’ terse but cheery response: “Yep, someday.”

Excellent news. I’m sick of syncing my iPhone through wires like some sort of caveman. If we get wireless syncing, though, is it too much to ask for inductive charging as well?

iPhone 4 Drop Test Shows Fourth Drop’s The Charm

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A couple of weeks ago, we posted a link to a stress test the guys over at iFixYourI performed on the iPhone 4, showing that while it was fairly bend proof, it easily shattered when dropped.

The problem with their test was that since the iPhone 4 hadn’t been released yet, they had simply conducted their test with an empty iPhone 4 case and display, which prompted our commenters to raise some excellent points that a hollow iPhone 4 was more likely to be easily broken than one with all the electronics innards tightly packed inside.

Here’s the follow through. iFixYouri have done another drop test on a real iPhone 4. Frankly, I’m surprised how well the real iPhone 4 holds up to dropping it from waist height onto concrete: three successive drops breaks the phone, while the fourth shatters it, but I’d actually consider that pretty good for an unprotected handset made largely out of glass, wouldn’t you?

iPhone 4 Antenna Misdesign Causing Dramatic Reception Drops When Picked Up

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Those in the know of how cellular antennas work have been expressing misgivings about the design of the iPhone 4’s antenna for a while now.

As a simplistic summary of the problem, with the iPhone 4, Apple chose to essentially make the stainless steel band wrapping around the phone act as the phone’s antenna by separating it into three distinct chunks delineated by the gaps in the handset’s frame. Superficially, that should give the iPhone 4 more reception bars, but as MAKE’s Dave Matthews said two weeks ago: “Having been in the cellular business most of my career, I think it’s really odd that you’d want an antenna grounded by a moist hand.”

It looks like this fear may have been grounded in reality. Numerous users are reporting — with video proof — that the iPhone 4 loses up to four bars of reception when it’s actually picked up. If you don’t touch the bottom of the phone, you’re fine, but as soon as you connect the left side with the bottom of the phone… reception goes in the toilet.

Octiv Mini Dock Ensconces Your iPhone In Rare Geometry

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This is something fresh in the shelves of black, rectangular iPhone docks: the Altec Lansing Octiv Mini M102, which distinguishes itself from its brethren by imbuing its sleek design with an angular slant in the back and a free app called Alarm Rock which wakes you up to your favorite tunes when your device is docked.

Otherwise, there’s not much to distinguish this $60 compact dock with any other one, but let’s face it: given how indistinguishable other docks are, a neat geometric design is all that’s really needed to set the Octiv Mini apart.

HyperMac Batteries Now Come In Chromatic Hues

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Want a splash of color for your external Mac, iPad or iPhone battery? HyperMac has just updated their line to include an attractive array of new hues, modeled by the strange gang of human peacocks pictured above.

The batteries are available in four different sizes offering between sixty and two hundred and twenty watt hours of juice for your favorite Apple portable: at the higher end, that’s enough to fully juice your iPhone fifty-two times, power your iPad for 100 hours and drive your MacBook from between 20-35 additional hours, but even the $199.95 entry level model will deliver a third of that performance.

Iomega Skin USB 2.0 Hard Drives Have Extreme Aesthetic

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For many of you, it’s probably a bit too late, but if you’re a Mac gamer who uses Valve’s Steam for Mac games delivery client, you might want to hold off updating to 10.6.4: according to Valve, 10.6.4 introduces some major performance issues to owners running Macs with NVIDIA GPUs.

The following message warend Steam users who logged in over the weekend about the upgrade:

The recent 10.6.4 update from Apple has noticeable performance issues for NVidia graphic chip owners running high performance games. If you wish to avoid this, you should consider waiting to install the 10.6.4 update until Apple has had the opportunity to address this issue. Full details of what is contained in the 10.6.4 update can be found here: https://support.apple.com/kb/HT4150. If you have already installed this update and believe your graphic performance is affected, please contact Apple support (https://www.apple.com/support/) for details on what to do.

I haven’t noticed anything on my 27-inch Core 2 Duo iMac, but your mileage may well vary. If you haven’t updated to 10.6.4 yet, and if your Team Fortress 2 performance is more important to you than your Snow Leopard importance, it can’t hurt to hold off for now.

Comparison Between Apple A4 and Samsung S5PC10 Shows Intrinsity Streamlining

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Over at the EE Times, they have posted an interesting comparison between Apple’s A4 CPU and the Samsung S5PC10.

The end results are that they find that the CPUs are similar in design, Apple has taken a chip originally engineered to meet the demands of a broad range of OEMs and reduced the complexity and footprint to suit Apple products, thanks to their partnership with Intrinsity.

[via Engadget]

JooJoo Tablet Is No iPad, But At Least It Can Now Run OS X

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The JooJoo Tablet has had a long and troubled history. Originally a project by TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington to build a $200 tablet and called the CrunchPad, the JooJoo came into being when its outsourced Singaporean developers violated their contract and decided to cut Arrington out and sell the tablet themselves… a mere month before Apple unveiled the iPad at a similar price point.

By March 30th, only 90 JooJoo tablets had been sold. But if you happen to have one of those 90 JooJoos, good news: you can now install OS X on it. None too surprising — the JooJoo boasts an Atom processor, which is compatible with Snow Leopard — but why would you even want to? OS X is an even worse tablet operating system than Windows 7, let alone the finger-based custom Linux distro the JooJoo ships with.

But hey, if you’re the kind of person who was willing to drop $500 on the JooJoo when you could have bought an iPad, you’re probably already prone to some truly questionable decision making,

New NAND Modules from Toshiba Could Herald 128GB iPhone and 256GB iPod Touch in 2011

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The only thing that Apple didn’t actually update with the iPhone 4 was the storage, raising the question of whether or not the iPod Touch will get a storage bump come September.

Theoretically, Toshiba’s currently available flash storage modules could give us a 128GB iPod Touch this year… but next year, we could possibly see that number double again to a shocking 256GB, thanks to Toshiba’s latest announcement: they have just announced the first-ever 128GB embedded flash memory chip manufactured with a 32nm process to start shipping this autumn.

Stacking sixteen 8GB NAND layers, the new design is just 0.06″ thick and seems ready made for iDevices. Since Apple employs one NAND flash module in the iPhone 4 and two 32GB NAND flash modules in the 64GB iPod Touch, that means next year, the iPhone 4 could conceivably leap to 128GB of storage to the iPod Touch’s 256GB.

iPhone-Compatible Medi Earbuds Stay Anchored In Your Canals No Matter What

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Most of us are familiar with the annoyance of a pair of earbuds squirting out of our ear canals. The best earbuds either use rubber tips to anchor your headphones in place or, better yet, are specifically molded to fit your ears, but even those solutions can be uncomfortable for long listening sessions.

UrbanEars have a different solution with their latest Medi buds: they use an “earclick” solution which secures them in your ears by applying pressure at the catilaginous antiragus and inferior crux. The end result? Even though you can hardly feel them, they stay in your ear.

Each pair of Medis comes with four variably sized swappable pads to guarantee a close fit, and each bud boasts a 15.4mm driver, an inline remote and microphone compatible with the iPhone and a fabric, tangle-free code. They are available now for just $50 in twelve different colors.

[via Gadget Lab]

Nintendo Wants To Prove That 3D, Not Retina Display, Is The Future of Gaming With the Nintendo 3DS

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Although it started as a clandestine probe into enemy territory, Apple now pretty much owns the handheld gaming market — game for game, buck for buck — thanks to the App Store. The previous king of handheld gaming, Nintendo, hopes their new console will swing things back in their favor: they think the future of handheld gaming is 3D, and have just announced the console they hope will prove it, the Nintendo 3DS.

Sharing the look of its predecessor, the Nintendo 3DS has two displays: a 3.02-inch touchscreen display running at a 320×240 resolution, and a 3.52-inch 3D widescreen display that works without the need for additional glasses. It also includes three cameras (one front facing, two back facing — to allow 3D photos to be taken) as well as an SD slot, a traditional DS cartridge slot, 802.11n WiFi, a 3D depth slider to reduce or disable 3D effects in games and both a D-Pad and analog stick for controls.

Neither price nor release date have been announced for the 3DS yet, but a $149 – $199 MSRP and a holiday season launch would be my guess.

It looks like a fantastic update to the original DS, and the 3D technology is uniquely amazing, but with the 3DS, it seems like Nintendo’s still locked in to a primarily retail distribution channel for new titles. As long as Apple has the edge of a thriving app ecosystem and a low-barrier to developer entry, Nintendo is only going to continue to fall behind Apple.

New Mac Mini Awesomeness

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Hey kids, look what uncle Steve has made for us overnight: a new Mac mini.

It:

  • is tiny
  • has HDMI
  • has an easy-to-remove lower panel for replacing memory
  • has an SD card slot
  • is tiny (did we say that?)
  • still has a Core 2 Duo processor
  • supports up to 8GB RAM
  • looks amazing
  • is tiny

That’s all I’ve discovered after three minutes of drooling and surfing; more posts with more details coming later.

Battery Pack for iPhone Looks Like Charging Battery Icon

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The Icon by essential tpe is a design first in a peripheral line all too dominated by bulky li-ion boxes: it looks good. Actually, it looks great, aping the style of the iOS replenishing battery icon by using electroluminescent lighting film that displays the add-on battery’s power level even when it’s unplugged.

It has all the hallmarks of just another Yanko Design wishful-thinking concept, but essential tpe swear that this is a real product which they are ready to sell you… an assertion perhaps belied by the lack of pricing details and the rendered appearance of the product shots.

We certainly hope it’s a real product though: the Icon just looks too sexy for us to root against it.

Aegis NetDock Gives Your MacBook Air Four USB Ports, Optical Drive and 500GB HDD

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The MacBook Air is a beautiful machine, but with a puny hard drive, no optical drive and one USB port, sometimes its paucity of ports and specs can put the pinch on you.

The Apricorn Aegis NetDock aims to help you supplement your MacBook Air’s specs by umbilicaling your USB port to an attractive little box that merges four USB ports (two of them powered), a dual-layer DVD burner and a 500GB hard drive (or, if you prefer, an empty 2.5-inch SATA hard drive enclosure).

It’s pretty tiny, too. The Apricon Aegis NetDock is only 6.25 x 5.75 x 2.125 inches. The only real problem is it requires a power cord, but powering all of this off of a single USB port is a bit much.

The Aegis Netdock costs $189, or just $89 if you supply your own hard drive.

Why Apple’s WWDC Keynote Was Disrupted By MiFi

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmZkrdhOjeQ

What exactly happened to cause the WWDC WiFi Meltdown during Steve Jobs’ keynote? Does Apple just not know how to set up a Time Capsule or what?

As it turns out, the problem was just what Apple said it was: too many 3G and MiFi devices. Over on the Future Tense blog, Glenn Fleishman has a very clear explanation of what happened and why.

Ex-Hubble Astronomer Proves iPhone 4’s Pixels Won’t Show More Than 12 Inches Away

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A sensationally-titled piece over at Gadget Lab posted on Wednesday asserted that Jobs’ claims about the iPhone 4’s Retina Display being so dense that individual pixels were unobservable to the naked eye was “false marketing.”

Not so, says the Bad Astronomer himself, Phill Platt, who uses what he knows about optics and resolution from his years spent calibrating cameras aboard Hubble to prove that Jobs’ (mostly) told the truth when it comes to how the iPhone 4’s display looks from twelve inches away.

iPhone 4 Display May Be Bend-Proof, But It May Also Be Easily Shatterable With A Drop

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On Monday, Apple made a big deal about exactly how tough the new iPhone 4 glass was, bending it almost thirty degrees on stage without a sliver of a crack webbing across the glass.

Pretty impressive! Too bad you can’t even drop an iPhone 4 from waist height onto the ground without it shattering, finds repair shop iFixYourI (who don’t have an iPhone 4, but do already have replacement parts).

Where’s the blame, according to iFixYourI? The bezel. Previous iPhones had counter-sunk glass flush with the bezel, while the iPhone 4’s glass actually extrudes a little bit, so the bezel can’t protect it.

iFixYourI says design flaw. Possibly, but as a commenter points out below, it’s worth noting that a hollow iPhone 4 (as we have here) is going to have glass more vulnerable to drops than one supported by an interior hardware architecture. Furthermore, Apple seems aware of just this vulnerability: their new cases seem almost sole-mindedly designed around eliminating the exact sort of shock impact being discussed here.

Either way? Whether your fingers exude butter or not, you’ll probably want one of Apple’s new iPhone 4 bumpers. Probably the pink one, too.

For $49.95, Konnet ReflexPro Dock Will Hook Your iPhone 4 Up To Your HDTV

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Looking for a stylish and affordable way to hook your iPhone or iPod to your 50-inch plasma? Konnet Technology has just unveiled its new, $49.95 ReflexDock Pro, which looks like a pretty fantastic tool for the job.

In addition to piping out your audio and video to a larger screen thanks to included AV Out cables, the ReflexDock Pro also will charge your iPhone. It even includes features like Advanced Sound Reflection, designed to enhance audio and speaker quality when the iPod or iPhone is docked. And yes, Virginia, it’s iPhone 4 compatible.

My only criticism is actually the image Konnet is choosing to use to showcase their product. Sure, it’s a pretty accurate appraisal of how an iPhone-compressed video will look when smeared across a 50-inch plasma without the proper encoding, but creative license and all.

According to Slashgear, the ReflexDock Pro should be available soon on Amazon.

Motorla’s S9-HD Bluetooth Music-Streaming Headset An Odd Combo Of Smooth And Awkward [Review]

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With Motorola behind one of the main challengers to the iPhone (at least, the current ones, anyway — the emerging iPhone 4, for now, seems fairly peerless), one doesn’t get much chance to observe the iPhone and the Motorola M in close proximity outside, perhaps, some smartphone cage match, or on the bedside table of two star-crossed lovers.

Unveiled: Unique 1080p Action-Cam With Remote And LCD Screen

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Not content with the standard definition on their X170 action-cam, Drift Innovation has just revealed their new HD version, capable of thrilling the pants off viewers with first-person shenanigans rendered in 1080p.

The 170-degree viewing-angle-lensed HD170 — kudos to their marketing department for the refreshingly self-explanatory name — also sports a ton of slick features: RF remote, 300-degree rotating lens, night-mode, an LCD screen and more mounts than a Texas rodeo competition.

The HD170 will be available in late July for $330.

iCrystal iPhone Speaker Blasts Sound Through Colorful Alien Pods

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iPhone and iPod speaker docks are usually interchangeably designed affairs, which is what makes the brightly colored iCrystal speaker from Speakal such a breath of fresh air: the dock itself is a lovely Pantone hue of red (black or white are also an option), connected to two alien eggs breaking open to reveal the day-glo, audiophonic yolk: the iCrystal’s pulsating speaker pods, which promise to deliver 360 degrees of sound.

The iCrystal runs on AA batteries, and can connect to televisions, stereo systems or non-Apple MP3 players through a 3.5mm auxiliary input jack. The iCrystal plays and charges all iPods and iPhones to date, although it’s unknown if there’s anything preventing it from similarly docking an iPhone 4.

The iCrystal is available now from Speakal’s website for just $79.99.

Western Digital Unveils New My Book Studio LX Line of Mac Friendly Hard Drives

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If you’re looking for some new external storage to rock your Mac, Western Digital has just announced some new drives specifically tailored for Mac Heads.

Coming in flavors of one and two terabytes, the My Book Studio LX line come in brushed aluminum cases which, if you squint, kinda-sorta match the Ive aesthetic.

The drives come with both FireWire 800 and USB 2.0, and are available for $199 and $299 for the 1TB and 2TB models, respectively. They’re available now.

Comparison: iPhone 4 Retina Display vs. HTC EVO 4G

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We mentioned earlier today that the secret behind the iPhone 4’s Retina Display isn’t just the quadruple pixel density over the iPhone 3Gs, but Apple’s amazing new process that completely eliminates empty space between the LCD and touchscreen, resulting in a display that looks like the pixels have been painted directly on the glass.

Want to see what we’re talking about? The above comparison shot comes from Engadget and compares the iPhone 4’s Retina Display with one of the previously cited industry bests, the HTC Evo 4G’s display.

Granted, the HTC Evo 4G is throwing 38% less pixels at the display than Apple, but even so: look at how those app icons are basically throbbing through the iPhone’s glass, while the Evo 4G’s display looks like it has been submerged in a thin layer of dirty water.