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Tag Archives: apple
Verizon Cloud iPhone backup software launches on Apple’s App Store
Verizon this week launched a new iPhone application for its subscribers that gives access to the carrier’s cloud-based syncing and backup service. Continue reading
Apple deals: refurbished iMacs from $1,099
Right now at Apple’s online store save on refurbished iMac models starting as low as $1,099 for the refurbished 21.5-inch iMac with a 2.7GHz Intel quad-core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM and a 1TB hard drive. The 21.5-inch iMac with a 2.9GHz Intel quad-core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM and a 1TB hard drive has been reduced by $230 to $1,269…. Continue reading
Apple releases new iPhone ad touting music
Continuing with a nearly voiceless and poetic new campaign, Apple’s latest TV ad for the iPhone is called “Music Every Day” and carries on the theme begun in the previous “Photos Every Day” ad, touting a major feature of the iPhone that is not unique to it, but more widely used on the platform than on any of its rivals with visually beautiful montages anchored to a single, simple piece of music…. Continue reading
Horace Dediu’s four questions for Tim Cook
The ever sharp tech analyst has four incisive questions for the Apple CEO ahead of Cook’s appearance at next week’s D11 conference. (asymco.com) Continue reading
Posted in Apple, Apple News, Apple Rumors, Inside Apple, Mac News, Technology
Tagged apple, check-failed, else-load, loading, please-try, ready-post-load, return-false, typeof-add, var-load
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New service delivers passes for Apple’s Passbook via text message
Users of Apple’s Passbook feature for iOS have a new option for getting tickets, coupons, and more delivered to their devices, as Skycore has launched support for cross-carrier delivery of Passbook passes by MMS. Continue reading
Posted in Apple, Apple TV, Apps, CES, iPad, iPhone, iPod, iPod nano, iPod shuffle, iTunes, Mac Rumors, Macs, Other, Technology
Tagged adobe, apple, apple-tv, ces, feeds, iphone, ipod, ipod-nano, microsoft, technology
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Bugs & Fixes: iTunes 11.0.3 update improves app updating
Along with the usual bug fixes and performance improvements, the recently updated iTunes 11.0.3 introduces several interface tweaks. For my money, the most welcome addition is one that Apple doesn’t even mention on its “ About iTunes 11.0.3 ” page: a redesigned interface for checking on and downloading updated apps. On the downside, if you’re among the unlucky minority, the new iTunes version may crash on a regular basis. Updating apps gets a welcome makeover Back in 2010, I detailed several problems with how the app update process worked in iTunes — and how it could be improved. The just released iTunes update, at last, addresses almost all of these concerns. The location of the Updates button has moved to a better, more easily accessible, location. Of course, you first have to discover the change. Rather than off by itself at the bottom of the Apps window, Updates is now at the end of the row of buttons at the top of the window. After clicking the Updates button, iTunes 11.0.3 instantly displays a list of whatever updates you have available. In iTunes 10 and earlier, clicking Check for Updates would just tell you if updates were available. If they were, you would be asked if you wanted to view them—requiring that you click a second button. Even after clicking the second button, it still took a few moments before the update list appeared. While prior versions of iTunes 11 somewhat simplified the procedure, iTunes 11.0.3 completes the job. Catching up with the iOS versions of the App Store, the latest Mac version of iTunes now gives you quick access to What’s New in each updated app. Just click on an app’s icon and an expanded view drops down. From here, you get the details of what’s new as well as the app’s version number. You can also select to individually update an app. This is still not as good as how things work on the iPad, where the data and Update buttons are all available without requiring a separate click of each app. But it’s much better overall than how this was handled in older Mac versions of iTunes. The new iTunes app update listings no longer indicates the size of each app, but most people won’t miss this. With iTunes 11.0.3, Mac users can finally easily check what’s new in each app update. The Updates listings are now part of the Apps section of your iTunes Library. In prior versions of iTunes, selecting to view updates transferred you from Apps and whisked you away to the iTunes Store. I’m sure this contributed to the slower response times. It also was a source of irritation if you needed to toggle back and forth between the two locations while dealing with updates. iTunes crashes for some After updating to the latest version of iTunes, a subset of users report having repeated crashes, “ on an almost daily basis ,” as often as “ every five minutes .” Downgrading back to 11.0.2 appears to eliminate the crashes, but Apple does not make this easy to accomplish . Unfortunately, if you are a victim of this bug, there does not seem to be a better consensus work-around. Presumably, Apple will quash the bug in the next iTunes update. To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Continue reading
How fast is USB 3.0 really?
As a Mac user, I’ve never been a big fan of USB for storage. Keyboards, mice, sure. But a hard drive connected via USB has always been slow compared to those using Apple’s FireWire, FireWire 800, and (most recently) Thunderbolt interfaces. And booting from a USB drive on the Mac was a no-no for a long time. Times have changed, however. And thanks to USB 3.0’s availability on almost all shipping Macs (and, in the case of the Mac Pro, something you can add via a PCI card), its bootability (since late 2005—but what can I say, I can hold a grudge), its improved performance, and its relatively low price, my bias is quickly disappearing. (Though the first certified USB 3.0 consumer devices were announced at the Consumer Electronics Show in 2010, Macs didn’t begin shipping with USB 3.0 ports until June 2012, when new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro models were released.) USB 3.0 (also known as SuperSpeed USB) has a maximum bandwidth rate of 5 gbps (gigabits per second). That translates to 640 MBps (megabytes per second)—ten times faster than USB 2.0 (aka Hi-Speed USB). By comparison, Intel’s Thunderbolt technology allows theoretical data-transfer speeds of up to 10 gbps on each of its bi-directional channels. On paper, that’s twice as fast as USB 3.0, but how fast is Thunderbolt really? Also, you’ll currently you pay quite a premium for Thunderbolt (often an extra $100 or more for a drive of the same capacity) and USB 3.0 ports offer backward compatibility with USB 2.0 devices. To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Continue reading
Posted in Apple, Apps, Camera, Cases, CES, Features, Inside Apple, iPad, iPhone, iPod, iTunes, Mac News, Mac Rumors, Macs, Other, Peripherals, Reports, Styluses, Technology
Tagged apple, backup, business, camera, cases, facebook, home-audio, ipad, macs, networking, social-media, videos
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Box aquires Folders, plans to integrate into own iOS cloud storage app
Enterprise-oriented cloud storage firm Box has acquired Folders, an iOS app used to manage files from cloud storage services. The purchase, for an undisclosed amount, will see the technology behind the app rolled into Box’s own iOS app, with Folders developer Martin Destagnol being drafted in to help with its integration…. Continue reading
Posted in Apple, Apple News, Apps, Cases, CES, iCloud, iPad, iPhone, iPod, iTunes, Mac News, Mac Rumors, Other, Technology
Tagged apple, apps, icloud, ipad, iphone, mac news, most-read, photos, podcast, powerpoint
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Apple airs new iPhone ad, continues brilliant ‘quiet’ TV campaign
Apple on Thursday released a new ad focusing on the iPhone as a music player, with the quiet, serene style of the spot following in the footsteps of the company’s last commercial. Continue reading
AT&T GoPhone may get iPhone, LTE/HSPA+ support on Friday
AT&T’s prepaid GoPhone brand is set to get a major upgrade on Friday, MacRumors claims. This includes official support for the iPhone, and access to LTE and HSPA+ networks. People have been able to sign up to GoPhone with an iPhone in the past, but until now had to sacrifice cellular data access…. Continue reading
Posted in Apple, Apple News, Apps, Cases, CES, iPad, iPhone, iPod, iTunes, Mac News, Other, Technology
Tagged apple, archives, ces, headlines, iphone, kensington-com, microsoft, most-read, podcast, technology, toggle
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