Sunday, March 20, 2011

News: id Software released from the iOS Rage

ID Software has released an update to Rage, the highly anticipated iOS chassis, the first person in the rail-shooter. Earlier this month announced that Rage iOS is based on the same Tech 5 engine of the game, which is used for the upcoming PC/console game. IOS-version contains a subset of the data is structured in such a Rage-the world's combat game Mutant Bash television program in the entire game. Rage HD iOS for on-Rails shooter that takes the player stalked mutant, if they must collect weapons, ammo, and on the basis of the power to survive through the wastelands. The game contains three different levels of difficulty, and four degrees, as well as the specific challenges the entire TV Mutant Bash at each level.


Rage iOS is available in two versions: the rage and Rage HD, but unlike most other "HD" games Rage HD does not have a version of iPad; both are in fact universal applications that simply different quality graphics. iPad, iPhone (4) and the fourth generation iPod touch users can take advantage of the Rage HD higher resolution textures even though this version is also compatible with iPhone 3GS and third-generation iPod touch.Rage is a basic version is compatible with iOS device with iOS 3.1 or later applications are available to. both app store and are large compared to most of the iOS games: Rage ($ 1) is a 540 MB download, while the Rage HD ($ 2), or press the power button is slightly less than 750 megabytes (MB).


If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.


View the original article here

Saturday, March 19, 2011

News: Headcase demo Etch A Sketch for the iPhone-



>
Headcase and Ohio Art have introduced a new Etch a Sketch of the conciliation on the iPhone 3 G/3GS and iPhone 4. These cases have been designed from officially licensed inspectors who are similar to Ohio Art is located in the center of the drawing toy and impact resistant ABS construction of property, by focusing on all ports, controls, sensors, and the cameras and the snap-in in conjunction with the designer. Headcase: n etch-A-Sketch cases iPhone 3 G/3GS and iPhone 4 are now and sell EUR 25.


If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.


View the original article here

Friday, March 18, 2011

News: Parrot announce AR. Pursuit AR Drone of the game.

Parrot for first game app announced its iPhone-AR. Drone Wizard quadricopter released earlier this year. AR. Pursuit is a two-player game, which allows AR. Drone users can run the fix actually using their flock dogfights and iOS devices with integrated cameras they AR. Drones. One of the game, the player makes the role of the pursuer and tries to apply, and shall be fixed in accordance with their opponent, which is to try to reach the top of the world and survive for as long as possible without being hit in the Plugin. Use virtual weapons Pursuer, including Automatic machine gun and missiles and their fleeing the opponent to attack virtual attacks, in which to escape more difficult physically reacts with the AR. Drone. Aims/pursuer roles change automatically after each successful missile strike or a half-time in the game and the winner is the player who Survives without the longest shot dead. AR. using a different colour is used to identify the Drones out of Office Assistant hulls or stickers than can be kept up to date on the Interior of the body, and the Bluetooth connection is used for multiplayer support iOS-between the devices. AR. Pursuit is expected to be available in the app store by the end of November.
If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.
View the original article here
>

Thursday, March 17, 2011

News: Hulu update Hulu Plus

Hulu has released an update for streaming to Denmark, iPhone, iPod touch and add a new a split screen player status and make improvements to the iPad users and to manage the queue in the order of about Hulu Plus 2.0 also improve playback performance within and change the thumbnail version of iPad iPad behaviour. Hulu also announced today that it was originally published in the preview of a recent summer Hulu plus service is now officially launched. Hulu has been to offer its televisiolähetyssisältökokonaisuuden streaming service desktop PC-and Mac-users can look at some of the time, however, users must subscribe to the $ 8/month to view the content presented on mobile devices such as iPhone and iPad Hulu Plus service. Hulu Plus 2.0 is a generic app and is available in the app store as a free download. [via Mac rumors]


If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.


View the original article here

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

News: FlightTrack Add SeatGuru and Terminal Preferences

Mobiata has released a major update of the status of a flight to Denmark live FlightTrack for tracking. FlightTrack 4.0 sport the completely redesigned interface with tabs for information about how to improve your organization's individual surfaces and add the delay forecast for pattern and a full-screen scheduled, estimated and actual times in the port of departure, thereby, for a certain period of time, landing and at the time of receipt of the port. The new version now also includes the SeatGuru map integration, so that users can search for their flights, with the best tour operators and adds information about flights that have been transferred to their original airport. FlightTrack Pro users now also displays the full-screen within the airport terminal maps app. The update also includes several fixes for Weather updates and keep up-to-date on the displayed data. FlightTrack is available in both standard and Pro; FlightTrack ($ 5) contains a whole, including the monitoring of the flight characteristics of the weather, the port and baggage on the basis of the information, flight delay predictions and SeatGuru charts; FlightTrack Pro adds a new Terminal combines feature and push notifications, FAA airport as soon as possible, and the closure of the data, and synchronizing the TripIt. The universal service and require Both apps on the iPhone, iPod touch or the iPad, where iOS 3.0 or later.


If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.


View the original article here

News: Duck Duck Moose release Park Math HD

Duck Duck Moose has released its award-winning Park Math teaching game version of iOS iPad chassis. Selected as the Best Kids in the iPhone/iPod app buyers Guide of the year of our 2011, Park Math to teach math concepts, of the basic regulation, the charmingly illustrated collection of small children, through the operation of a park and a playground theme set to classical music and colorful original characters. Park of the same Math HD import is started by the learning experience, the greater the iPad screen seven fun activities and extra third level, geared to the calculation of the grade you teach the children first, up to a maximum of 100 and single-and subtraction with numbers less than or equal to 20. Park Math HD is available in the app store for $ 2.

If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.



View the original article here

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

News: Google launches iOS edit Google Docs

Google has launched by iPad iPhone and iPod touch users the ability to edit Google Docs directly to their experience gained from devices in the new property. According to the official Google Mobile blog post users simply have to visit in your browser, select the document docs.google.com they want to modify, and then click the "Edit" to begin the Edit button. Post points out that the properties be rolled out a English users around the world, in the next few days, and compatible with all iOS devices with a software version 3.0 or later.


If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.




>


View the original article here

News: KONAMI launches Stellar Arcade: Falcon Gunner

THQ Wireless has released a new stellar Arcade game for the iPhone and iPod touch with the reality of technology shall be fixed by the flock. Stellar Arcade: Falcon are in a gunner places players in the Millennium Falcon gun turret if they are travelling on the ROAD traveling waves blast and Star Destroyers of more than 20 arcade-style levels, on the basis of different stellar movies. The game contains the legendary missions Death Star of the escape, the pursuit of Hoth asteroid field, and the infamous "Kessel run. iPhone 3GS iPhone (4) and the fourth-generation iPod touch users can also carry out optional augmented reality-mode, which allows players to use the device camera overlay at the top of the real enemy of the travellers and the control of the movement in the environment of the device from the resultant of accelerometer/compass or gyroscope, 360-degree with the motion of the whole body. In the coming update also allows users to take and share within augmented reality Falcon turret pictures. The game is compatible with the iPhone 3GS, iPhone and iPod touch (4) and requires the iOS 4.1 or later scheduled publication of the iPad version. Stellar Arcade: Falcon are in a gunner is available from the app store for $ 5.


If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.


View the original article here

Monday, March 14, 2011

News: Samson debuts expedition 40iw PA System

Samson has debuted its new expedition 40iw Portable PA System with iPod dock. 40Iw features from the top on the iPod dock, 40 D-class amplifier, six-inch woofer and titanium dome compression driver, internal wireless microphone system and rechargeable battery, two-channel inputs and other microphones or other instruments and the possibility to link the two units together with Stereo sound wattage. Samson's expedition XP40iw Portable PA System is available now at the best Buy stores and online and sells $ 300.
If you have a comment, news tip, a statement of the advertising, or a request to the question referred to it by the coverage of the directory, to help and iPad or accessories, or If you sell or your iPod, iPhone and iPad products or services, please see the oranges: n comments + questions before posting policies and to identify themselves fully, if you can do.We are in the future, we will delete comments that contain advertising, astroturfing, trolling boats, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content then prohibit or identify publicly lainrikkojat.

View the original article here

Sunday, January 9, 2011

The Skinny on MacBook Air

By Wilson Rothman

Apple new MacBook Air will take your breath, as the original has been in January 2008, when Steve Jobs from a manila envelope. In the era of iPad, thin laptops are jaded. What made Apple with this relaunch is turning to a niche style declaration in an easy option to mass. It is the MacBook Air, less adopteur tax.

When my wife saw the new air, said she, "is like they just poorly attached with it." His faithful original model has already decapitated once, due to a hinge low just presented at any given time (and then repaired). Its hard disk is problematic since day 1 and she regularly performs the battery during the day.

However, this new air has a robust hinge - whole body is in fact quite robust. Instead of the hard disk, each single model MBA now has a solid-state memory cable. The battery can run seven hours on a charge. The price has been fixed in one direction: until last week, the MacBook Air line started at $1,500. Now the base is $ 1,000.

It is not the truth, of course. There are two models, with a screen of 11.6 inches, a slower processor and a battery of 5 hours. This is what the costs of $1,000. The best solution that I've reviewed, 13.3 inch screen just like its predecessor and has longer battery life. It starts at $1,300, higher but $200 less previous range low air. Although both have two USB ports, which is fair, a 100% increase in USB!), only the 13-incher has a SD card connector. Anyone with a digital camera and the gift of losing cords knows the value of this.

More virginal computers meet refreshing, but this thing absolutely springs to life. Open the lid of sleep, and a decline, your screen is ready. A complete start-up takes 15 seconds – on the other hand my very powerful MacBook Pro gets to the login screen in about a minute and a half. The difference is, in part, because everything I got stuck in hard drive Pro, MBA help solid-state drive feel my hot rod as an old mule.

Some people joked with the MBA of 11 inches, Apple has finally built a netbook - a lightweight machine, powered by low that competes with the ASUS Eee PC and his fellow. Joke apart, although I think that Apple should endeavour to reach this audience. For some people hunting for net-friendly simple machine, perhaps an iPad will suffice. But for others who want to replace a same computer laptop with something sufficiently capable, but easier to tote around, air is the option.

I said that air is easy to mass, but I did not say that it is cheap. Apple did a lot of money (approximately $ 28 million per day, last I checked) sale good hardware people at high prices. (Is not the only product Apple, I'm sure many is iPad, even if people complain about it). Apple sells a netbook for $300, but now he sells an alternative of $1,000 to a. If that doesn't make sense, you're all simply not in in the form them of cross.

I have deliberately distance the iPad air because they promise the same experiences. There is no touch screen here, no App Store goodies. Even with the promise of a new Mac OS character resembling iPad from next year, there is really no overlap in the foreseeable future. It is a laptop, just like any other. It runs even Windows, if you can find out how to install it without the help of a disk. (There are ways!)

But while Apple probably do "cannibalize" sales iPad with a slightly more affordable the MacBook air, it can begin to gnaw at the poor, sensible white MacBook. It is a hard game of compromise: at the same price, the MacBook was larger screen, more rapid chip more internal storage and a 10-reversing-hour battery. But it is stocky and weighs more than twice the weight of air same price 4, 7 - lb.

If you are a producer of film or music, this additional power not to be missed. If you do accumulate with MP3 or films by the thousands, storage isn't a big deal. If commute you these off books mean a lot. And many people is satisfied with screens 10 inches, not to mention those of 11.6 inches.

I've never regretted buy MacBook Air my wife, but I wish to assure there is a $1,000 option when we paid $1,500 for her, given to nine. Then, I probably still would have opted for this configuration $ 1,300. The largest screen - not about battery life more long and connector card durned - well worth Upselling.

Catch up with Wilson on Twitter at @ wjrothman.


View the original article here

MacBook Air comes from the age of

Translate Request has too much data Parameter name: request Translate Request has too much data Parameter name: request by Jason Snell, Macworld.com  


You can forgive Steve Jobs for a bit of hyperbole when he’s on stage introducing new products to an audience of thousands of people following along via a live video stream and countless liveblogs. “It’s like nothing we’ve ever created before,” Jobs said when introducing the new MacBook Air. “We think it’s the future of notebooks.”


Jobs is certainly dead-on when he suggests that the future of notebooks is in ever-slimmer, lighter laptops featuring flash storage. But is the new MacBook Air like nothing Apple has created before? Not really. The 13.3-inch model is basically an improved version of the previous MacBook Air (), albeit at a better price.


The new 11.6-inch MacBook Air, on the other hand, is the smallest and lightest Apple laptop of all time, and its base price of $999 ties it with the plastic MacBook () as the cheapest Mac laptop available. I’m not sure I’d call it unlike anything Apple’s created before—it’s got all the stylings of the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro lines, but is tiny like the legendary 12-inch PowerBook of old—but it might be the most novel new Mac released since the Intel Mac era began.


The 11-inch and 13-inch MacBook Air models have a lot in common. They keep their displays in a rigid aluminum shell with an aluminum bezel around a LED-backlit glossy screen. (Unlike the MacBook Pro models, which feature a single slab of glass across the entire front of the display, the MacBook Air continues to feature an ultra-thin glass layer located behind the bezel. In my experience, displays with this approach are less prone to cause glare than screens such as those on the MacBook Pro models.) Like every other Mac laptop, there’s a tiny Webcam located immediately above the display. (In some press materials Apple refers to this camera, once called iSight, as a “FaceTime camera,” though in System Preferences it’s still called an iSight.)


The display piece of the laptop is extremely thin, but the aluminum shell means it’s fairly rigid. Certainly it doesn’t feel fragile or flimsy. And a new hinge design means you can now open the display at a wider angle than previous Airs.


The bottom half makes up the bulk of the laptop, and this is where Apple definitely made some changes compared to earlier MacBook Airs. The older Airs had curved edges all around, a choice that forced the design of a drop-down door to expose the laptop’s headphone, display, and USB ports. These new Airs have flat sides and a slightly curved bottom. The result is that when you pick one up, it feels a bit chunkier than the older models, even though it’s really not.


By trading off that illusion of extra thinness, Apple gets to ditch the drop-down door and station ports right on the sides of the laptops. On the left side, there’s a MagSafe connector, USB 2.0 port, headphone jack, and a built-in microphone. On the right, there’s a Mini DisplayPort, another USB 2.0 port, and (on the 13-inch model only) an SD card slot.


The second USB port addresses one of the previous Air models’ major shortcomings: its single USB port could get crowded in a hurry, especially if you needed to perform a task with two separate USB devices at once and forgot to bring a hub along. (In addition to the continued lack of FireWire support on these models, they also continue to lack an Ethernet port. Apple does offer a $29 USB Ethernet Adapter if you need to get on a wired network. And of course, the Air doesn't come with any optical drive.)


These small laptops can drive large displays via that Mini DisplayPort, at resolutions up to 2560 by 1600—meaning they’ll even drive Apple’s 27-inch LED Cinema Display. (The Apple display’s included MagSafe and Mini DisplayPort cables will stretch to reach those ports, which are situated on opposite sides of the MacBook Air—but just barely.) Both models are driven by a nVidia GeForce 320M graphics processor (the same one used in the 13-inch MacBook Pro), and it’s a nice step up from the nVidia GeForce 9400 used in previous Airs; the new models showed off much improved graphics performance compared to their predecessors.


One nice touch for users upgrading from a past MacBook Air model: if you’ve got a set of iPhone-compatible headphones with an inline microphone and remote, this generation of Airs will let you use that mic for audio input, and you can even use the button(s) for controlling music playback.


Though many small laptops in the PC world feature shrunken-down keyboards that deviate from the standard keyboard layout in unpleasant ways, Apple has refused to compromise on this point—even on the 11-inch MacBook Air. Both models sport the same full-sized keyboard that Apple uses in all its other laptops, not to mention its USB and wireless external keyboards. The only real difference is on the top row of keys: they’re shorter than on the other keyboards, and the power button now appears as the rightmost key in that row. Typing on the keyboard feels exactly as it does on all those other keyboards, too; the thinness of the Air doesn’t mean there’s any less key travel. If you like typing on a MacBook keyboard (or Apple’s external keyboards), you’ll like typing on the MacBook Air.

Keyboard and trackpad of the 11-inch (left) and 13-inch MacBook Air.

One place where this new set of MacBooks regresses from the previous generation: keyboard backlighting is gone. I never considered keyboard backlighting an essential feature—I do know where all the keys are. Like heated seats in a car, it’s a feature that was occasionally useful and felt vaguely luxurious, and I’ll miss it. Also gone are the sleep light and the infrared port.


On the positive side, though, the Airs have finally inherited the same glass-trackpad technology that was added to the MacBook Pro two years ago. It looks, feels, and works just like you’d expect. Though the Air is only .11 inches thick at the same edge that contains the trackpad, the trackpad still depresses with a satisfying click. (The trackpad on the 11-inch model is slightly less tall, but otherwise the two trackpads are identical.)


Finally, one of the lamest features of the MacBook Air was its single mono speaker stuck under the right side of the keyboard. Good news, everyone: The new Air has stereo speakers nestled under the left and right sides of the keyboard. They’re never going to win any awards, but they sound vastly better than the old model.


The original MacBook Air was the first Mac system to be sold with a flash-storage drive as an optional component, and in these new models all storage takes place on flash storage. In case you’re not familiar with the concept, flash storage is a hard-drive replacement that stores data on fixed memory chips (just like the iPhone, iPad and all iPods except the classic) instead of on spinning platters (like most of the computers out there today).


Flash storage has several advantages over hard drives. They tend to be faster than hard drives, especially at reading data. (Though performance can vary widely, the flash storage on these new MacBook Air models was way faster than the poky 4200-rpm hard drives on the prior generation of MacBook Air.) Because they’ve got no moving parts, there’s little risk that dropping your laptop will cause physical damage to flash storage—a real concern when it comes to a spinning hard drive. Flash-storage drives can use less power, extending battery life. They are silent. And despite the amazing miniaturization that’s gone on in the hard-drive market, flash storage takes up a whole lot less space than a hard drive. (At least, it does if it hasn’t been inserted into a traditional hard-drive enclosure—a backward-compatibility trick Apple had to do with the previous version of the Air, but has avoided with this revision.)


There are also some disadvantages to flash storage. It’s more expensive than traditional hard drives, though prices are falling rapidly. There are also questions about ongoing performance of flash storage—depending on the type of flash storage you use, you could find that after several months of heavy use it’s dramatically slower than it was when you bought it.


In any event, if you get a new MacBook Air you’ll be getting it with flash storage. Because of the expense of solid-state technology, the disk capacities for these systems are much lower than they’d be in a bigger system with a spinning hard drive. The $999 base-model 11-inch MacBook Air is the most extreme of these: it comes with 64GB of flash storage. (It’s a $200 upgrade to move up to 128GB.) The 13-inch models come in 128GB and 256GB flash-storage configurations.


At 128GB and certainly at 256GB, you’ll find the MacBook Air’s storage space perfectly acceptable, especially if you’re only using these systems as a secondary computer. (If you’re planning on editing HD video on them, I suspect the lack of storage space will be no more of a problem than the slow clock speed of the Core 2 Duo processor.) The 64GB model, on the other hand, will be a tight fit. You can do it, but you’ll need to carefully pick which apps you want to install and make good use of file servers, or just embrace shuttling files on and off it via a syncing service such as Dropbox. Also, I’d suggest you keep your music collection on a server or just use the music in that iPod or iPhone in your pocket, rather than loading big media files on such a tiny drive.


The new 13-inch MacBook Air isn’t a radical departure from the previous-generation Air, which was itself a surprisingly thin and light laptop compared to Apple’s other MacBook and MacBook Pro models. The new Air is almost imperceptibly thinner (0.05 inches thinner at its thinnest point, 0.08 inches thinner at its thickest), has exactly the same width and depth, and weighs just 40 grams (1.4 ounces) less. The keyboard’s the same, and while the glass trackpad is new, it takes up the same space as the old Air’s trackpad-and-button combo.


Beyond the physical changes to the case, the extra USB port, and the upgraded video processor, perhaps the biggest hardware change to the 13-inch Air from the previous model is the screen itself: the old model was 1280 by 800 pixels, while the new one is 1440 by 900 pixels—all in the same physical space. The result is that everything looks a little bit smaller, but you’ve got more room for stuff on the screen. I found that after a few minutes using the new display, I was used to the change in resolution, though I did increase the default font size in a few of my apps just to take it easy on my eyes.

From a financial perspective, the 13-inch Air is a much better deal than any previous MacBook Air model. The base model, priced at $1299, features a 1.86GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor and 128GB of flash storage. That’s $200 less than the previous base-model Air, where $1499 got you the same processor, a 120GB physical hard drive, and inferior graphics performance. The stock high-end model, with the same specs as the low-end model save 256GB of flash storage, is similarly $200 less than the previous stock high-end system. (Though that $1799 system came with a 2.13GHz Core 2 Duo processor, it also had only 128GB of flash storage.) This is not to say that $1599 is all you can spend on the 13-inch MacBook Air. Apple has provided several options for those who want to trick this system out: for $100 you can add a 2.13GHz Core 2 Duo processor (to the high-end configuration only), and either configuration can be upgraded from 2GB to 4GB of RAM for $100. (And you can only make these upgrades when you order the product; none of these features is upgradable after the fact, either by you or your local Apple Genius.) Even with those two additions, at $1799 you’d be getting a majorly upgraded system from the MacBook Air offered by Apple previously.

In our Macworld Lab testing, we found that the 1.86GHz 13-inch MacBook Air was slightly faster overall than a current-model 13-inch 2.4GHz Core 2 Duo MacBook Pro. However, our Speedmark 6.5 score is based on a suite of tests, and the individual tests were all over the map. The Air, powered by its flash storage, excelled on our storage-based tests. Powered by the nVidia GeForce 320M graphics processor, it held its own on graphics-related tests, but our calculation-intensive tests showed the effects of its processor’s slower clock speed.


The 13-inch Air also easily outdistanced previous models of MacBook Air, aided by its fast storage and upgraded graphics. Not only is this new MacBook Air the fastest Air ever made, it’s roughly comparable in speed to the other two current 13-inch Mac laptop models. That’s a first for the MacBook Air product line.


I love small Mac laptops. The smaller, the better. That’s why I embraced the 12-inch PowerBook in its heyday. But the 11-inch MacBook Air puts even that legendarily small Mac to shame: it trades an inch of depth for an inch of width, weighs in at half the PowerBook’s weight, and is a full half-inch thinner than the old paragon of tiny Apple laptops. Yes, there’s a new champion of Mac laptop smallness, and it’s the 11-inch MacBook Air.


The 11-inch Air is only 11.8 inches wide (a full inch narrower than the 13-inch model), 7.56 inches deep (1.4 inches less deep), and a scant 2.3 pounds (nine ounces lighter). Apple’s $999 white MacBook weighs more than twice as much! The original MacBook Air made all the other MacBooks in Apple’s product line feel like boat anchors; the 11-inch MacBook Air makes the 13-inch Air feel heavy. It’s a little bit crazy.


But while the 11-inch Air is small and light, it doesn’t feel cramped. Part of that is due to the high-resolution display, which packs more pixels into its compact 11.6-inch diagonal screen than fit on the screen of that 13-inch white MacBook. Sporting a 16:9 aspect ratio (1366 by 768 pixels), it’s a bit wider than most Apple laptop displays, and 768 pixels is the bare minimum number of vertical pixels you’d want in a modern Mac display. However, most modern Mac software has been designed with widescreen aspect ratios in mind—and the extra width of the 16:9 display is what keeps it from not feeling cramped.

Like the 13-inch Air, the 11-inch model managed to fit a lot of pixels into a small area of physical space, meaning it’s got a higher-resolution display than most other MacBooks. (It’s actually more comparable to the screen resolution of an iPad.) Because the Mac OS X interface isn’t independent of screen resolution, the result is that everything on the MacBook Air’s screen seems a little bit smaller than it does on most other Macs. As with using the 13-inch model, I adjusted to the new resolution within a few hours, with the exception of changing a few default font sizes and finding myself pressing Command-plus in Safari a bit more often to increase the size of Web pages.

When the MacBook Air was first introduced in 2008, it was criticized for its high price: $1799 to start, with a $1000(!) 64GB flash storage option. Over the past two years Apple has made some progress in turning the Air into a more affordable computer, but with the 11-inch model the company has made a breakthrough. The base-model 11-inch Air costs $999, the same price as the previous low-price laptop leader, the white MacBook. Granted, for $999 you only get a 1.4GHz Core 2 Duo processor and 64GB or flash storage—but unless you’re shopping for a desktop-replacement system that’ll do heavy-duty video and audio editing, I’m not sure it matters.


For an extra $200, Apple’s offering the 11-inch Air with 128GB of flash storage. While both models can be factory-upgraded from the stock 2GB of RAM to 4GB for $100, only the 128GB model can be upgraded to a 1.6GHz Core 2 Duo for an additional $100. A fully stocked 11-inch MacBook Air— complete with 128GB of flash storage, 4GB of RAM, and a 1.6GHz processor—would cost $1399. Not dirt cheap, but still less than the base model of the last-generation Air. (And yes, for that price you could also get a 13-inch Air with the same RAM and storage and a 1.8 GHz processor—but it would be bigger and heavier than the 11-inch Air, now, wouldn’t it?)


Based on our Macworld Lab tests, the 11-inch MacBook Air performs about how you’d expect: It’s the slowest currently-shipping Mac laptop, but it’s still quite a bit faster than the previous generation of MacBook Air models. That’s primarily because of the new nVidia GeForce 320M graphics processor, which makes these systems blow the old Airs out of the water on all our graphics tests. But despite that graphics processor and speedy flash storage, the fact remains that the 11-inch MacBook’s processor is a 1.4GHz Core 2 Duo processor, so it’s running at a clock speed far below those found on other current Macs.


Now that I’ve declared the 11-inch MacBook Air the slowest Mac in Apple’s product line, let me explain to you why I don’t think it matters. If you’re using the Web, writing e-mail or articles or novels, and other relatively lightweight tasks, you’ll find the MacBook Air plenty fast. I could even run Photoshop CS4 on it, editing relatively lightweight Web-resolution graphics, without much trouble. If you’re planning on using it to edit multitrack audio or complex HD video projects, though, you are probably setting yourself up for disappointment.


I tried to watch some video on this model—typically a major MacBook Air bugaboo. I was able to stream an episode of Terriers from Hulu without incident. The episode played without getting all jumpy and dropping frames (a typical symptom of an overheated and struggling MacBook Air in the past). The Air definitely heated up when the video was playing, and its fan kicked in—though honestly, I had to almost place my ear against the back hinge before I could actually hear it. Playing H.264 video was much smoother than I’ve experienced on prior Air models as well—again, presumably because of the GeForce 320M graphics processor.


Longer bars are better. Blue bars in italics represent reference systems. Macworld Lab testing by James Galbraith, William Wong, Gil Loyola, and McKinley Noble.

Apple is making a big deal about saying that these new MacBook Airs have “instant on” technology. What the company is talking about is a new power-saving mode: After a laptop’s asleep for a while, it switches into a super power-saving standby mode that lets the battery survive for up to 30 days. But when you open the laptop back up, it doesn’t show you a progress bar while it loads stuff—it just snaps back to life. Unfortunately, I couldn’t test Apple’s claim of 30 days of standby survival, since as of this writing these laptops have only been in our hands for five days.


Apple says that by reducing the space of other components (such as the solid-state drive enclosure) in these models, it’s been able to increase the amount of room left for batteries, with the result being improved battery life. Apple claims that the 11-inch Air can last up to five hours when running the company’s own “wireless productivity” test suite; its claims for the 13-inch Air are up to seven hours.


Our own tests are more aggressive than Apple’s, and are designed to drain the laptop’s battery much faster than Apple’s. But they do give us a good sense of how much battery power these systems have when compared to the previous-generation MacBook Air. And there’s good news on that front: The 11-inch Air lasted for 220 minutes while looping an H.264 movie in full-screen mode at full brightness. The new 13-inch Air lasted 265 minutes. And the 2009-era MacBook Air? It only lasted about 185 minutes.


In real-world use, I found that the 11-inch MacBook’s battery definitely felt more long-lasting than the previous-generation Air’s. It’s probably not powerful enough to last the entire day, but it’s going to give you a good, solid run. The 13-inch model, on the other hand, can probably get you through an entire workday if you’re judicious with your power usage and put it to sleep when appropriate.


My original review of the MacBook Air ended with a simple question: “How much are you willing to compromise?” While it’s still true that a small, light laptop will require some degree of compromise on both speed and price, over time Apple has made those compromises much less painful.


It feels like, with these new 11- and 13-inch laptops, the MacBook Air product line has finally come of age. The 13-inch model addresses many of the old Air’s weaknesses (graphics performance, battery life) and offers speeds that aren’t far off the standard of the MacBook Pro line. And yet the 13-inch MacBook Air weighs 1.6 pounds less than what the 13-inch MacBook Pro weighs. Yes, the MacBook Air still costs more and does less than other 13-inch Apple laptops; if weight and size are not important considerations for you, you shouldn’t buy a MacBook Air. But if, all other things being (roughly) equal, you’d prefer a lighter laptop, the MacBook Air deserves your serious consideration.


There’s no previous-generation analog to compare the 11-inch MacBook Air against; it’s a completely new kind of Mac laptop, the smallest the company has ever built. But the high resolution of the 11.6-inch screen keeps it from feeling cramped, the full-sized keyboard is comfortable, and its slower processor is offset by its speedy solid-state drive and good integrated graphics processor.


People seeking a small, light system for writing and e-mail will find the $999 base model irresistible. Those who want to upgrade its drive, processor, and RAM will want to consider its small size versus the slightly larger 13-inch model, which comes equipped with a better set of specs. But while the 13-inch model is just as light and thin as the MacBook Air has ever been, it looks like a hog in comparison to the 11-inch model.


The MacBook Air product line still isn’t for everyone. But those who value smallness and lightness above all else will find the 13-inch model more tempting than ever. And that 11-inch dynamo, the smallest and lightest laptop in Apple history, the one with the $999 price tag? It’s quite possibly the most desirable laptop Apple has ever made.


The release of the iPad made me wonder if I’d consider a Mac laptop as my constant traveling companion ever again; the release of the 11-inch MacBook Air proves that there’s still plenty of life left in the Mac after all.


[Jason Snell is Macworld’s editorial director.]


View the original article here

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Best applications iPad media

The verticals of historical media of radio, television, print and Web if evaporate in an iPad - it is simply contained, backlighting and inviting, waiting for the magnetic finger. Long-lasting and news story found a reliable Wing man in the iPad.

On the desktop, click links, the results of the scan and then click on some more exploration for information, but never really read much of what it is.

Because of its screen size and relative weights, the iPad allows and encourages the user to quit typing so, lean back and actually read something. And in the process, it renews the love of reading: people want to touch that they learn on the iPad allows this intimate relationship, along to read something more of a Twitter post or a news alert.

Some of my favorites:

BBC NEWS (FREE): With its grid intelligently organized on the left and the right column, the implementation of the BBC allows rapid foam and dives deep with equal ease. This is a nice window non-buggy on the events of the day around the world. Top news ticker keeps the drive up to the minute, and there is an option to listen to radio live BBC so.

NEW YORK POST (FREE): say that as someone and we are not naming names here, a bit of taste for the side of the street scandal. But it might seem less green purchasing a dead trees New York Post version just to look in, on Page Six, and see what kind of war sports article trying to gin up. The New York Post app is there for you. Good horizontal and vertical navigation with a drop-down bar that gets you where you want to go. Miss "wood," cover screaming? No worries. IPad, you can make your own tabloid cover and send it to a friend. A needless, but totally seductive utility.

INSTAPAPER (free and $5): you are a ton of research Web to your desktop, but not the time to digest. Instapaper allows you to mark a document and then later tell leaned in a Chair after House has chastened for the night, pass through all these documents in a clear, clean, easy-to-read format.

$4.99 You forks above for the paid version of Instapaper on the iPad may be the best fin that you will never pass allows you to archive Web pages for offline reading in an optimized format iPad makes long-term content reading a pleasure.

NETFLIX (free of charge, but $8 monthly fees): it is the bedtime and your spouse is watching "House hunting" is a great show and all blows but a whistle, you cannot hear. This device on your bedside table which you have been checking emails with can instantly spring to life with all sorts of broadcast streaming movies and TV shows from Netflix. Just hit play, pop your listeners - while holding hands with your partner. You're single, watch what you want, but you're only as a whole.

REUTERS NEWS PRO (FREE): Enterprise resolutely, Reuters has separate buttons on the bottom of the display of the current information on markets, stocks and currencies. And the main page bifurcates horizontally at the top of the new page and the video with a horizontal navigation prompts the skimming in many rich content. Once you deeper into the application, there is a drop-down index that allows you to see the news by country and region


View the original article here

Friday, January 7, 2011

New Apple TV sales at the top of the page $ 1 million this week

The new Apple TV is quiet, efficient, and so small it fits almost anywhere.

Everything you want to watch - movies, TV, photos and more - stream wireless for Apple TV. In this way you do not have to worry about storage or synchronization of your iTunes library management. Film HD TV show locations of play on the Internet on your TV screen, while the stream music and pictures from your computer. In both cases, you have to is click and play. Given that Apple TV features powerful A4 chip it flows without effort, without frozen screens or stuttering. Video looks clear and sharp. And just like watching a DVD, you can fast forward through the opening credits, pause for a break of popcorn or replay a hilarious, scene that you memorize each row.


Establishment of Apple TV is as simple as it gets. Simply plug the power cord into the wall, and Apple TV to connect your TV screen with a cable HDMI (sold separately). Since any stream wireless Apple TV, which is all that you need. Well, that and a comfortable sofa.


View the original article here

Thursday, January 6, 2011

iPad-world opens disabled boy

Owen 7, is a not the force flexibility a mouse computer, but when a nurse seconded at your fingertips iPad his friend in June, he did something that his mother had never seen before.

He aimed his left finger pointer to an icon on the screen, he touched - just - and opened application Gravitarium, who plays the music that users create landscapes of stars on the screen. Over the years parents Owen had tried several gear communications computer to give him to escape his handicap but the iPad was the first who worked on the first try.

"We spent all this time keep alive, and now we need him more than," said his mother, Ellen Goldstein, Vice President of the association of business alliance of Times Square. "I think its ability to communicate and learn as much of this challenge - not all, but a large part of it." And so is my responsibility.

Since its inception in April, the iPad became a tool of popular therapy for people with disabilities of all kinds, although that person keeps track of how much is used in this way and studies receive only underway to test its effectiveness, which varies according to the diagnosis.

A speech therapist to Walter Reed Army Medical Center uses text-to-speech applications to give patients a voice. Christopher Bulger, one 16 years in Chicago injured in a car accident the spine used an iPad to navigate on the Internet in the early stages of its rehabilitation when her hands were closed fist. "It was fun because you grew join to join the screen using finger," he said.

Parents of autistic children use applications to teach basic skills such as brushing teeth and communicate better.

For a traditional technological device as the iPad instantly adopted by persons with disabilities is unusual. It is much more common for components designed for persons with disabilities to be adapted for General, such as closed captioning on TV in gyms or GPS devices in vehicles that use branches. In addition, most consumer devices do not come with built-ins as the iPad captioning, expansion and functions of audio playback - who were supposed to keep it simple for all users, but also help people with disabilities.

"Less complicated things can actually do a lot of money," said Gregg c. Vanderheiden, a Professor of engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who has worked on issues of accessibility for decades.

Representative Edward j. Markey, a Democrat of Massachusetts, who wrote recently adopted require mobile devices to be more accessible to users with disabilities, said about three quarters of the communications and video devices need to be adapted for blind and deaf people. "Apple", he said in a statement, "is a flap when it comes to devices that are available in the box".

The iPad is, generally speaking, cheaper than computers and other gadgets specifically designed to help people with disabilities to speak, read or write. While insurers do not usually cover the cost of such as the iPad mobile devices because they are not medical equipment, in some cases they will pay for applications that run on them.

Owen, grandmother bought him an iPad $ 600 in August and his parents have invested about $200 more in software. One day this summer promise his finger on the title page of "Alice in Wonderland" on his iPad, while his mother ranged over his shoulder in their house in Brooklyn. Then, with most movements and the sensitivity of a touchscreen iPad, Owen has begun to turn the pages of the book. "You're reading a book on your own, Owen!" Ms. Goldstein, 44, exclaimed. "It's wonderful completely.

But while the sensitivity of the touch screen of the iPad makes promising for Owen, it can be problematic for others, such as Glenda Watson Hyatt, a blogger in Surrey, British Colombia, who has cerebral palsy. "When ' flipping screens, sometimes I return more than one screen," Ms. Hyatt wrote in an e-mail interview. "Or I touch that I had no intention of".

Yet Ms. Hyatt said that when she found it difficult to chat with friends at a bar recently, she pulled her iPad to help communicate and considers normal. "People were attracted to it because it was a"known"or"known"technology, piece" she wrote in a blog ticket examine the device.

In the Centre of Berger, a clinic for rehabilitation of spinal cord in Atlanta, some tetraplegic adolescents received iPads in the form of donations, but they don't work well for those who rely on a stick of mouse - essentially a long pen controlled by mouth.

"He wants to see a finger," said John Anschutz, the Shepherd assistive technology program manager. "It really quality skin and mass to operate."

Owen Cain, whose disease is physical, mental, the iPad has limitations, too. Moving his finger while on the keypad remains a challenge and writing is difficult. Ms. Goldstein said that his versatility, and affordability, however, have been a boon. It has been experimenting with a variety of applications - Proloquo2Go, allowing him to touch an icon which invites the device to talk about things like, "I need to go to the bathroom." Math Magic, allowing the arithmetic practice. and the game of the animal, a memory game.

"Everything you're worrying about is 'I can try this program, I can try this program, I can buy this app or I can buy this app', and investment is much lower,"said his mother"if our ability to explore and experiment with different things is so big."

When Owen was approximately 8 weeks old mother noticed that his pending right arm. It leads to a crushing diagnosis: the disease called neuron spinal muscular atrophy type 1. An article by New York Times, 2003 on spinal muscular atrophy has said that her parents had said that owen would be "paralyzed for life, predicts physicians will last not more than two years."

Owen transform 8 November 11. While its State should not be worse, it is highly susceptible to infection and once almost died of pneumonia. three specialized therapists and a nurse to keep alive.

Although he does not speak, her parents have learned to read, write and do math. It has a playfulness sense of humor and love of the "Star Wars". "It is a normal child trapped in a body not normal," said his father, Hamilton Cain, 45, a book publisher.

Since he has received the iPad, Owen was trying to read books and playing Air Guitar applications. And one day it was typed on the keypad, "I want to be Han Solo for Halloween."


View the original article here

Apple Mac App Store to open January 6

 

The Mac application Bank is the Bank application for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad. It is easy to find and download applications Mac as it should add your magazine preferred iPad or a new game for iPod touch. You can browse Mac apps by category, such as games, productivity, music and more. Or perform a quick search for something specific. Descriptions of developer to read and user reviews. Browse the screenshots. When you find an application that you like, click to buy it.


View the original article here

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

New MacBook Airs do not disappoint

After a week with tiny Apple new computers notebooks, it is everything you need to know by John Mahoney and Mike Haney displayed 11.10.2010 3 h 17 61 comments
MacBook Airs multiple John Mahoney

I'll keep typing after the first sentence, but before we start something must be said: this examination can be summed up in a single time when, after use of the new MacBook Air for a long period of time, return you to your old notebook. And he feels like he suddenly contracted elephantiasis.


My laptop "old" is a monohull 15-inch MacBook Pro with a little less than two years of mileage, which makes it even more dramatic contrast. Both machines share the same overall language design, and both feel modern, elegant and sexy, faithful to their manufacturer. A fair opinion of roughly almost comical oversized.


Because after you use the 11 inch MacBook Air for a week, a tiny axe-blade metal corner machined (folds out into a computer, I had to keep reminding myself), it is difficult to remember why I needed such machine "huge" in first place.


Here are my thoughts on the 11-inch; on the next page, Mike Haney stacks 13 incher new against air from the previous generation.

11 Inch MacBook Air in profile: John Mahoney

Previously available only in the configuration of 13 inches, the new 11 inch form factor is the smallest portable Mac ever made. New in the air is also in the solid state memory flash as the only option for storage sizes of 64 GB or 128 GB 11 "(128_Go_ou_256_Go_sur_13"). " Graphics are managed by the same processor Nvidia GeForce 320 M in the 13-inch MacBook Pro. Cases have been rationnalisées and sharp and an additional USB port has been added (the previous air had a).


Speed: It was not a laptop Mac with a clock as slow as air 11 speed inches entry-level 1.4 GHz Core 2 Duo since mid-2005. But processors have changed since then. Despite running at a slower clock, brain air has two cores for more power. This means not should it tasks such as video encoding run significantly more slowly on the machine that all other modern Mac - for this sort of thing that you will be better served by something more beef processing.


But what is striking here is the little importance for the other 95% of the daily air handles 11 inches with a speed of calculation tasks effortlessly. Ditching a disk hard spinning tops flash memory is a huge reason - disk bed and writes crazy fast is (there a 229.47 disk test XBench, compared to a 33.06 hard drive of my MacBook Pro late 2008 5400 RPM), which strengthens the feeling of real speed dramatically. Full restart occur before you can even decide if stand and fix yourself a drink and a new ultra low-power mode can remain asleep until 30 days and still align return to life as a regular sleep wake. Milquetoast web work, e-mail and word processing feel as catchy as they are on a new core i7 iMac. I was most surprised to learn that even running import and processing with the opening of the image, one of the biggest hog resources frequently use, without the slightest loss (something I cannot definitely say two years for my 2.53 GHz MBP). It almost feels like you be wrong.


No compromise: You could look at the spec sheet and diminutive size and immediately cry "Mac Netbook", but air 11 inch share any of this category of the sacrifices of mini notebooks. The tiny screen is crisp 1366 x 768 pixels dense - great place to work with. The keyboard, except for a few meager keys function in the top row is the exact same full-size keyboard on each portable computer Mac. Ditto for the glass multitouch trackpad. Everything feels like a real computer, shrunken to the right places.

The 11-inch MacBook Air: Yes, it is little John Mahoney size perfect:: this is not just that it is extremely low. More importantly, its extremely low weight (2.3 books only 0.7 an iPad more) and profile thin crazy (a hair on one-tenth of an inch at its terminal size) balance of sustainability, the fragility and portability. Just as imagine you an Ant could survive a leap of ten floors from the roof of an office building, so too is he feeling that you could give safe air 11 inch pretty good abuse. With an iPad, who is still feels brittle in my hands.

It needs Companion: I would love if difficult to sell my MacBook Pro for this machine. This is what I want in a laptop and is powerful enough to handle most of what I do at home. But this slow processor and a lack of storage space is still dealbreakers for this my primary (and only) machine. I could probably connect a large external drive to store my media and a larger display to make things a little more acceptable when I am at home, but the entire installation is much more sense with either a drive huge implement Act as a media server, or other more powerful Mac to handle intensive tasks. Even though I've not regularly used desktop for more than 10 years, she feels bad for this main home machine to be also a laptop. Perhaps it is time to build this Hackintosh, Office that I was dreaming?


$999 for the configuration of base 64 GB/1.4 GHz. $200 more gets you 128 GB of storage for $1,199. Trim lines can be worn up to 4 GB of RAM for an another $100 and 128 GB model can get a bump processor at 1.6 GHz for $100 as well.


I wanted if evil like the iPad when I travel. But if I travel for work, I often take photos and quick videos with a DSLR, processing, shipment with words in our content - management system mainly work with files of shooting. I can do any of these things easily with an iPad.


What can I do on an iPad that I can't with a 11 inch MacBook air? Hmm. On the air, can I use the perhaps less design-y but also if not more functional version of applications such as bel my iPad, my beautiful note-taker, my widget weather - RSS reader much of this thing called the web browser. It is just as portable, more durable, has a screen resolution. I guess that it does not quite as nice e-reader, but I'm always a fan of old-fashioned book. Then, why should I you once again iPad?


Continue to the next page to Mike Haney version 13 inches


View the original article here

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

MacBook Air Feels Like an iPad in laptop

Error deserializing body of reply message for operation 'Translate'. The maximum string content length quota (8192) has been exceeded while reading XML data. This quota may be increased by changing the MaxStringContentLength property on the XmlDictionaryReaderQuotas object used when creating the XML reader. Line 1, position 9141.
October 27, 2010
by Walter s. Mossberg

Some of the nicest, if little discussed, benefits of using an Apple iPad tablet are that it starts instantly, resumes where you left off, and has a long enough battery life that you aren't can't constantly fretting about running out of juice or looking for a place to plug it in. And it can do a lot of things for which people use laptops.

What if somebody designed an actual laptop that worked this way – you know, a computer with a real keyboard and a larger screen that could run traditional computer software and store more files than year iPad? And what if it was almost as light and portable as an iPad? Well, somebody has, and that somebody is Apple itself.

The computer in question is the company's new MacBook Air, which went on sale last week, starting at $999 - a price that's very low for an Apple laptop, though hardly a bargain for a Windows one. The new air comes in two sizes. The base $999 model has an 11-6-inch screen (versus 9.7 inches for an iPad) and weighs 2.3 pounds (versus 1.5 pounds for an iPad). The larger-but still thin and light-model starts at $1,299, has a 13-3-inch screen and weighs 2.9 pounds.

I've been testing both versions, but especially the 11. 6-inch model, and I find that, despite a few drawbacks, they really do offer the different, more iPad-like experience Apple claims they do. Battery life is strong, and the wake up from sleep is almost instant, even after long periods of being unused.

Like their predecessors in the air family, these are gorgeous, very thin and light, but very sturdy aluminum computers. And, like their predecessors, or like iPads and smartphones, they rely on solid - state storage-flash chips-instead of a conventional hard disk to hold all your files. But Apple has dramatically reduced the physical size of the flash storage to make room for larger sealed-in batteries, so battery life is longer. It has also cut the price from the last version of the air, a 13-inch model that cost $1,799 with a solid - state drive.

Also, the company has re-engineered the way these new airs sleep, adding a long "standby" period of very low power consumption that Apple says lasts up to 30 days. This standby mode kicks in after about an hour of idle time, and replaces the traditional hibernation system, where your current activity is saved to a conventional hard disk just before the battery dies. With hibernation, getting back to where you were can be slow and somewhat uncertain. With the new "standby" mode, the process just takes a few seconds, only a bit longer than normal sleep.

These are just the first of a number of changes Apple plans in order to make its computers behave more like the iPad and iPhone, without losing their greater power and more traditional keyboards, touchpads and mice, ability to run and conventional programs.

For instance, Apple has said it will soon introduce an "app store" for the Mac, which would make it simpler to find and download programs for the computers, and notify users of updates. And it will also roll out, in its next Mac operating system, called Lion-due next summer-a system of apps icon screens, like those on iPhone and iPads, that you can brazzell through with the company's multitouch touchpad gestures.

In my harsh battery tests, I found the two new air models almost matched Apple's claims, even with all battery power-saving features turned off, Wi - Fi kept on, the screen is maximum brightness and a continuous loop of music playing. The 11-inch model lasted four hours and 43 minutes, versus Apple's claim of up to five hours. The 13-inch model lasted six hours and 13 minutes, versus Apple's claim of up to seven hours.

This means that, in normal use, with power-saving features turned on, you'd be almost certain to meet, or possibly exceed Apple's claimed battery life. For comparison, I did the same battery test on a new Dell 11 6-inch model, the M101Z, which costs about $450, goal is much thicker and heavier than the smaller air, and uses a conventional hard disk. It got only two hours and 41 minutes of battery life, which means that in normal use you'd probably get three to four hours.

The new models are designed to hardly ever require a traditional bootup or reboot. The idea is that you'd only reboot if you had a problem, or installed software that required a reboot, or if the machine had been idle and unplugged more than a month. Aim even booting is very fast.

In my tests, a cold boot took 17 seconds and a reboot, with several programs running, took 20 seconds. By contrast, the Dell I tested took more than three minutes to fully boot up and be fully ready for use.

Unfortunately there many netbooks, these two new Apples also have high screen resolutions so you can fit more material into their relatively small sizes. The 13-inch model has the same resolution as Apple's 15 - inch MacBook Pro and the 11-inch air has greater resolution than the 13-inch MacBook Pro. Also, unlike on many netbooks, they feature full-size keyboards, though the 11-inch model has reduced-size function keys.

The new airs can't aren't meant to be the most robust machines. They use last-generation Intel processors and have only two gigabytes of memory in their basic configurations, and their storage is well below typical hard-disk capacities.

For example, the 11-inch, $999 model has a paltry 64 gigabytes of storage. the 13-inch model starts at a still-weak 128 gigabytes of storage, and even the high-end version of the larger model, which costs $1,599, has just 256 gigabytes of storage. And neither the storage nor the memory can be expanded once you choose your initial specs.

I'd recommend buyers of the 11-inch model spend $200 more to double the storage to 128 gigabytes. And people doing a lot of video editing might want to double the memory is either model to four gigabytes for an extra $100.

Also, as with the earlier air models, these two lack a DVD drive and an Ethernet port. Apple sells an external drive for $79 and an Ethernet adapter for $29. If you add in all these extras, prices can climb quickly.

They also lack ports called HDMI ports, becoming common on Windows PCs, for easy connection to floristry and their keyboards aren't can't backlit. The two new models do, however, have two USB ports instead of the single USB port in the older air.

I was surprised to find that even the base $999 model was powerful enough to easily run seven or eight programs at once, including Microsoft Office, iTunes and the Safari browser with more than 20 Web sites open. It also played high-definition video with no skipping or stuttering.

So, if you're a light-duty user, you might be able to adopt one of the new airs as your hand laptop. If you're a heavy duty user, who needs lots of power and file storage, they're likely to be secondary machines.

Overall, Apple has done a nice job in making these new MacBook Airs feel more like iPads and iPhone without sacrificing their ability to work like regular computers. But, as always with Apple, you'll pay more than you will with Windows PCs.

Find all of Walt Mossberg's columns and videos online, free, at the All Things Digital Web site, walt.allthingsd.com. Email mossberg@wsj.com.Published on October 27, 2010Tagged: Apple, Macintosh, Personal Technology, Walt Mossberg, hardware, reviews, computer, Holiday Product Roundup, iPad, laptop, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, netbook, notebook | Permalink

View the original article here

Monday, January 3, 2011

Apple iOS 4.2 now available for the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch

Find my iPhone touch, iPad or iPod - which helps you to locate your missing device and protect its data - MobileMe functionality is now free on any iPhone 4 iPad or fourth-generation iPod touch running iOS 4.2.4 that want to configure you, you will find your device lost on a card, display a message on his screen remotely set a lock code and initiate a remote wipe to remove your data. And if you eventually find your iPhone, iPad or your iPod touch, you can restore all of your last backup.

Once you download iOS 4.2, it is easily enable this functionality. You have right on your device. Learn how to configure your iPad iPhone or iPod touch.


View the original article here

Tech Behind Hit games comes to iPhone

The technology behind the success of the games such as "Batman: Arkham Asylum" and "gears of war 3? comes from developers of iPhone and iPad games this week, in another sign that mobile gaming is growing on platforms from Apple."

Chair Entertainment "Blade Infinity."

Epic Games plans to release an update of its known game development tools such as Unreal, SDK version to the public Thursday. The kit, which is free to download, will include tools to create graphics and high-quality animations on iOS, effectively, simplify and accelerate the process of developing games. EPIC charge fees license to overhaul kit or make free games. But if developers want to sell their applications, they must pay a $99 licensing fees and royalties by 25% after the first instalment of $5,000 in sales.


«Apple App Store is the most dynamic market for mobile gaming, "said epic co-founder Mark Rein. "If you are going to make a game for a mobile device and you want to make the most money, you're nuts do step to make it to iOS.".


In the past few years, Apple added technologies to improve the iPad Visual capabilities of the iPhone and iPod Touch. It commercializes also games strongly in both advertising campaigns and in its stores. Cupertino, California-based electronics manufacturer also committed manufacturer leading videogame Graeme Devine year last to help manage relationships with top of the page, like epic games manufacturers. Devine recently left Apple to create its own games for mobile devices business.


Apple has sold more than 125 million devices to its operating system iOS, strongly against competition which shipped approximately 135 million of units, the Nintendo DS and PlayStation Portable, which sold more than 62 million units.


The results of the construction on the Apple platform have been so far for Epic, too.


The company has recently published "Infinity Blade", a fighting game that could help to Mr. said kidney usher games more with high range charts to iOS. Industry experts already pegged sales Infinity blade to more than 1.5 million in its first four days on the market. Game Center social network Apple lists more than 300,000 users at $5.99 a pop.


So, what about Google's Android operating system?


M. kidney said that it was largely in agreement with id Software John Carmack, recently presented its concerns about the Android platform in an interview with Ars Technica. Among them: the variety of Android phones makes available on the market for writing applications that can run on the challenge of the Board, and does not Android marketplace from Google for applications above a certain size file, a problem specific to Infinity blades and id Software "RAGE", which are fairly large downloads.


But Mr. kidney said, hope Google will propose solutions to these problems over time.


Update:This post was updated to say that Mr. kidney is the co-founder of epic. A previous version incorrectly said that he was the Chief Executive.


View the original article here

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Apple launches a store online in China

CUPERTINO, California - October 26, 2010 - Apple ® today introduced the Apple Store in China (apple.com.cn), the simplest to shop online for Apple, including the Revolutionary iPhone ® products 4 ® and magical iPad ™. shop online for Apple in China this delivery free of charge, free engraving personalized on any iPod ® or iPad and the ability to custom configure any ® Mac with just a few clicks. Apple Store online also offers a wide selection of third-party products and is the only place online to buy ® (PRODUCT) RED iPod nano.

"We are very pleased to open our newest shop online in China," said Tim Cook, Apple's COO. "With engraving, custom configuration on order and free delivery on all options, the Apple Store is a great destination for our customers in China".

Just in time for holiday shopping, gift signature package is available to purchase most products Apple iPod and iPhone iPad. Apple Store online also allows eligible students and members of faculty to take advantage of the prices special education on Apple products.

Also leave today in China, customers can access Apple legendary App Store? in Chinese simplified, with localized features and tables free and paid applications applications more popular in China. Application vault offers iPhone, iPad and iPod touch access users to larger catalog global applications with more than 300 000 applications in 20 categories, including games, business, news, sports, health, reference and travel.

Apple designs Mac, personal computers in the world, with OS X, iLife, iWork and software professionals. Apple is leading the revolution of digital music with the iPod and iTunes online store. Apple is reinventing the mobile phone with its revolutionary iPhone and APP store, and has recently introduced its magical iPad is to define the future of mobile media and computing devices.

Press contacts:
Amy Bessette
Apple
abessette@Apple.com
(408) 862-8012

NOTE to editors: for more information visit the PR of Apple, or call Apple Media Helpline at (408) 974-2042 .Apple, Apple, Mac, Mac OS, Macintosh, Apple Store logo, iPad, iPhone, iPod, iPod nano, Mac App Store are trademarks of Apple. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

View the original article here

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Portrait of the artist.

Translate Request has too much data
Parameter name: request
Translate Request has too much data
Parameter name: request
Our Gadget of the Week: Portrait of an Artist - Barrons.com #hat_div { height: 28px; visibility: hidden; overflow: hidden; }MoreBigChartsVirtual Stock ExchangeWSJ AsiaWSJ EuropeWSJ AmericasWSJ Chinese SEARCH   Login: Password: Remember MeForgot your user name or password?Subscribe Welcome, My Account/Billing Messages Logout Home Magazine This Week's Edition Past Editions Subscribe Daily Analysis All Coverage Barron's Take Weekday Trader Inside Scoop Hot Research Investors' Soapbox Blogs & Columns Stocks To Watch Today Tech Trader Daily Focus On Funds Alan Abelson Gene Epstein Randall Forsyth Michael Kahn Tiernan Ray Michael Santoli Steve Sears Kopin Tan Investing Ideas Barron's Picks & Pans Mutual Funds / ETFs Bonds Center Options Center Barron's Take Weekday Trader Rankings & Reports Top Financial Advisors Barron's PENTA Most Respected Companies Barron's Roundtable Market Data Market Data Center Market Lab Economic Calendar PortfolioStockGrader Stock & Fund Listings Daily Stock Alert About Subscribe Latest Issues Manage Subscription

Dow Jones Reprints: This copy is for your personal, non-commerical use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints tool on any article or visit www.djreprints.com

See a sample reprint in PDF formatOrder a reprint of this article nowGadget of the Week  | SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2010 Portrait of an Artist By TIERNAN RAY | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

Apple's latest release of iLife, a software suite for photos, movies and music, offers upgrades for presenting and producing your photos, video and music. ArticleComments + text size - print email Share more Twittertwitter DiggDigg Facebookfacebook LinkedinLinkedIn StumbleuponStumbleUpon YBuzzYahoo! Buzz MySpaceMySpace Deliciousdel.icio.us NewsVineNewsVine MixxMixx single page reprints get rss Background image Subscribe Now Close this window With these readers: My Yahoo Reader Google Reader Pluck Reader Windows Live Reader MSN Reader Newsgator Reader Netvibes Reader AOL Reader Or copy the rss link:

When I got back from my vacation in St. Martin, I wasn't just another guy with a good tan. I was well on my way to becoming a coffee-table-book author.

Thanks to the latest release of iLife, Apple's collection of software for photos, movies and music, I was able to quickly turn my snaps from the trip into a handsome coffee-table book. The iPhoto software helps you flow a bunch of photos into an attractive layout. Pick some page colors, write some text and then press a button; off she goes to Apple's servers. Within days, you receive in the mail a hardback book that anyone would be proud to display in a living room. For sure, my coffee table will never look the same.

View Full Image

gadget_p gadget_pgadget_p iLife '11

Price: $49
Features: Makes it a breeze to polish and present photos, movies and music.
Website: www.apple.com

[Five_Star]

That's not iLife's only trick. With iMovie, Apple provides templates, assembled as genres—action/adventure, film noire, etc. Simply click video clips you've already got on your computer and they'll appear as a sequence in your chosen genre. Apple automatically adds credits and titles, and original movie scores recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra; they sound just as good as Double Indemnity or Vertigo. It shaves hours off the process of making a home movie, while vastly improving the results.

The third program that gets an upgrade is GarageBand, the home studio application. Among other things, it now makes sure the recording tracks of each band member sync up with the performer with the best rhythm (or any rhythm, for that matter).

Of course, there's nothing in iLife to bail you out if a spouse or a band mate complains about all the time you spend with the program. But at least you'll have something to show for your trouble—a book, a movie or a sweet little song.

E-mail: tiernan.ray@barrons.com

Copyright 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit www.djreprints.com

Email Print Reprints Share:

Twitter

Twitter

Yahoo! Buzz

Yahoo! Buzz

facebook

facebook

MySpace

MySpace

Digg

Digg

LinkedIn

LinkedIn

del.icio.us

del.icio.us

NewsVine

NewsVine

StumbleUpon

StumbleUpon

Mixx

Mixx   moreOnline ExclusivesmoreThis Week's Magazinepreviousnext[BA_Cree_1228]Cree's Brighter Outlook

The maker of light-emitting diodes is seeing a surge in demand.

[BA_Calmaine_122]Cal-Maine's Shellacking

The egg producer's earnings report disappointed and the outlook isn't improving.

[BA_New_Housing_]New-Home Sales May Not Be Welcoming in Q4

Home-builder stocks are at risk for bad sales data.

[BA_Intuit_1227]Intuit's Intuitive Way to Gains

The tax-prep firm may be set for additional share gains.

[SB_grocerystore]Grocers, Drugstores Boosted by Durbin

Kroger and CVS Caremark will benefit from interchange-fee reform.

[BA_MicronDram_1]Price Declines Loom for Micron Tech

The memory maker will see continued declines in gross margins.

[TRA_Novopens_12]A Giant in the Fight Against Diabetes

Danish drug firm Novo Nordisk has more than half of the global market.

[SB_marcellusSha]A Positive Move for Newfield

A deal to buy some Marcellus Shale acreage from EOG was cancelled.

[BT_bedbathbeyon]Throw in the Towel for Bed Bath & Beyond?

The fragile economic recovery will hurt gross margins.

[HOT_laptopcalc_]SVB Financial Shares at Fair Value

The bank is trading at a premium to midcap peers.

[SB_munibonds_12]Insurers Most Exposed to Municipal Bonds

Credit Suisse says Travelers, W.R. Berkley, Chubb and Allstate are most exposed.

[HOT_shatnerbuck]Priceline Gets a European Boost

The travel site will benefit from strong travel trends.

A Defense Contractor Set to Play Offense

Though CACI International has underperformed the S&P 500 this year, shares are coming back to life.

[BT_nikeshoefoot]Nike to Regain Its Footing

The company warned of rising costs, but investors would do well to buy the dip.

3 Stocks That Soared in 2010

These shares had an amazing run. Is it over? (At SmartMoney.com.)

previousnext[cvr_1227jpg]Saving Cisco

Investors are underestimating the company's prospects and positioning in tech's new world. The stock looks cheap. Paying a dividend will help, too.

'Tis the Season to Be Wary

Pessimism about Europe and optimism about the U.S. may both be overdone. But Wall Street's bull run looks vulnerable for a 2011 selloff.

[restaurants_i]Holy Guacamole! These Dining Shares Look Pricey

Restaurant stocks rallied sharply in 2010, and many already reflect an expected pick-up in traffic and sales in 2011. Time to take Chipotle, BJ's, Panera and Red Robin off the menu?

[Farmland_F]Pricing the Good Earth

U.S. farm income is solid, debt is low, and crop prices and productivity are high. Does that mean that farmland is a good investment?

[Netflicks photo]Time to Hit the Eject Button?

Netflix, the video-rental titan, is facing bruising battles in Hollywood and on Wall Street. Why the short sellers may have it right.

[Roeper_Profile]Backstage Power

Atlantic Investment Management's Alexander Roepers is an activist investor who prefers to avoid major public confrontations. His returns suggest the strategy works. Why he likes ITT, Owens-Illinois and FMC and dislikes Vornado Realty Trust and Simon Property Group.

Reviving America's Animal Spirits

Recent Nobel Prize winner Dale Mortensen discusses the outlook for U.S. employment.

[Best_F]Economics on View and Between Covers

Among this season's recommended books and DVDs are accounts of entrepreneurs named Preston and Howard, and bumblers named Fannie and Freddie.

Out With a Bang

Stocks are on track for their best December since 1987. Even the S&P 500 has returned to its pre-Lehman Brothers level. Good omens for 2011?

[longview_p]When the Central Bank Was One Man

J.P. Morgan played a crucial role in stemming the panic that erupted in the 1907 financial crisis, in effect playing the role of central banker.

A Good Year for Northern Exposure

This year, investment happiness had a true North—and small-cap—orientation.

Shielding Time-Share Sellers

Industry gets exemption from the law that could have forced it to verify buyers' income, job status.

Weak U.S. Dollar's Gift: Gains in Asia

Asian returns were muted in 2010, but the falling currency meant U.S. investors enjoyed solid gains in the Far East.

2010: Year of the Cloud

Vitualization was the big thing in a year that also saw battles over acquisitions and the messy ouster of Hewlett-Packard's CEO.

Is 2010 Really Over? Depends on the Meaning of "Is"

From Apple to Zuckerberg, it was a year for the record books.

Back To Back To MSN Money Homepage MSN Money Investing More Gadget of the WeekDecember 24A Better You-Know-WhatDecember 18Portrait of an Artist December 11Almost the Height of Style browse the full archive Video Center

The Cisco Skid1:11

Holy Guacamole! These Dining Shares are Pricey1:11

End of Year Seasonal Factors at Odds1:50Today's Most Popular ViewedEmailedCommentedPortrait of an Artist Saving Cisco Regional-Banks Stocks That Still Have Juice A Bear Trade On Micron Tech 'Tis the Season to Be WarySaving Cisco Pricing the Good EarthTime to Hit the Eject Button?Backstage PowerRegional-Banks Stocks That Still Have Juice 'Tis the Season to Be Wary31 commentsEnding the Cisco Skid14 commentsTime to Hit the Eject Button?13 commentsWhen One Man Was the Central Bank7 commentsReviving America's Animal Spirits5 comments Featured Comment

“ I'm not a Republican but it seems to me that the voters sent a clear message that they want the government to get its fiscal house in order while households struggle to do the same. The recently passed legislation to extend tax cuts and increase spending is a slap in the face to those voters. ”

— HELENA LIEU
On The Beginning of the End of Dollar Hegemony Blogs Updated throughout the day. STOCKS TO WATCH| Avi SalzmanAvi SalzmanConsumer Confidence Slips in December Tue, 28 Dec 2010 15:31:10 GMTIs the Rumor Mill Snowed In? Tue, 28 Dec 2010 15:25:55 GMTTECH TRADER| Tiernan RayTiernan RayApple: Shipping Half a Million iPad 2 In January, Says DigiTimes Tue, 28 Dec 2010 15:47:05 GMTRIM: PlayBook Battery Issues, Multiple OSes Worry Kaufman Tue, 28 Dec 2010 15:05:26 GMTFocus on Funds| Murray ColemanMurray ColemanBill Miller's Legg Mason Value Fund Heading For Sub-Par Year Tue, 28 Dec 2010 16:10:44 GMTRare Earth ETF Up 5% As China Cuts Export Quotas Tue, 28 Dec 2010 15:33:02 GMT Get Emails from Barron's Barron's Daily Roundup Barron's Preview This Week's Barron's Magazine This Week's Most Popular The email address is already associated with another account. Please enter a different email address: Enter your email address: Thank you! You will receive your email(s) shortly in your inbox. Manage Email Preferences Rollover Chart 1 Day 10 Days 1 Month 3 Months 1 Year Go to Interactive Charting Real-Time Snapshot Change % Change Comprehensive Quote Last Change % Change Volume

Latest News from Barron's and other Dow Jones publications

Get: Full Research Snapshot quotes reflect real-time trades reported through Nasdaq only; comprehensive quotes reflect trading in all markets and are delayed up to 15 minutes. Volume updates from 4:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. ET. Barrons.com: Headlines Link to Barron's Slice. 15 return to top Account Services Subscribe My Account/Billing Info Forgot Password Log Out Help & Info Help Customer Service Barron's Print Customer Service About Barrons.com Advertising Advertise Locally Editorial Staff Privacy Policy Subscriber Agreement
& Terms of Use Copyright Policy Community Guidelines Also From Barron's Daily Stock Alert Conferences Reprints Digital Delivery Classifieds Tools & Services Email Newsletters Mobile/E-Readers Barron's iPad Barron's on Facebook Barron's on Twitter RSS Feeds Podcasts Portfolio Video Annual Reports The Wall Street Journal Barrons.com WSJ.com MarketWatch.com SmartMoney.com AllThingsD.com FINS: Finance, IT jobs, Sales jobs BigCharts.com Virtual Stock Exchange WSJ U.S. Edition WSJ Asia Edition WSJ Europe Edition Foreign Language Editions: WSJ Chinese WSJ Portuguese WSJ Spanish Copyright © 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. #messagecontent{font-family:Verdana,Arial,Sans-Serif;font-size:10px;color:black;} .verdana {font-family:Verdana,Arial,Sans-Serif;font-size:12px;line-height:20px;} .p10 P{font-size:10px;}.pb14darkRed {font-size:14px;color:#990000;font-size:14px;}.boldRedSixteen{color:#990000;font-weight:bold;font-size:16px;} .pntsevenfiveem{font-size:12px;}.plnEleven{ font-size:11px;} close window Close

View the original article here