Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Apple's Mac Makeover, 'Mountain Lion' Software Brings Mobile Features to Mac

Apple's Mac Makeover, 'Mountain Lion' Software Brings Mobile Features to Mac


By JESSICA E. VASCELLARO


CUPERTINO, Calif. - Apple Inc. Chief Executive Tim Cook wants to make its Mac more like an iPhone.


In an interview at the company's headquarters here, Mr. Cook unveiled a new version of the company's Mac operating system that incorporates several features from the software that powers Apple's hit mobile devices.


Named "Mountain Lion," the new version of OS X is the clearest sign yet of Apple's belief that the mobile, laptop and desktop world are destined to converge - and that Apple wants to be a catalyst.


"We see that people are in love with a lot of the apps and functionality here," said Mr. Cook, 51 years old, pointing at his iPhone. "So, anywhere where it makes sense, we are going to move that over to Mac."


Apple's moves come as fiercer competition among hardware makers is leading them to compete over software and giving consumers a familiar experience across various devices. That is leading to a convergence between different categories of devices that could have wide ramifications across the technology industry.


Apple also hopes to add luster to a business line that has momentum but little market share. Apple sold a record 5.2 million Macs in the quarter ended in December, up 26% from the same quarter in 2010. But Macs represented 5.4% of global PC shipments in the fourth quarter, according to IDC, up from 4.5% a year earlier.


By comparison, Apple's iPad leads the tablet industry in market share, and its iPhones frequently command the biggest slice of quarterly smartphone shipments.


Apple will start selling the new Mac software to customers in late summer. It made an early version of the software available to developers Thursday.


The updates will include Apple's messaging service, notifications app, gaming center, sharing features and integration with the company's online service iCloud - all pioneered for the iPad and iPhone, which use software known as iOS.


Mr. Cook said he already thinks of Apple's iOS and OS X operating systems "as one with incremental functionality." He said both laptops and tablets will continue to coexist, but he didn't rule out that the technologies could converge further.


When asked if Apple's iPhones, iPads and Macs might run the same microprocessor chips, he said: "We think about everything. We don't close things off."


Apple's OS X team had already started borrowing from iOS, last July releasing the "Lion" version of its operating system that adopted iOS features like advanced gesture controls - by touching the Mac's track pad, rather than a display screen - and the ability to view desktop apps as icons in an iPhone-like grid.


Now, Apple is going further, even changing the names of internally developed Mac apps to those of iPhone counterparts. The Mac's Address Book, for example, will become Contacts. iCal will become Calendar.


"We went through and just took a logical pass at what the user is going to experience using these products to make it all make more sense together," said Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of world-wide marketing, in a separate interview. "This is more than people expect."


With Mountain Lion, users will see the same notification screen that scrolls down on the iPhone by swiping their touchpads. The new software has deeper ties to other Apple products, such as iCloud, which Apple is integrating into applications and into the experience of registering a new Mac. A new security feature called Gatekeeper allows users to specify what kinds of apps can be installed on their computers, including an option to only install apps from Apple's Mac App store.


The new Mac software will also support a feature called AirPlay Mirroring that allows users to view what is on the screen of their iPhone or iPad and a television screen connected to a $99 Apple TV device. The technology is highly strategic for Apple, as it contemplates new video technologies for the living room.


Not all mobile features will make it to the Mac. Messrs. Cook and Schiller both said important differences remain, including the need for different touch interfaces on mobile devices, as well as more robust location services.


AirPlay, already available for the iPhone and iPad, has run into opposition from media companies worried about cannibalizing of traditional TV. Mr. Schiller said he doesn't believe media companies will have any issue with customers using it from their Macs. When asked if the Mac would get Siri, Apple's voice-activated virtual assistant available on the iPhone, Mr. Cook smiled and said he would leave the question to Mr. Schiller.


Mountain Lion comes as Mac has been a relatively small contributor to the company's record financial performance. As the company's revenue jumped 73% in the quarter ending in December, the percentage of its revenue from Macs fell to 14.2% from 20.3%.


Mr. Cook said the Mac remains an "incredibly important" part of the company and that it is already benefiting from the success of the iPhone, particularly in China, where Mac sales doubled last year. "They love the iPhone and so they then search out and look for the Mac."


While Apple banks on that halo effect, its competitors are trying to follow its approach. Microsoft Corp. plans to release a new version of its Windows operating system that has a new interface that supports touch-based commands and resembles its mobile-phone software.


"I don't really think anything Microsoft does puts pressure on Apple," said Mr. Cook, who said Apple is focused on building the best product and the pressure on the company is "self-induced."


Mr. Cook declined to comment on future plans for Mac hardware, calling the company "secretive" about such things. But he expressed pride in the company's MacBook Air laptop. "Now, you see the industry at large trying to copy it in some way, but they'll find that it is not so easy," he said.



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OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion: More iPhone-Like Than Ever

OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion: More iPhone-Like Than Ever


BY ADRIAN COVERT AND SAM BIDDLE.


Seemingly out of nowhere, Mountain Lion, the next version of the Apple's OS X operating system, is formally in the works and will be on our computers later this summer. Most intriguing is that it will further blur the lines between iOS and OS X, bringing apps like Messages, Notes, and Reminders along with utilities such as Notification Center and - finally - AirPlay mirroring from your Mac.


Based on what Apple is revealing for now, many of the new features revolve bringing iOS functionality to the desktop. Not only do these new apps and features behave the same as their iOS analogs, but they seamlessly sync with those apps as well. Oh, and one other significant change: OS X updates are going to happen yearly now.


But let's take a look at what's new right now.


Messages


Messages will completely replace iChat, allowing you to trade iMessages with iOS devices (but don't worry, it'll still support AIM, Gtalk, etc.). FaceTime has also been integrated into Messages, further consolidating all of Apple's messaging platforms. This could be the end of the awkward divide between iMessage, iChat and FaceTime.


Notification Center


The OS X version of Notifications behaves much like the iOS iteration, witha full drop down menu and banner updates. From the looks of things, Notification Center is looking to completely and utterly upstage Growl, which has served as the de facto OS X notification framework for years.


iCloud


Much like Apple is going after Growl, they're also going after services like Dropbox in a more pronounced way. Specifically, you can now upload documents from Mountain Lion to iCloud. Anytime you make a change to the document, any device accessing the doc will see the changes. But according to The Verge, Apple still isn't giving access to an iCloud file browser to see everything you have in your cloud.


AirPlay Mirroring


Finally, we now have the ability to push our computer screens to our televisions (provided you have an Apple TV). Mirroring is limited to 720p resolution and stereo audio, but that should be fine for most. Sadly the feature seems limited to mirroring, and not pushing system (or app-specific) audio to AirPlay speakers or Airport Express, but it's at least a step in the right direction.


Reminders


The same Reminders app that came to iOS 5 is now coming to Mountain Lion. The GPS functionality isn't here - not that it would be entirely useful if it were - but you can search through your reminders, set due dates and receive alerts. They basically ripped the to-do list out of iCal and made it more robust.


Notes


Write down a few notes on the mobile Notes app, and they'll appear on your desktop. The desktop version, however, has a few new tricks. You can pin notes to your desktop (remember stickies before they got pushed into the widgets layer?). You can also drag and drop images into notes and send those off to other people.


Gatekeeper


Gatekeeper is a simple, preemptive security barrier for people worried about downloading malicious programs. Malware isn't much of a problem on OS X, but if you're worried, Gatekeeper will let you assign one of three set download levels: anything, Mac App Store only, or programs from trusted developers plus everything in the App Store. If something violates the security level you've set, you won't be able to install it. This should go well with the grandparents.


Twitter


Twitter is now built into OS X. Mountain Lion will let you, say, tweet photos and links directly from iPhoto and Safari, and every time you're mentioned or hit with a direct message, you'll get an automatic notification - no extra Twitter software needed.


Game Center


The iOS Game Center has always been a neglected backwater territory for Apple, so Mountain Lion is pushing it right onto your desktop. You'll get to plug into the same leader boards and friend-finding available on your phone, but now it's on your laptop! Hey! It's unclear whether just Mac gamers will be able to go at it with each other or if iOS is invited.


Share Sheets


You know that arrow icon on your iPhone? The one that you click to share photos from your albums? Now you'll be able to do that same thing throughout OS X apps, too: emailing your notes, uploading your videos, and tweeeeeeeeting will all be done from one handy icon.


Oh, and Apple says there are over 100 new features on the way as well:


Hundreds of new APIs give developers access to new core technologies and enhanced features within OS X. The Game Kit APIs tap into the same services as Game Center on iOS, making it possible to create multiplayer games that work across Mac, iPhone, iPad and iPod touch. A new graphics infrastructure underpins OpenGL and OpenCL and implements GLKit, first introduced in iOS 5, to make it easier to create OpenGL apps. Using Core Animation in Cocoa apps is easier than ever, and new video APIs deliver modern 64-bit replacements for low-level QuickTime APIs. Enhanced Multi-Touch™ APIs give developers double-tap zoom support and access to the system-wide lookup gesture. Kernel ASLR improves security through enhanced mitigation against buffer overflow attacks.



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Apple unveils new Mac OS X Mountain Lion

Apple unveils new Mac OS X Mountain Lion


By Edward C. Baig.


When Apple launched Mac OS X Lion last July, it brought the Macintosh operating system ever closer to the experience folks had gotten accustomed to on the iPad and iPhone. Now, just seven months later, Apple today unveils OS X Mountain Lion, an early preview version for developers.


This ninth major release of OS X goes even further in bringing features common to the iPad and iPhone to the Mac. And when Mountain Lion hits, likely this summer, Apple plans to commit to a roughly 12-month release cycle for new versions of OS X.


This is a heady time for Apple's traditional computers. The Mac has outpaced PC industry growth for 23 straight quarters. And during the last quarter of 2011, Mac sales grew 26% year-over-year compared with the overall PC industry, which was flat.


Apple isn't providing pricing at this point (Lion cost $29.99) or a specific date when Mountain Lion will be uncaged for consumers. The operating system isn't even in its prerelease beta state. But as with its predecessor, Mountain Lion will be available as a digital download through the Mac App Store (and presumably preloaded on new Mac models available at the time).


I've had a chance to check out the early Mountain Lion build on a loaner MacBook Air. Highlights of what's coming:


* iCloud. Apple's cloud-based service, launched last fall, now has 100 million accounts. You'll be able to tap into the clouds to set up a new Mac with your Apple ID account credentials. A Documents feature will let you view, create and edit the same documents on your Mac as on your iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch. In a cloud-based Document Library, you can organize documents into folders by dragging one on top of the other similar to the way in which you can create folders containing the apps you have on iOS devices. Apple is opening the technology to Mac developers so that various Mac apps can work with Documents in the cloud. But the feature was not built into the developer preview that I had access to.


* Messages. Apple's iChat instant messenger and chat service is being replaced by iMessage, the Mac version of a feature that arrived with iOS 5. The result: You can send messages to or from a Mac to anyone who has an iOS device. Conversations in iMessage are kept up to date across all your computers and devices. And you can send pictures, high-definition video and other attachments up to 100 megabytes in size. You can also send group messages and receive a "read receipt" that lets you know when a person has seen your missive. Through a typing indicator, you will know when the recipient is readying a response. There's also a FaceTime button within the Messages app that lets you launch a video call. And Messages works with the same instant-messaging services that iChat supported, including AIM, Yahoo, Google Talk and Jabber.


* Reminders and Notes. Other iOS 5 features come to the Mac. Reminders are a handy way to track your to-do lists. A built-in Share button inside Notes lets you share your note via e-mail or message.


* Notification Center. As on the iPhone or iPad, Notification Center is a central repository for calendar reminders, incoming e-mail, new messages and more. On those iOS devices, you can pull down notifications by dragging your finger from the top of the screen down. On the MacBook Air, I was able to make the Notification Center come and go with a new gesture - moving two fingers left across the trackpad after starting the gesture off the trackpad. If your Mac doesn't have a trackpad, there's a tiny icon in the upper right of the screen to click.


* Twitter. Twitter is now integrated through Mountain Lion. So in the Safari browser, Preview, Photo Booth and Quick Look, you can select Twitter to tweet from within the app. If you choose, you can add a location to your tweet.


* Game Center. Apple's social-gaming venue in iOS - there are more than 20,000 Game Center-enabled games in the App Store - is coming to the Mac.


* AirPlay Mirroring. If you have an Apple TV box on the same network as your Mac, you'll be able to exploit this to wirelessly stream whatever is on your Mac screen to a high-definition television connected to Apple TV.


* Gatekeeper. Through the years, Macs have famously avoided the scourge of viruses and malware that have plagued Windows PCs. But Apple is keeping up its guard with new security technology.


Apple promises a lot more, including much easier ways to share pictures, videos, links, documents and content within apps. And I'm sure you can expect a few surprises before the formal launch - Siri on the Mac, perhaps? For all of that, stay tuned.



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Apple OS X Mountain Lion: Top 15 New Features

Apple OS X Mountain Lion: Top 15 New Features


By Peter Pachal.


Apple just unveiled the next major upgrade to its core software, OS X. It's called Mountain Lion, and it's a doozy, bringing a lot of the features its customers use ever day on iPhones and iPads over to the Mac. Apple says Mountain Lion has 100 new features, from tiny details in the Safari web browser to wholesale changes in how instant messaging works.


Curious about what's different? The general public will have to wait until summer to download the release for themselves, but in the meantime you can explore the Top 15 most important new features in the gallery above. Throughout all of them, though, you'll find two distinct trends:


The continued migration of mobile features to the Mac experience.


iCloud playing a greater role on the Mac.


When Apple first unveiled Mac OS X Lion back in 2010, it was a paradigm shift for computers. Mobile technology had been - and still is - evolving extremely fast, and more fundamentally was becoming much more integrated with peoples' day-to-day lives. It only made sense to take the best features of mobile (full-screen experiences, integrated sharing, a launch center for apps, etc.) and bring them to the desktop.


Mountain Lion continues this transition. Apps familiar to iOS users get ported to the desktop, and most feature seamless syncing with their mobile counterparts.


Which brings us to iCloud. The cloud-syncing service introduced last year is playing a greater role in Mountain Lion, and so it should. Keeping track of what you're doing on which device is a task no one wants - much better to simply take the whole experience with you no matter what machine is in front of you. The new version of OS X brings that functionality to a ton more apps.


For all the new stuff in Mountain Lion, however, it's worth pointing out a notable absence: Siri. Apple makes no mention of its famous voice assistant in its overview of the new OS and has remained mum on why. Is it because Macs simply don't have the same system-on-a-chip technology that the iPhone 4S includes? The investigation continues…


In the meantime, please browse OS X Mountain Lion's many new features, and tell us which ones you're really looking for to (or could do without) in the comments.


In a twist, new Mac software now inspired by mobile operating systems


By Marty Gabel.


It used to be that we'd want our smartphones to be more like the laptops or PC computers we use every day. Originally, most of us were amazed that we could have at least some kind of computer within the palm of our hand. This is what Apple's iPhone and Android devices now provide, especially when running a huge variety of amazing and powerful apps.


In today's Wall Street Journal, Apple CEO Tim Cook is now aiming for the opposite - he wants the Mac to be more like the iPhone, not the other way around. A new version of Mac OS X was unveiled (in fact, the company is dropping the whole 'Mac' moniker and going with just OS X) codenamed 'Mountain Lion.'


This next generation operating system, released to developers as a beta version, demonstrates further alignment between the smartphone and desktop world. In the article, Tim Cook is quoted as saying "We see that people are in love with a lot of apps and functionality here … Anywhere where that makes sense, we are going to move that over to Mac."


Apps seem to be the, erm, killer app here, that's for sure, and it's clear that Apple is thinking of a future where the Mac computer OS X and the iPhone's iOS coexist far more intimately. While all kinds of devices will continue to be manufactured, and probably maintain their unique characteristics, we'll see far more similarities in the software look, feel and apps they run.


One new feature of OS X Mountain Lion is its AirPlay capabilities. Current Apple iPhone and iPad users may already be familiar with this technology. AirPlay helps make sharing content between devices, whether they be laptops, phones or 'smart' TVs, even easier. Now that that capability will be extended to all the hardware in Apple's arsenal we're likely to see even closer synergy between every device in the connected home or office.


Soon the app itself will be the key. Whether you're using it from a smartphone or a laptop is unlikely to be so important.


Mozilla offers Gaia UI first look, will reveal Boot to Gecko partners at MWC


By James Trew.


Mozilla surprised us last summer when it announced plans for its Boot to Gecko mobile OS. Now, it looks like the project has some industry support, with CTO Brenden Eich tweeting that the company will make a partner announcement at MWC this month. There are no details right now as to who might be involved, but given that developer support is already there (the operating system is based on existing web standards, after all), the hopes are that this could indicate vital operator, or even hardware manufacturer backing. Another encouraging development is the first sighting of the platform's Gaia UI, further suggesting the project might well meet its planned Q2 release target. It doesn't stray too far from the Android / iOS model that we're already familiar with, but give the source link a swipe if you want to see more.



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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Apple Switching Back to NVIDIA Graphics for Upcoming Mac Pro Update?

Apple Switching Back to NVIDIA Graphics for Upcoming Mac Pro Update?


By Eric Slivka.


M.I.C gadget reports that it has received information from sources indicating that Apple is "close to finally updating" its aging Mac Pro line. As we detailed in a report last month, the window for a potential Mac Pro update is approaching as Intel prepares to launch its Sandy Bridge E Xeon processors and AMD is pushing out its new "Tahiti" family of graphics cards.


But M.I.C gadget reports that Apple may be planning to switch back to NVIDIA for its stock graphics options in the next Mac Pro instead of sticking AMD as on the current models. The move, which would line up with a rumored similar shift for the MacBook Pro, could open the door to improved performance on a number of applications such as those from Adobe that embrace NVIDIA's CUDA architecture.


Nvidia has their “Kepler” platform due out around the same time as Intel is making their changes, and our sources within the company indicate that they have chosen to have Nvidia lead the charge so to speak on the graphics front. This is good for all our compatriots who want to use the special graphics engine in Adobe products, as it supports Nvidia only, or for those who wish to do CUDA based programs as well, again only supported by Nvidia.


The report cites "rumblings" that Apple may be targeting a Mac Pro update "near the end of quarter three", although that timeframe may be subject to change. The report's definition of "end of quarter three" is a bit unclear, as that would equate to September as measured by calendar quarters or June as measured by Apple's fiscal calendar. But with Intel pushing out Sandy Bridge E chips in "spring" and NVIDIA reportedly launching Kepler in April, Apple would likely be able to follow fairly closely on the heels of those releases with a Mac Pro update if it elects to do so.


But curiously, the report also claims that Apple will be looking to jump directly to Ivy Bridge, Intel's successor processor family to Sandy Bridge, for the revised Mac Pro. Intel's Sandy Bridge E processors have seen significant delays but are now close to shipping, and it is unclear how Apple's Mac Pro plans would line up with any Ivy Bridge server chip plans from Intel.


Unfortunately, M.I.C gadget does not have a terribly accurate record on hardware rumors, particularly on the Mac Pro front where last year the site was one of those sources claiming that Apple would issue a mid-year Mac Pro update using a custom processor from Intel. So while a switch to NVIDIA for graphics cards in the next Mac Pro may make sense given the timeline for availability on NVIDIA's Kepler lineup, we hesitate to place too much faith in this report's claims for the time being.


Apple Asks Labor Group to Audit Foxconn


By Sajid Farooq.


Apple is showing some love to workers in foreign factories building its products -- just in time for Valentine's day.


The Cupertino company announced Monday that the Fair Labor Association will conduct voluntary audits of Apple’s final assembly suppliers, including its controversial contract factory Foxconn. Audits will be conducted at both the Shenzhen and Chengdu, China locations.


Apple said the audits are being done per its request, which is in line with CEO Tim Cook's statement two weeks ago to employees that said the company cares about all its employees and their well-being.


Cook has a long history with Foxconn. Late Apple CEO Steve Jobs sent Cook to the factory to conduct his own safety audits and to examine reports of employee suicides at the plant.


"We believe that workers everywhere have the right to a safe and fair work environment, which is why we’ve asked the FLA to independently assess the performance of our largest suppliers," Cook said in a statement Monday. "The inspections now underway are unprecedented in the electronics industry, both in scale and scope, and we appreciate the FLA agreeing to take the unusual step of identifying the factories in their reports."


Apple says it has conducted more than 40 audits since 2006 of its factories, including Foxconn. The company also puts out an annual report of what it fines, which is available online.


The labor association will interview thousands of factory employees and do an assessment of the work environment.


Apple reportedly squeezing supplier to stop building MacBook Air clones from Asus


By Katie Marsal.


Apple has reportedly asked Pegatron, one of its overseas device assemblers, to "choose sides" and stop producing the MacBook Air-like Zenbook from Asus, or else lose Apple's business.


Apple's apparent aggressive strategy with Pegatron was detailed on Monday by China Times (via Google Translate). It was said that Apple executives are upset because of the "high similarity" between the MacBook Air and the Zenbook from Asus.


It is expected that Pegatron will comply with Apple's demands, and Asus will move production of its thin-and-light Zenbook laptop to Compal or Wistron. That would allow Pegatron to continue production of Apple's hot selling MacBook Air.


The Asus Zenbook is one of a line of computers based on the "Ultrabook" specification spearheaded by chipmaker Intel. After the first Ultrabooks hit the market last year and saw soft sales, manufacturers began slashing prices to undercut Apple's MacBook Air.


Intel's Ultrabook class aims to bring "tablet-like features" to thin-and-light notebooks, but manufacturers have struggled to keep prices down. One report last year said that Apple's control of its overseas supply chain, particularly with respect to metal chassis, was a roadblock for PC makers.


Apple is so bullish on the success of its MacBook Air lineup that the company is expected to bring features from its ultraportable laptop to the high-end MacBook Pro lineup this year. AppleInsider detailed last week how a radical redesign of the MacBook Pro will make the company's 15- and 17-inch professional laptops look more like the MacBook Air.



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Why it's time for the 13-inch MacBook Pro to go away

Why it's time for the 13-inch MacBook Pro to go away


By Scott Stein, VIA:cnet.com.


October 2008. I remember eagerly buying Apple's newly designed and sleekly beautiful unibody MacBook. My son, now 3 1/2, was just born. The last presidential election was just wrapping up. "Avatar" hadn't even come out yet. The iPhone was in its second iteration. The iPad was still a year and a half away.


A long time has passed since, yet the 13-inch MacBook Pro, in terms of just sheer design, has barely changed at all. Sure, under the hood it's a completely different computer: fast Intel processor, Thunderbolt, integrated long-life battery, better screen. Yet, I can line up that 2008 13-incher (then just known as the MacBook) next to the latest 13-inch Pro and most people wouldn't be able to tell the difference.


One of the most popular pieces I wrote last year compared the 13-inch Pro with the 13-inch MacBook Air. At the beginning of 2011, the Pro had a clear advantage in terms of battery life and even performance. However, by midyear, the new Air had caught up. Its battery life and general performance, according to our CNET benchmarks, met what the Pro had to offer.


The Pro had a slight CPU bump at the end of 2011, but remains largely the same computer as the early 2011 model.


I've always been someone who leaned slightly toward the Pro as the laptop of choice, if one had to pick an all-around Apple computer. The reasons are few, though: the optical drive, which could be useful for some; the extra hard-drive storage gained by not adopting an SSD like the Air; and, well, that's about it.


I think it's time for the 13-inch Pro to go away, and I have a feeling 2012 will be the year it happens.


Apple products tend to lean toward simplification of a product line. There used to be three 13-inch Mac laptops: the white MacBook, the Pro, and the Air. Now there are two. I think that will drop to one. It should happen, for these reasons:


Few people use optical drives. Oh, I've defended the DVD drive for years. I remember when watching DVDs on my Mac was a huge deal. For installing software or importing CD music, it's handy--or, for making disc backups. OK, who am I kidding: I never use my DVD drive anymore. We're in an age where Netflix lives on my iPad. Simple streaming and large-capacity external hard drives and USB flash drives--plus, of course, cloud storage--have changed the equation. Plus, Apple doesn't seem too fond of optical drives--the Air lacks one, and so does the 2011 Mac Mini. If you need a DVD drive, buy an external one...or, get a larger laptop that has one.


The performance is equivalent. The Air, as we learned last year, really has almost the same performance as the entry-level Pro circa February 2011 (we didn't get a fall 2011 13-inch Pro for review, so we can't compare--but, the spec bump wasn't massive). The 13-inch Pro doesn't have dedicated graphics, just integrated Intel HD 3000 graphics, like the Air. Battery life is the same. Yet, the Air is lighter. That matters.


This year's Ivy Bridge bump will make the Air even more powerful. Graphics and performance should see even greater improvements compared with the already-impressive 2011 Air, which could erase many concerns from power users. Odds are, the 2012 MacBook Air will feature the Ivy Bridge processors we're already glimpsing in this year's ultrabooks.


The 15-inch Pro seems due for a redesign, and it should be the new Pro. For higher-end graphics and maybe an optical drive, a 15-inch MacBook Pro should be where an interested Mac user chooses to go. Based on the new wave of high-powered 14- and 15-inch ultrabooks seen at CES 2012, my guess is that Apple will slim down the Pro while still offering high-powered graphics and pro-oriented features, making it a 15-inch "ultrabook plus" of sorts. That would leave the 13-inch Air to claim the sole spot as the heir to the MacBook, while the 11-inch Air remains the superportable laptop.


If hybrid hard drives are offered, then my one gripe about the 13-inch Air goes away. Some ultrabooks have begun offering hybrid hard drives, mixing larger-capacity magnetic storage with a small cache of SSD flash storage. The Acer Aspire S3 had one, and upcoming ultrabooks like the Samsung Series 5 Ultra will feature them, too. While SSD seems to be a more streamlined solution, hybrid drives can bridge the gap and offer 500GB capacities for laptop users until SSD flash storage prices can perhaps drop in the future. I don't want to live with only 128GB of storage on my laptop, and I'd rather not pay more for the privilege of 256GB. I think a lot of laptop customers feel the same way.


How would you feel if the 13-inch Air was Apple's only 13-inch MacBook? Sound off below.



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MacBooks for all-kind of: Ninth graders will get laptops next year

MacBooks for all-kind of: Ninth graders will get laptops next year


Monday, February 13, 2012 By Mollie Berg.


In September, among pencils, pens, notebooks and paper, a shiny new MacBook will be in each freshman's backpack, as SCDS becomes the first school in Sacramento to implement a 1:1 laptop program.


Additionally, the school will purchase two mobile iPad labs for the lower school.


The laptop decision results from the success of the middle school iPad program and months of decision-making, headmaster Stephen Repsher said.


Assisted by technology director Tom Wroten, Repsher made a formal presentation to the Board of Trustees in early December about the laptop plan.


So in January, when the board voted to approve the school's 2012-13 budget, the cost of new laptops for the freshmen and new iPad stations for the lower school were included. As a result, they "tacitly approved the technology initiative," Repsher said.


While Repsher and Wroten have not decided what type of MacBook will be given to the freshmen, they are considering the 11-inch MacBook Air or 13-inch MacBook Pro and are leaning towards the MacBook Air.


The MacBook Air is $999 and the MacBook Pro is $1,199 (not including the 10 percent educational discount the school receives). Both prices don't include software, which will be installed in students' laptops.


However, the laptops will not cause a spike in tuition, according to Repsher. He pointed out that tuition has increased approximately 3.3 percent annually for the past few years, and the increase will be about the same this year.


"Many people are worried about the cost, but we have addressed that adequately," Repsher said.


"This is just a tiny part of our total (technology) budget."


There is technology funding available every year, Wroten said.


Giving laptops to freshmen is an example of taking advantage of this funding—just as the school would use the funding to update school technology like the library computers.


Steve Edwards, vice president of the Board of Trustees, said in an email that the board is "really excited about the program and (feels) the money spent is well worth it."


Although Repsher said that most parents are delighted with the new technology, some parents of next year's sophomores, juniors and seniors are disappointed that their children will not have laptops.


But providing laptops to all 135 high-school students would be too expensive, Repsher said.


Transition period


Wroten acknowledged that there will be a transition period when some students have MacBooks and some don't--just as there was in the middle school, when only the sixth grade received iPads.


"There's going to be an evolution," Wroten said.


The computers will be leased to the school, and at the end of the lease, the school will own them. The computers will likely be given to students when they graduate, Wroten said.


Throughout the lease period, the laptops will officially be owned by Country Day although students will retain "full control," Wroten said.


And full control means full control—the school will have no power to stop students from downloading illegal music and copies of textbooks.


"We can't restrict music specifically and we don't want to. However, it is illegal," Wroten said.


"I want students to take ownership of their machine—I don't plan on having a lot of restrictions. We (had restrictions) for the middle school because of how the iPad is designed and because they're younger," he said.


Nevertheless the school's "Acceptable Use Policy" ought to deter potential illegal downloaders.


Sue Nellis, head of high school, said that if illegal material is downloaded in a school computer, the school could get into serious legal trouble.


Legal issues aside, students like eighth grader Aidan Galati, who already has a MacBook of her own, are wondering what will become of their laptops.


According to Repsher, students like Galati will be given Macbooks, and will be expected to use their school laptops for the high-school curriculum.


But Repsher expects parents not to buy their high-school children laptops in the future.


Eighth grader Leslie Young, who will attend SCDS next year, doesn't have a laptop. Her parents, were "seriously thinking" about buying her one with the start of high school, and now her parents don't have to pay the extra expense, she said.


Eighth grader Manson Tung, who is not planning on attending high school at Country Day, said the laptop decision has increased his interest in SCDS.


"It's becoming a first-class education. My mom was really excited about it," he said.


Moreover, Repsher said, the school is planning on taking advantage of Apple's new iBook program, which allows students to download textbooks for about $15 apiece. The downloaded books not only cost less, but also provide interactive access to videos and links.


However, because many textbooks aren't in the iBook store, not all teachers will move to an electronic curriculum.


"We're not telling the teachers they have to change textbooks because it has to be online," Wroten said.


"If it arises that there are textbooks that are cheaper, more interactive, better all around and computer based, we hope they will move in that direction."


According to Repsher, another concern in the months of deliberation was creating a "steep learning curve" for teachers.


"We want (the laptops) to be something that enhances teaching—not something that reinvents it. Teachers are busy as it is," Repsher said.


So, on Feb. 8, the faculty started training on how to use the computers and their software.

Led by Cindy Kendall, a Ph.D. candidate at Michigan State University, via webcast, an hour-long Webinar taught teachers how to integrate technology.


Laptop distraction


In addition to not being "laptop savvy," some teachers worry that they won't be able to see what their students are doing.


"It's up to the teachers to instruct the students on how they want to use the laptops in class," Repsher said.


Although math teacher Patricia Dias expects to take advantage of Geometer's Sketchpad and Google ToolBar in class, she worries that "math is most easily done with pencil and paper.


"It is (almost) impossible to take notes in a math class on a computer—I could teach them how to do it, but the fact of the matter is it's faster to do it with pencil and paper," she said.


"And if it's in paper I can see all the way back to the room and see if they're really doing math."


However, Dias said that it will be convenient to have the laptops on days she schedules projects.


Although history teacher Daniel Neukom doesn't plan on incorporating laptops into his class regularly, he does think that his curriculum will somewhat change.


Neukom also believes that the laptops will force teachers to be more vigilant. He said that he's already witnessed students using their laptops in a non-educational way during class with their private laptops.


Wroten is looking into turning the Internet off in certain classrooms to prevent students getting distracted while taking notes or testing.


Dias is also concerned about students being responsible for their own equipment.


Now, Dias said, students lose their Ti89 calculators or get them stolen.


"You put your bag down for 45 minutes while you're eating lunch and someone's messed with it because they can't find their own stuff," she said.


Also, she fears that strangers will come onto campus because they've heard that everyone has computers and know that teenagers aren't responsible.


Wroten, however, said that in the two years the middle-school iPad program has been in place, "somebody hasn't walked onto campus and stolen 30 iPads."


When a student inevitably does lose their laptop, their family will be left with the bill.


Middle-school students sign an agreement that says that if their iPads are lost or stolen, they must pay for them. The same program will be implemented in the high school, Wroten said.


The school is also considering purchasing an accidental damage warranty.


What's ahead


Wroten is unsure what to expect for the future.


"Three years ago we would talk in our technology meetings about what we were going to do. No one said anything about iPads," he said.


"Ten years from now technologically will be totally different."


But Neukom is a little more skeptical, perhaps because he's "seen other ‘miracles' of education in 40 years."


"(There were) new trends and new ideas that people thought would make big differences, but it doesn't happen very often," Neukom said.



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Why a 15-inch MacBook Air would be the greatest thing since sliced bread

Why a 15-inch MacBook Air would be the greatest thing since sliced bread


By Dan Ackerman.


15-inch MacBook Air


In a recent poll of most-anticipated 2012 laptops, a purely hypothetical product beat out every high-profile system previewed at CES.


More than the glass-covered HP Envy 14 Spectre, Dell XPS 13, or even Acer Aspire S5, a 15-inch version of Apple's MacBook Air was the clear winner among CNET readers, pulling in 40 percent of the total vote.


And this is for a product that, while churning in the rumor mill for the last several months, lacks even the sparse documented evidence that Apple's expected HDTV has (such as this recent spec-heavy Best Buy survey of purported features).


There is this DigiTimes report that Apple has "already engaged manufacturing partners to start producing a 15-inch MacBook Air for a first-quarter 2012 launch," but that's not quite enough to take to the bank.

Nevertheless, by getting 40 percent of the vote in our most-anticipated 2012 laptops poll (the HP Spectre came in second, with 17 percent), the 15-inch Air is clearly a product with a potentially large built-in audience. The reasons for this may include:


Current MacBook Airs cut too many corners for professional work


With relatively small hard drives and limited connectivity, the current MacBook Air models are simply not full-featured enough for some power users. The 13-inch Air's native display resolution is 1,440x900 pixels, whereas the 15-inch Pro starts the same, but also offers a 1,680x1,050-pixel upgrade. It's hard to imagine a 15-inch Air that wouldn't match that, plus have more room for ports and connections (such as an Ethernet jack).


The 15-inch MacBook Pro is too heavy to commute with frequently


Many a creative professional has a 15-inch MacBook Pro sitting on a desk. And, even if it doesn't happen every single day, there are times when you simply have to take your work laptop home with you, or on the road to a meeting. As great as the 15-inch MacBook Pro is, anyone who has ever tried to lug one around in a shoulder bag all day can tell you: at 5.6 pounds, it's not exactly light. Especially with a new generation of ultrabooks redefining the expectations of how portable a laptop can be, being thinner and lighter than the competition is more important than ever.


Other lightweight, thin 15-inch laptops are showing up


Last year, we saw the Dell XPS 15z, which, though far from perfect, showed that midsize laptops were starting to slim down. Its dimensions were about the same as the 15-inch MacBook Pro's, but at CES 2012, we got a chance to check out the upcoming 15-inch version of Samsung's Series 9 laptop. That system, which certainly owes much of its DNA to the Air, packed a 15-inch display into a body 0.58 inch thick and weighing just 3.5 pounds.


The 13-inch MacBook Pro is already an anachronism, other Pros may follow


As my colleague Scott Stein pointed out recently, the 13-inch version of the MacBook Pro has largely outlived its usefulness. He says: "At the beginning of 2011, the Pro had a clear advantage in terms of battery life and even performance. However, by midyear, the new Air had caught up. Its battery life and general performance, according to our CNET benchmarks, met what the Pro had to offer." With the line between the two brands fading, there may be no reason, other than market positioning, to even offer a "Pro" line, if the mainstream consumer line, which the Air has become, is just as good.


What do you think? Is a 15-inch MacBook Air the ultimate unreleased laptop? Would you run out and buy one, or stick with the thicker Pro model (or something else entirely)? Let us know what you think in the comments section below.



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Thursday, February 2, 2012

IBM acquires mobile enterprise developer Worklight

IBM acquires mobile enterprise developer Worklight


By: Brian Dolan | VIA:mobihealthnews.com.


IBM has acquired Israel-based mobile platform developer Worklight for an undisclosed sum. Worklight offers mobile application management to companies in a number of sectors, including healthcare. According to the acquisition announcement, Worklight is set to become a key component of IBM's mobility strategy. IBM will leverage Worklight to help enterprise clients "speed the delivery of existing and new mobile applications to multiple devices" while ensuring "secure connections between smartphone and tablet applications with enterprise IT systems," the announcement stated.


With the Worklight acquisition IBM certainly has mobility solutions for the healthcare enterprise in mind:


"For example, a bank can create a single application that offers features to enable its customers to securely connect to their account, pay bills and manage their investments, regardless of the device they are using. Similarly, a hospital could use Worklight technology to extend its existing IT system to allow direct input of health history, allergies, and prescriptions by a patient using a tablet," according to the announcement.


IBM also noted the growing importance of mobile in the overall enterprise: A recent IBM survey of more than 3,000 global CIOs found that 75 percent pointed to mobility solutions as one of their top spending priorities. IBM also pointed out that last year, for the first time, shipments of smartphones exceeded total PC shipments.


IBM also claims that "every day more than one billion mobile phone subscribers are touched by IBM software."


More on Worklight and its acquisition by IBM in the press release below:


PRESS RELEASE: ARMONK, N.Y., Jan. 31, 2012 - In a move that will help expand the enterprise mobile capabilities it offers to clients, IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced a definitive agreement to acquire Worklight, a privately held Israeli-based provider of mobile software for smartphones and tablets. Financial terms were not disclosed.


With this acquisition, IBM's mobile offerings will span mobile application development, integration, security and management. Worklight will become an important piece of IBM's mobility strategy, offering clients an open platform that helps speed the delivery of existing and new mobile applications to multiple devices. It also helps enable secure connections between smartphone and tablet applications with enterprise IT systems.


In a recent study conducted by IBM of more than 3,000 global CIOs, 75 percent of respondents identified mobility solutions as one of their top spending priorities.* In fact, for the first time ever, shipments of smartphones exceeded total PC shipments in 2011.**


"Our clients are under increased pressure to meet the growing demands of a workforce and customer base that now treat mobility as mission critical to their business," said Marie Wieck, general manager, IBM application and infrastructure middleware. "With the acquisition of Worklight, IBM is well-positioned to help clients become smarter mobile enterprises reaching new markets."


Worklight accelerates IBM's comprehensive mobile portfolio, which is designed to help global corporations leverage the proliferation of all mobile devices - from laptops and smartphones to tablets. IBM has been steadily investing in this space for more than a decade, both organically and through acquisitions.


As a result, IBM can offer a complete portfolio of software and services that delivers enterprise-ready mobility for clients - from IT systems all the way through to mobile devices. This builds on IBM's deep understanding of its clients and their evolving IT needs over the last several decades. Today, the world's top 20 communications service providers use IBM technology to run their applications, while every day more than one billion mobile phone subscribers are touched by IBM software.


Worklight supports consumer and employee-facing applications in a broad range of industries, including financial services, retail and healthcare. For example, a bank can create a single application that offers features to enable its customers to securely connect to their account, pay bills and manage their investments, regardless of the device they are using. Similarly, a hospital could use Worklight technology to extend its existing IT system to allow direct input of health history, allergies, and prescriptions by a patient using a tablet.


Worklight Builds on IBM's Comprehensive Mobile Software and Services Offerings


Ubiquitous connectivity provides businesses with unique opportunities to better connect with their customer base, interact with external users and employees in more efficient ways, drive productivity and reach new audiences. IBM's strategy is to offer its customers a complete set of the software and services they need to effectively bring mobile devices into their business infrastructure. These capabilities include:


Build and Connect Mobile Applications: The explosive growth of mobile has created a fragmented landscape for enterprises to support, often with limited budgets and skills. IBM's development and integration tools, complemented by Worklight, help clients to develop mobile applications and their supporting infrastructures for a variety of platforms just once – including Apple iOS and Google Android – while offering capabilities to securely connect to corporate IT systems.


Manage and Secure Mobile Devices: As Bring Your Own Device or "BYOD" gains popularity, IT departments are looking to find an efficient and secure way to enable employees' use of mobile devices in the work place. Rather than implement a separate infrastructure solely for mobile devices, IBM's offerings are helping customers deliver a single solution that effectively manages and secures all endpoints. These unified capabilities can now extend from servers and laptops, to smartphones and tablets.


Extend Existing Capabilities and Capitalize on New Business Opportunities: The rapid adoption of mobile computing is also creating demand for organizations to extend their current business capabilities to mobile devices, while capitalizing on the new opportunities that mobile devices uniquely provide. For instance, IBM's software, services and industry frameworks offer clients the ability to use mobile to engage with their customers around growing business opportunities such as analytics, commerce and social business applications.


"In the last year, we have seen surging demand from enterprises for mobility solutions that will support the unique set of challenges introduced by new smartphone and tablet platforms," said Shahar Kaminitz, CEO and founder, Worklight. "Building on our existing partnership with IBM, the acquisition of Worklight further enhances IBM's broad mobile portfolio. Now it will be easier than ever for our clients to offer secure and connected applications to their customers, business partners and employees."


In addition to Worklight, IBM today is also unveiling IBM Endpoint Manager for Mobile Devices, a new software system that will enable corporate users to manage and secure their mobile devices these applications are running on. For more details, visit: http://www.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/36661.wss


The acquisition of Worklight is expected to close in 1Q12. Worklight will sit within IBM's Software Group.


About Worklight


Today Worklight delivers mobile application management capabilities to clients across a wide range of industries including retail, financial services, technology, travel and hospitality and manufacturing.


This enables organizations to efficiently create and run HTML5, hybrid and native applications for smartphones and tablets with industry-standard technologies and tools. Worklight's unique capabilities provide a complete and extensible integrated development environment (IDE), next-generation mobile middleware, powerful management and analytics. Worklight dramatically reduces time to market, cost and complexity while enabling better customer and employee user experiences across more devices. By enabling organizations to only develop and integrate the applications once - for any platform - it frees up time, resources and skills to focus on other business opportunities.


IBM is a world leader in the development of open standards critical to the web and mobile enablement, and co-chairs the W3C HTML5 working group. For more information on IBM's mobile software and services portfolio visit:


http://www-01.ibm.com/software/solutions/mobile-enterprise/.


*IBM CIO Study, 2011.


**The Economist, 2011.


IBM, the IBM logo, ibm.com, Smarter Planet and the planet icon are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation, registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Other product and service names might be trademarks of IBM or other companies. For a current list of IBM trademarks, please see www.ibm.com/legal/copytrade.shtml


All other company, product or service names may be trademarks or registered trademarks of others. Statements concerning IBM's future development plans and schedules are made for planning purposes only, and are subject to change or withdrawal without notice. Reseller prices may vary.



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Scanning on the Go, Wirelessly

Scanning on the Go, Wirelessly


By DAVID POGUE, VIA:nytimes.com.


At this point, the first rule of technology should be clear to everyone: as progress marches forward, gadgets get smaller. Our phones. Our cameras. Our laptops. Our savings.


But there's a fly in the truism: some things can't get smaller forever. You can't make a microwave oven smaller than the food you put inside. You can't design a Blu-ray player that's smaller than the disc it's supposed to play. And you can't make a scanner that's smaller than the pages or photos you want to scan.


You can come pretty close, though. Several companies sell compact portable scanners that could almost fit inside the cardboard tube from a paper-towel roll: foot-long skinny gadgets with a slot that pulls in photos and papers and spits them out the back. The scan quality is surprisingly good, and the speed is decent (about two seconds a page). The huge drawback is that you can't scan books, magazines or anything else that won't slide through that slot.


If you can live with that limitation, you might consider the new, straightforwardly named Xerox Mobile Scanner ($250). It's battery-powered, so you can scan anywhere (up to 300 scans on a charge). The scans can go directly to a flash drive you've plugged into the back, or onto a camera memory card, or over a USB cable to your computer.


But the Mobile Scanner's truly useful twist is that it can be completely wireless. Not just no power cord, but no cable to your computer, either. It can fling your scanned photos or documents through the ether to almost anywhere: your iPhone or Android phone, for example. Your iPad or Android tablet. A laptop. Or even a Web site, where other people can immediately see and download the results.


I'll wait here while you let that sink in. This means you: students, researchers, lawyers, real estate types, inspectors, genealogists, artists and business card collectors of all stripes. Now you can whip this foot-long scanner out of your bag, feed in a photo or page (from 2 by 2 inches up to 8.5 by 11.7 inches), and then marvel as it shows up on your phone, ready to forward to anyone in the world. Or onto your iPad, safely copied from the original, ready for instant retrieval. Score one for portability.


If you're a true-blue technoholic, you might recognize certain themes of this story. You might have heard of the Eye-Fi card: a traditional SD memory card for cameras that, somehow, also contains Wi-Fi wireless circuitry. Pop this thing into any camera model, and it suddenly becomes a Wi-Fi camera, capable of transmitting your photos to your computer, phone or a photo gallery Web site like Flickr.


In creating its Mobile Scanner, Xerox didn't bother reinventing the wireless wheel. Instead, it worked with the Eye-Fi people to develop a customized version of their magic little card. The chief enhancement: The Xerox version of the Eye-Fi card is capable of transmitting PDF documents wirelessly, not just photos. (It's worth noting that it's otherwise a standard Eye-Fi card. When you're not scanning, you can pop it into your camera and transmit photos wirelessly from it.)


When you unpack the silver plastic Mobile Scanner (it comes with an attractive black carrying case), the only setup is inserting the Eye-Fi card - a 4-gigabyte model - into a slot on the back and charging up the scanner's built-in battery, either from a wall outlet or from your computer's USB jack.


There are only two buttons: Power and Mode, which lets you choose which kind of scan you want: a color photo, a black-and-white PDF document or a color PDF document.


Once you've made your selection, you feed your photo or paper into the front slot. The scanner gives you a couple of seconds to get the thing straight, and then slurps the sheet in with satisfying speed, grip and confidence.


If you're in one of the PDF modes, the scanner gives you 10 seconds to feed it the next sheet of a multipage document. The result is a single PDF document with multiple pages. Nice.


The scans are clean, straight and sharp. You'd have a hard time telling them apart from the work of a big-footprint desktop flatbed home scanner.


Except that this time, they're appearing on the screen of your phone, tablet or laptop - wirelessly.


In other words, Xerox has done a beautiful job of making its machine solid, simple and competent. Unfortunately, you can't say the same for its partner, the Eye-Fi card.


It seems as though for every square inch of miniaturization this marvel has undergone, its complexity has ballooned proportionately. Setting it up is a baffling procedure that involves moving it back and forth between the scanner and the computer and flipping between the Eye-Fi Web site and the Eye-Fi's own Mac or Windows software. You wind up entering your Eye-Fi account name and password about 30,000 times.


To bring about the wireless union of scanner and receiving gadget, both have to be on a Wi-Fi network together.


Sometimes you can use the one in your home, office or school. But what about the times and places where there's no Wi-Fi? Or what if you don't feel like hauling your computer around with you everywhere you go? (The computer is required to introduce the Eye-Fi card to a new Wi-Fi hot spot.)


Fortunately, there's another way: Direct Mode. In this mode, the Eye-Fi card creates its own tiny Wi-Fi network, even if you're out in the middle of a soccer field or at the top of a mountain. It can't send its scans to the Internet, of course, but it can send them just fine to your phone, tablet or computer.


This, it turns out, is one of the most complex of the Eye-Fi's complexities. If there's a regular Wi-Fi hot spot, the Eye-Fi wants to jump onto that instead of using Direct Mode.


Once the Wi-Fi situation is settled, you can begin scanning. After a significant pause - maybe 30 seconds - the scanned images wind up in Eye-Fi's software, which is available for Mac, Windows, iOS or Android. But this Eye-Fi software was never designed for PDF files; not many cameras take pictures in PDF format. So Eye-Fi software displays PDFs as blank thumbnails, which isn't especially helpful. They represent actual PDF documents that lie on your hard drive in some buried folder.


Things are much easier on the iPhone/iPad/iPad Touch. For these Apple iOS gadgets, Xerox has written a beautifully simple app called DocToMe. It's made to receive the photos and PDF documents from the scanner, and they show up as proper thumbnail images. If you tap one, you're offered a list of ways to process it: e-mail it, print it, send it to Dropbox, copy it to the Clipboard, add it to your phone/tablet's photo stash, or open it up in an e-book reader like Kindle. (The one semi-downside: DocToMe works only in Direct Mode - not over a regular Wi-Fi network.)


There are other portable scanners, by the way, even other wireless ones. But Xerox asserts that the Mobile Scanner is the only one that can scan PDF documents, wirelessly and directly.


Getting to that point might take you a couple of hours - fussing with the Eye-Fi setup, hammering through Wi-Fi problems, sitting on the phone with Xerox or Eye-Fi tech support. Fortunately, once that's over, you wind up with a smooth, automatic, extremely portable scanning system. Yes, gadgets may get smaller over time. But in this case, the possibilities just got a lot bigger.



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Developers Learn How OpenGL is an Essential Tool for 3D Computer Graphics for Android.

Developers Learn How OpenGL is an Essential Tool for 3D Computer Graphics for Android.


New York, NY (PRWEB) February 01, 2012, VIA:prweb.com.


Android Developers: Harness the full power of OpenGL ES with "Pro OpenGL ES for Android"-just released by Apress Media.


The Android platform is one of the fastest growing segments in the mobile industry. Already developers have been creating apps and games to be sold on these devices since it exploded onto the market. Many experienced Android developers are now starting to see the value in learning 3D graphics to give them a leg up in creating better apps and more in-demand games. To help developers who want to enter the 3D world, graphics experts and authors Mike Smithwick and Mayank Verma created "Pro OpenGL Es for Android" as the go-to guide book for the open platform, published by Apress Media.


Pro OpenGL ES for Android offers everything a programmer needs to know about 3D graphics -from basic mathematical concepts to advanced coding techniques. Authors Smithwick and Verma walk readers through the process of building a fascinating 3D solar system simulator using the fundamental concepts.


While working on the solar system project example in the book, programmers will learn how to incorporate a variety of graphic and animation techniques and how they fit into application development. "Pro OpenGL ES for Android" begins by explaining the basics of 3D math and then orients the reader to the native Android 3D libraries that will be used in building the solar system project-and of course in creating 3D games. This essential resource will also teach how to create 2D interfaces within the 3D world and how to develop animation and 3D movement. The authors cover topics such as lighting, texture mapping, modeling, shaders, blending modes and several more advanced concepts.


Pro OpenGL ES for Android is the go-to guide for the Android developer who wants to start learning the world of 3D. Readers will learn all the skills needed to build their own incredible 3D applications based on the most powerful 3D libraries available. Smithwick and Verma's book gains a strong foothold in the rich and trending world of 3D -and until now there has never been easier or more comprehensive guide for learning this skill.


About the Authors


Mike Smithwick's slow descent into programming computers began when he first got a little 3-bit plastic DigiComp 1 computer in 1963. Eventually he graduated to programming NASA flight simulator graphics through the 1980s. He wrote and sold the popular Distant Suns planetarium program for the Commodore Amiga, old-school Mac, and Microsoft Windows while selling himself as a contract programmer on the side, working for Apple, 3DO, Sense-8, and Epyx. Eventually he landed a job at Live365, working on client software Windows and Windows Mobile 6, TiVo, Symbian and iPhone. After 13 years, he decided to go back to contracting, writing, and working on Distant Suns for mobile devices after it became modest success in the App Store.


Mayank Verma completed his master's degree in computer science from Arizona State University in 2008. During the program, he published several research papers in the area of security. Since then, he has been working as a software developer specializing in software application design and development. Mayank is passionate about mobile application development and became interested in Android programming when the platform was first launched by Google. When he's is not working on Android projects, he spends his spare time reading technical blogs, researching, analyzing, and testing mobile applications, and hacking gadgets.


About Apress Media


Apress Media LLC is a technical and business publisher devoted to meeting the needs of IT professionals, software developers, programmers, and business leaders with more than 1,000 books in print and electronic formats. Apress provides high-quality, no-fluff content that helps serious technology professionals build a comprehensive pathway to career success. For more information about the innovative approach Apress takes to publishing.


Picture Messaging App Zlango Hits 1 Million Android Users Four Months After Launch


By Sarah Perez, VIA:techcrunch.com.


Zlango, a goofy but fun icon-based text messaging app, just hit one million U.S. users on the Android platform only four months after launching. Backed by Accel and Benchmark Capital, the app originally arrived in the U.S. market in October 2011, following the opening of its San Francisco-based offices. In total, Zlango now boasts over 5 million users worldwide, the company reports.


The fact that Zlango is achieving this level of popularity on Android in such a short timeframe, is indicative of the type of apps Android users still seem to prefer – apps that replace Android’s core components. In Zlango’s case, the app offers an admittedly silly take on the concept of text messaging, offering packs of icons that let you replace words with emoticons and pictograms. It clearly seems aimed at a younger audience, because, let’s face it – no self-respecting 30-year old is going to send out picture messages like this. But that fact, too, is interesting. Many of Android’s success stories to date have been ports of popular iPhone apps, general purposes apps (like Any.DO) or utilities – not those aimed at such a specific, younger demographic.


For comparison purposes, Any.DO reached half a million downloads in just 30 days. Meanwhile, Evernote’s Skitch app for Android, an arguably more well-known brand, saw 3.5 million downloads in just 3 and half months post-launch. So hitting a million in four months, while not quite on those levels, is still indicative of some relatively decent traction. Even more so given its limited appeal to older users.


Zlango now supports over 25 languages, is available in over 20 countries, and has delivered more than 9 billion Zlango icons worldwide. It’s currently seeing the most traction in Europe, Asia and the U.S. The app, which is also available for BlackBerry, Nokia and J2ME, is available here on the Android Market.



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T-Mobile MyTouch Q (violet)

T-Mobile MyTouch Q (violet)


Via:cnet.com.


The good: The T-Mobile MyTouch Q offers a satisfying physical keyboard and a fast 4G data connection for people on a budget.

The bad: With a sluggish single-core CPU, a pokey 5-megapixel camera, and a low-res display, the MyTouch Q won't impress either gadget hounds or shutterbugs looking to replace their point-and-shoot cameras. Also, the phone is loaded to the gills with bloatware and it suffers from a blah user interface.


The bottom line: If you absolutely crave a physical keyboard and swift 4G data for less, you'll find plenty to like about T-Mobile's MyTouch Q. More selective smartphone shoppers, however, will want to look elsewhere.


Do you need a solid Android smartphone but don't want to spend a lot of cash up front? If so, then the T-Mobile MyTouch Q could be the device that you're seeking. Owners of aging BlackBerrys in need of a change also should take a closer look at this $79.99 handset that boasts a sliding QWERTY keyboard plus swift 4G data.


Design


If you're familiar with the MyTouch Q's predecessor, the MyTouch 4G Slide, you won't find many surprises here. Also a QWERTY slider, the MyTouch Q's look and feel are very similar and it's practically the same size. Measuring 4.7 inches tall by 2.5 inches wide and .5 inch thick, the MyTouch Q is not small or trim by modern definitions. And tipping the scales at 5.6 ounces, the phone isn't light either. Compared with much thinner smartphones like the Samsung Galaxy S II for T-Mobile, the MyTouch Q is plump and portly. Still, I found its softly curved edges comfortable to hold, and the gray soft-touch back coating provides a sure grip and repels grease and prints.


Eschewing the large 4.3-inch or even 4.5-inch panels gracing many of today's modern Android handsets, the MyTouch Q relies on a smaller 3.5-inch LCD screen.


Immediately, I noticed how fuzzily the low-resolution screen (480x320 pixels) rendered details in app icons, photos, and especially text. Contrast wasn't great either, with the black background of the Android app tray, for instance, appearing grayer than it should. Viewing angles also were disappointing and tilting the device in any direction off axis quickly killed image quality.


Below the screen are illuminated capacitive buttons for typical Android controls including Menu, Home, and Back. Instead of the Search key, though, there is the Genius button, represented by a circular "G" logo. Long-pressing this key, a staple of T-Mobile MyTouch devices, fires up the phone's voice command capabilities. You can tell the MyTouch Q to do simple tasks like "Send text message to John Smith, running late," or "Find the nearest espresso."


The MyTouch even can be commanded by voice to launch specific applications or play favorite music, which is handy if the phone is buried deep in a pocket or bag. In my experience, the feature worked as advertised. That said, don't be fooled into thinking this is as powerful or intelligent as the Siri assistant on the iPhone 4S. While I could dictate a pretty lengthy text message, if I paused midstream the device assumed I was done and wouldn't check whether I had more to add, which is something Siri does.


But why waste time with voice commands for messaging when you could use the MyTouch Q's standout feature, its full QWERTY keyboard? Though there are only four rows of keys instead of the complete five rows boasted by other devices such as the eagerly anticipated Motorola Droid 4, the Q's main input method is usable. I was able to bang out messages relatively accurately and quickly despite the cramped layout and minimal spacing.


On the whole it's a good effort, though I have to complain that the spacebar is small, the keys are hard, and the keyboard itself flexes alarmingly. Fortunately, the keys are backlit and there is a wealth of dedicated buttons for common punctuation marks, as well as buttons for @, .com, and "Text," and a smiley-face button for emoticons. Alternatively, if you just want to use the virtual keyboard, the MyTouch Q features Swype switched on by default while the stock Android entry method can be selected.


The T-Mobile MyTouch Q's QWERTY keyboard is a rarity in an Android phone these days.

Phone controls and ports are kept to a minimum, with the only physical buttons being two tiny volume keys on the left side and a power key on the top edge. Also on top sit the MyTouch Q's 3.5mm headphone jack and Micro-USB port. The back houses a 5-megapixel camera, LED flash, and large speaker. Under the flimsy battery cover is a microSD card slot populated by a 2GB card, which can be reached without removing the battery. The same, though, can't be said for the standard-size SIM card slot.


Features


Running the Android 2.3.4 Gingerbread OS, the MyTouch doesn't offer Google's latest version, Ice Cream Sandwich (version 4.0), but honestly neither do most current handsets, let alone most basic Android handsets. All the essential and powerful Android capabilities are here, such as Gmail, Google Maps, and access to the over 500,000 apps, not to mention movies and books, available for download from the Android Market. The phone can handle personal and corporate e-mail accounts and the usual text-messaging tasks. You tackle multimedia primarily through the simple onboard music and video software.


The design of the shortcut bar at the bottom of the screen has been tweaked. In addition to the usual icons for phone, text messaging, and browser, there's also one for e-mail. Frankly, it makes for a cluttered feel and I don't much care for the icons' cartoon look either.


It's also distracting how all the phone's seven home screens are clogged with either T-Mobile bloatware or massive widgets. I suppose that's both the appeal and the weakness of Android, since you can remove and customize icons at will. Speaking of apps, there are a fair number of useful titles preloaded, including Google Books, Slacker Radio for streaming Internet radio, Google navigation for free turn-by-turn GPS guidance, and a basic version of TeleNav (the premium version costs $2.99 per month).


SmartShare enables the MyTouch Q to link to DLNA-enabled computers and stream video or music files across Wi-Fi networks. The phone also can make calls over Wi-Fi, if you have better luck accessing a wireless router than a T-Mobile signal. Be advised, though, that the feature still counts against your voice plan minutes. Another service, T-Mobile TV, streams a collection of live channels such as Disney and Fox News, to name a few, but costs an extra $9.99 per month.


Equipped with a decent camera, the MyTouch Q takes pictures of acceptable if not arresting quality. Details in my test shots weren't as crisp as I would have liked, but in the phone's defense, color was accurate and pleasing. Typically for a smartphone camera, low-light performance was lacking, with plenty of image noise in dark regions. Perhaps the biggest weakness of the MyTouch Q's camera is its slow shot-to-shot time, which in my experience is a few seconds. This has a real impact when trying to capture wildly moving subjects, like my kids, for instance.




There are a few fancy camera modes to choose, such as Panorama and Continuous Shot, plus manual ISO settings. Avid video chatters are out of luck, however, because the MyTouch Q lacks a front-facing camera.


Movies I captured with the MyTouch Q's 720p HD camera were satisfying with smooth and clear playback even on a larger desktop monitor screen. The phone's microphone did an admirable job of picking up audio, too.


Performance


I tested the MyTouch Q on T-Mobile's network in New York. The phone's call quality proved to be one of its major strengths. Callers described my voice as sounding warm and lifelike, not digital or robotic at all. Of course, if they listened carefully they could tell that I was calling from a mobile phone. On my end, voices came through the earpiece with plenty of volume, forcing me to turn down the audio a few levels sometimes. Voices coming in via the MyTouch Q's speakerphone also had plenty of impact, though at the loudest setting the audio tended to become distorted.


Running on a single-core 1GHz Qualcomm processor, the MyTouch Q definitely feels sluggish, creakily churning through menus and mulling over apps that would fire up in a flash on more robust devices. Forcing the MyTouch to power through the Linpack benchmark confirmed my suspicions. The handset managed a score of just 36.9 (single-thread), while for example the high-octane Motorola Droid Razr Maxx (1.2GHz dual-core processor) sped through with a score of 51.5. The Maxx's lead widened further on the multithread portion of the test, where it notched 65.5 compared with the MyTouch Q's 32.7.


A quad-band GSM device (850/900/1,800/1,900MHz), the MyTouch Q is also capable of connecting to T-Mobile's fast 4G HSPA+ data network. At an ideal location in Manhattan, I measured an average download speed of 7.6Mbps while uploads averaged just over 2Mbps, which is pretty quick. In Queens, New York, I clocked mixed but still nimble data performance (4.4Mbps down, 2.7Mbps up).


Powered by a 1,500mAh battery, T-Mobile rates the MyTouch Q's talk time at up to 3.3 hours with almost 12 days of standby time. Informally, I was able to run a video stored on the phone's SD card for over 6 hours in airplane mode before the handset called it quits. Additionally, I consistently made it through a full work day without needing an AC outlet.



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