Fourth-Generation iPod Touch Orders Begin Shipping

Posted on September 6, 2010 by MacRumors : Mac News and Rumors.
Categories: Uncategorized.

As noted by TiPb and several posters in our forums, Apple has begun issuing shipping notices for fourth-generation iPod touch orders.

Apple announced new iPod touch, nano, and shuffle models at last Wednesday's media event, not...

Success of Samsung Galaxy Tab doomed by carrier contracts

Posted on by Tony Bradley.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Tony Bradley sees the iPad holding a potential advantage over Samsung's Galaxy Tab. The latter will likely have contracts with carriers that won't compare to the iPad's no-commitment contract for 3G service.


GalaxyTab - IPad - Samsung Galaxy Tab - Samsung Group - Android

What to expect from Apple’s iOS updates

Posted on by Macworld staff.
Categories: Uncategorized.
iOS 4.1 is supposed to arrive this week, followed by the 4.2 update in November. If you've got questions about Apple's batch of iOS updates, we'll supply the answers.


Apple - IPhone - IOS - iOS 4.1 - Operating system

iPad Orchestra shows musical potential of Apple’s tablet

Posted on by Nick Spence.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Members of The iPad Orchestra recently performed 'Sweet Dream' by Ilya Plavunov on four iPads, much to the approval of Apple.


Apple - IPad - tablet - Ilya Plavunov - Companies

iOS 4.1 walkthrough

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Complete feature guide to Apple’s iOS 4.1 update for iPhone and iPod touch

iOS 4.1 is a relative small update to iOS 4 that fixes some important bugs, adds a few new features, and powers the all new iPod touch 4.

Steve Jobs announced the headlines during Apple’s 2010 special music event and they include Game Center social gaming network, TV rentals, iTunes Ping social music network, HDR photography, and HD video uploads. (Yes, Apple is introducing not one but two new social networks.)

More importantly for some, proximity sensor misfires, Bluetooth woes, and the abysmal performance on iPhone 3G appear to be fixed.

We’ll be covering all of that and more below. For anything and everything that hasn’t changed, check out our massive iOS 4 walkthrough because we won’t be repeating all that here

Note: this walkthrough is based on the GM (gold master) version of iOS 4.1. We’ll continue to add to and improve it as needed, and update once iOS 4.1 release version hits, probably on Wednesday September 8.

ios_4-1_walkthrough

If you don’t have time (yet) to read this iOS 4.1 walkthrough and are eager to get the basics down now, here’s a quick 5 minute video guide to get your started.

We’re showing it off on an iPhone 4, which should be similar to how it will work on an iPod touch 4.

What hasn’t changed

Most things haven’t changed with iOS 4.1, so again, check out our iOS 4 walkthrough to get up to speed on the far more numerous changes last summer’s update brought.

System-wide changes

AVRCP A/C Remote Control Protocol for stereo Bluetooth

Yes, you can finally — finally — control volume, skip tracks, and do pretty much anything your stereo Bluetooth headset allows. Unfortunately, at least in my tests, volume changes on the headset don’t show up on the iPhone’s volume slider — but they do work in both iTunes Store streaming and iPod apps.

FaceTime app

iPod touch 4 gets a brand new, top left icon on the home screen just for FaceTime. (Which makes sense since there’s no Phone app from which to initiate a FaceTime call. There’s also no phone number associated with iPod touch so Apple/iTunes IDs will be used instead.

iPod touch 4 isn’t available yet so we’ll update this section when we’ve had a chance to go hands-on with it. Once the FaceTime call is initiated, however, it should work the same way as it does on iPhone 4 under iOS 4.

Photos – HD YouTube uploads

iPhone 4, and now iPod touch 4, can record 720p HD video but in iOS 4 those videos would be compressed down to SD when uploaded to YouTube. 4.1 fixes that. Just tap the action button at the bottom right and share HD straight up to YouTube.

Note: HD uploads require a Wi-Fi connection.

Camera — HDR photography

iphone_30_icon_cameraiOS 4.1 adds HDR photo capability to the iPhone — and now iPod touch — Camera app. HDR stands for high dynamic range and usually involves a photo with one or more identical photos that are over- and underexposed and then combined together so that far more light and shadow information is available than a single exposure would allow. These high dynamic range images can then be tone mapped to provide a far greater amount of detail, far more like what the human eye can see. So basically, you can see detail in the sky and in the shadow under the tree, rather than having one blown out or the other lost to black. (That’s my lay person, non-photo geek understanding of it anyway).

To enable HDR you simply tap the HDR button, much like the LED Flash button under iOS 4.

Then, when you take the picture, iOS takes not only the regular shot but one overexposed and one underexposed. Shooting the picture seems to take roughly the same amount of time, but saving it takes noticeably longer.

So far, based on the results I’ve seen here and online, iOS HDR does a good job pulling color and detail back into what were previously blown out skies, but an only okay job revealing detail in shadowy areas.

For non photo geeks, however, all they’ll notice is better pictures with bluer skies and brighter people, which is probably why Apple added the feature in the first place.

iTunes Store – Ping and TV rentals

The iTunes Store was originally introduced in iOS 1.2 (iPhone 1.2) as the iTunes Wi-Fi music store and that we’re about to talk about features accessible over 3G and involving video shows desktop iTunes isn’t the only version growing beyond it’s original moniker and focus. With iOS 4.1, new features include the social music network Ping and $0.99 TV show rentals.

Ping

A social music network, Ping debut with iTunes 10 but is also accessible on the iPhone and iPod touch via the double talk bubbles tab, bottom middle. If you haven’t yet signed up in iTunes 10, you’ll get a Ping splash screen telling you to do so.

Once you’ve signed on, the Ping tab will come up with the Activities view. Activities show what’s going on with the people you’ve followed — status, pictures, and videos from recording artists like Lady GaGa, and comments, likes, and shared music from friends. It gives you the ability to like or comment on any of those things and, of course, instant access to preview and purchase the music being liked or commented on in iTunes. That also means there’s currently no way to share or discuss music that’s not in iTunes, specifically in your local country’s iTunes store, which can be frustration for Beatles fans in the US, and fans of far, far more artists internationally.

Actions are fairly simple. To like or add a comment to an activity, tap the appropriate button. To preview or purchase a song that was posted, tap anywhere on the song widget, from album art to title. To be taken to the song’s album, double tap on the title.

The People tab gives you a list of people you follow and people who follow you, as well as a featured button for a list of recording artists.

Tapping on a person gives you profile page with recent activity and an easy follow/stop following toggle. You can also switch to an info view that contains a short bio and buttons to see the person follows and who follows them. Similar to Twitter, people can either let anyone follow them or decide to approve followers on a person to person basis.

The My Profile view, as the name suggests, shows you your own recent activity and, at the bottom, has a button for My Info that shows you your own profile. You can’t (yet?) edit this info on iOS, however, and will need to go back to iTunes 10 on Mac/Windows for that.

I’m not sure if it’s the blank loading screen, but iTunes Store has never felt like the snappiest app on iOS and including Ping inside it likewise makes it feel less snappy than Twitter or Facebook. It also doesn’t seem to save state of the tabs, perhaps because they’re web pages being re-loaded each time, which makes the experience of moving between apps seem sluggish.

TV show rentals

The other addition is TV show rentals. They’re only available from ABC (whose parent company, Disney, counts Steve Jobs as its biggest share holder), and FOX (whose owner, Rupert Murdoch, sees mobile devices as a way to save old media), and cost $0.99 per episode. You have 30 days to start watching and 48hrs. to finish once you start.

To access them, tap the videos tab at the bottom, then the TV Shows tap center top. Tap on a show and you’ll get the info screen with full season purchase price. If you want to rent a single episode, double tap the title and you’ll get the single episode info screen with rental option.

Double tapping is usually reserved in iOS for zoom, so it’s not the most elegant or intuitive way to get at rentals.

A discounted season rental price would be nice, but this is Hollywood, so baby steps. Tiny, tiny baby steps.

Note: if you rent on iPhone, only the SD version will be downloaded. If you rent on Apple TV, you’ll get the HD version. Given iPhone’s 3.5″ screen, SD is probably a better option to save on file size.

Game Center

Game Center, Apple’s social gaming network, remains in sandboxed developer preview mode but should go live sometime around iOS 4.1’s public release this week. Currently, as with the iOS 4 beta version, you can sign up for an account, share your status, view your friends, and approve incoming friend requests.

The games tab simply reads “find Game Center games” but redirects to a web page. During the iOS 4.1 demo, however, it featured Angry Birds, Dungeon Hunter 2, and other popular titles.

Likewise, achievements, leader boards, and match-making should all go live sometime this week. We’ll update with a complete walkthrough when that happens.

Phone

New to the Phone app, if you choose to add a number to Favorites, and that number is mobile, and is an iPhone 4, you’ll be given a choice of adding the phone number proper, or adding it as a FaceTime connection.

iOS 4.1 pricing and compatibility

iOS 4.1 is a free update for iPhone users and for iPod touch users.

Compatibility should be the same as with iOS 4.

  • iPhone 4 and iPod touch 4 (2010): All features
  • iPad (2010): Coming this fall with iOS 4.2
  • iPhone 3GS and iPod touch G3 (2009): No features requiring iPhone 4 or iPod touch 4-type hardware (i.e. FaceTime)
  • iPhone 3G and iPod touch G2 (2008): No multitasking, custom wallpaper, and Bluetooth keyboard support.
  • iPhone 2G and iPod touch G1 (2007): not compatible/no update

Conclusion

iOS x.1 point updates are relatively minor compared to the full version releases but this fixes some major bugs, adds a few great new features for iPhone users, and powers a whole new level of experience for iPod touch 4 owners.

Did we really need two separate new social networks in Ping and Game Center, or would a unified iOS/Apple social network have been better? Only time will tell.

If you were waiting on a new notification UI or widgets, well that’s not the point of the point release, but iOS 5 is only 6 months from beta so keep the dreams alive.

iOS 4.2, with wireless printing and AirView is scheduled for November, however, so there will be more to come for iPhone, iPod touch, and finally iPad users this year as well.

[Thanks to everyone who contributed screenshots and descriptions for this walkthrough. If you noticed we missed anything or got anything plain wrong, drop us a note in the comments and we'll update as needed.]

iOS 4.1 walkthrough is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


Total iPod Touch Sales Estimated at Over 45 Million


According to market research firm Asymco, Apple's iPod touch has been estimated to have sold more than 45 million units over its lifetime, or nearly 38% of the 120 million iOS devices cited by Apple CEO Steve Jobs at the company's media event...

Informal Testing Suggests Minor Performance Increase for iPhone 3G on iOS 4.1


Late last week, Lifehacker posted a video comparison of the performance of iOS 4.0 and iOS 4.1 on an iPhone 3G.

The video demonstrates the results, but here they are in all their glory:

- Messages: iOS 4.1 Wins ...

iPod touch 4 now shipping

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

TiPb readers are letting us know that they’re receiving shipment notifications from Apple for iPod touch 4. Made available for pre-order last Wednesday following Apple’s 2010 special music event, iPod touch 4 brings Retina Display (though perhaps without the same IPS panel?), FaceTime, 720p video (though only .7mp stills), and other iPhone 4-like features to its non-phone counterpart.

Have you gotten your shipment notification yet? Let us know which model you ordered, when you placed your order, and what date you expect it and we’ll keep track in comments.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

iPod touch 4 now shipping is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


Review: iBrainstorm for iPad

Posted on by Sam Felsing.
Categories: Uncategorized.
This app turns your iPad into a virtual whiteboard and lets iPhone users with a free companion app wirelessly contribute notes to your brainstorming session. It's a promising idea, but one that ultimately has too many limitations to be the creative collaborative tool iBrainstorm's developer envisions.


iPhone - Brainstorming - Handhelds - Smartphones - Collaborative software

Should Game Center and Ping have been one unified social network?

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Instead of introducing two new, separate social networks with Game Center for gaming and Ping for music, should Apple instead have combined them into one unified social network for users?

Keeping them separate means people who may be interested in gaming but not music or vice versa get only the content and interaction they want, and Apple can fine tune and optimize both separately, each to better suit its own focus. No leaderboards in Ping, no album art in Game Center.

Combining them together would mean Apple users only have one place to go to get everything related to their iOS (or Mac) experience. No separate profiles or friend lists, no jumping back and forth between apps.

Would Facebook be better if it was split into several distinct category sites? Would Twitter? Is Apple better able to compete with those unified, generic platforms by specializing and being distinct?

Many people cringe at the idea of even one more social network to join, how do you feel about two?

Should Game Center and Ping have been one unified social network? is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


TUAW’s Daily App: TiltShift Generator Free

Posted on by Mike Schramm.
Categories: Uncategorized.
I finally picked up an iPhone 4 last Friday, and one of the best things about the new handset is the beautiful shots I've taken with the camera. I'm not a professional photographer by any stretch, and people who have actually done tilt-shift photography might have a whole lot of bones to pick with the "'shopped" version of the technique, but I've already had plenty of enjoyment from TiltShift Generator Free. It's one of a few apps on the store that will edit taken pictures to give them the short depth of field and selective focus that creates the effect. The aptly named TiltShift and Tilt Shift Focus are two other (slightly more expensive) options, but TiltShift Generator Free worked great for just messing around, and it has the added bonus of being completely free.

With the free app, you get options to blur or "vignette" (that's the shadow effect seen around the outside frame) the images, as well as adjust the saturation, brightness, and contrast. Once you save the image, you can put it back on your photo reel or export it out to email, Twitter, or Facebook. Getting the paid version for 99 cents allows a higher resolution for output, but as an amateur just having fun, I had no issues with the free version.

Again, if you're a photographer who knows his or her way around Photoshop, something like this probably isn't what you need; you already know how to dive in and edit pictures, and your best shots probably aren't taken with an iPhone anyway. But as a super casual photographer who likes the tilt-shift look and playing around with the iPhone 4's great camera, I really enjoyed this free app. It's definitely worth a download.

TUAW's Daily App: TiltShift Generator Free originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 06 Sep 2010 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)TUAW's Daily App: TiltShift Generator Free originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 06 Sep 2010 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments