Steve Jobs Skipping Final Macworld Apple Keynote

Steve Jobs is not going to deliver this year’s Macworld keynote. We suspected this was coming. But there’s more: Apple has confirmed that this is their last Macworld ever.

Instead of Jobs, delivering this year’s supposedly final Macworld keynote is Phil Schiller, Apple’s senior VP of worldwide product marketing.

While we have confirmed this information with Apple, what this means for WWDC or town halls is unknown. We had predicted that Steve Jobs was preparing his farewell following his highly de-centered introduction of the new MacBooks. At the very, very best, this is another step in that direction, preparing the world for an Apple without Steve. We don’t really want to think about the worst.

But we have to. This sudden, dramatic announcement says to some, loudly and unfortunately clearly, that Jobs’ health has taken a significant dive since his appearance introducing the new MacBooks. One theory might be that Jobs had to step down one day, and while we noticed a transition towards other execs at Apple events, starting this fall, a true control freak would want to step down on his own terms before something like health required them to do it without any say in the matter. That’s one theory. But there are far better ways to do this. The best way being Jobs finishing his long career of on stage presentations by giving the last and final Macworld Keynote presentation in person. There’s not really any reason why they wouldn’t have planned it this way. At least a brief, headlining appearance Jobs, followed by a team effort announcing new products—if for no other reason than to dispel the alarm that’s already shaking the internet, but also to make the transition even smoother.

What’s Wrong With Macworld?
There are other possibilities besides illness, we suppose. Is it a decline in the confidence and importance of Macworld? Also possible, but let’s remember this is where Apple launched the iPhone, its most important product since the iPod, and this past year, the MacBook Air, which set the tone for its notebooks for the rest of the year. True, this year’s rumored products—an updated Mac mini (plausible), iPhone nano (stupid) and tablet/netbook (dream on) aren’t mind-blowing, but still. What we have seen happen in the last few years is Apple use the internet and their marketing dollars to reach the mainstream without the mainstream press. They probably don’t need Macworld or that major expense, even if Apple can afford it. Apple’s launched plenty of product at Cupertino HQ recently and they’ve all done well, and on Apple’s own timetable. (Macworld is in January, at the slump of the retail world’s cycle.)

Money, Money, Money
So why not announce a full retirement, if he is too ill to continue—a possibility if he’s too ill to show up on stage? This opaque announcement is more mysterious, and uncertainties tend to be more troubling than truths, even hard ones. Apple stock hasn’t quite felt the impact, only down 5 points in after hours trading, but if Steve really is worth $20 billion to Apple’s market cap, once the news spreads, expect it to plummet further, faster. An iPhone delay rumor might knock off a few billion, but the suddenly realer than ever possibility Apple’s wizard-in-chief really is about to fade into the night—something that spooked traders even when Jobs actually did make an appearance—is an even more drastic event. In the long run, Jobs handing over the reigns is a GOOD thing to start doing now, to reduce dependence of the stock price on one man alone. If Steve leaves the day to day entirely, the only way any one is going to have confidence in the company is if they see and feel other executives have been in place for awhile. Like Ballmer taking over for Gates, a transition that took years upon years, Apple would be dumb to start this process late. And incredibly dumb to do so on the leader’s deathbed, as the world is now speculating.

Who’s Next?
And why Phil Schiller? Why not the man most likely to wear the crown, Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook, who resembles Jobs more than anyone else at Apple? If Steve Jobs was retiring, why wouldn’t he announce his retirement himself? Or have his immediate successor do it? All questions we’ll have to wait until Macworld to get answers to, unless Apple’s iron secrecy dissolves in this apparent crisis moment. Another one: If a transition isn’t what’s happening here, but Steve is too ill to appear in public, how is he possibly well enough run Apple from behind the scenes? Why wouldn’t he make the transition more smooth if at all possible, gradually transferring power to his chosen successor. An opaque announcement—that Apple had to have known would spark this speculative frenzy is NOT the optimal way to do this.

Timing
The timing of this whole thing is really off, too, in more ways than one. News that you want buried, you drop on Friday, not Tuesday, which is actually the optimal day for the MOST coverage. Also, if Steve Jobs is in fact retiring, the best, most controlling way to do announce this would be at Macworld, Apple’s final Macworld, without this back-handed press release sending the press (us) into a frenzy before the fact. This seems like the worst way, but there are other paths that even crappier, which is likely why they’re doing it this way: him appearing seriously ill on stage, or worst of worsts, dying before Macworld. Which if the latter were the tragic case, it’s unlikely, given how (very rightly) guarded he is about his health, that Steve would announce its imminence. Maybe burying news would have seemed weak, and so Apple launched this on Tuesday in an unflinching message of bravado. Crazy, but this is a cult we’re talking about.

The Next iThingies?
Even supposing the worst of all possible scenarios, we don’t think this will change Apple’s roadmap, at least not for the immediate future—products have to be designed and engineered way in advance, so 2009’s slate is likely already completely mapped out, so even if Jobs does leave Apple soon, his direct hand will be felt in Apple products for at least the next year, if not longer. (That’s even assuming too much; just because he’s not presenting doesn’t mean he’s actually stepping down day to day.) And undoubtedly, his impact and legacy will endure far beyond that. Lack of product is a possible but unlikely thing to happen in the near future, specifically Macworld. Maybe the fact they have an uberproduct in the wings is a good counterbalance to losing Steve’s presentation skills? But then again, one way to look at it is that the Macworld cycle is, again, broken, and Apple has nothing to present this year and Jobs won’t get on stage for that. So, just as likely, if not more so than health issues, is that Apple simply has no amazing product to present at Macworld, so they’re sending the B-team to present it, conveniently broadcasting the irrelevance of Macworld at the same time. The possibilities are endless.

Apple spokesman Steve Dowling reiterates the irrelevance of Macworld as the rationale for their pullout, saying that “”It doesn’t make sense for us to make a major investment in a trade show we will no longer be attending.” But it still doesn’t address why Steve won’t speak at the final big show.

The End of an Era
So maybe this is the real announcement at this year’s Macworld, the one everyone knew would come one day, though it doesn’t make any less shocking.

More on this very topic:

Steve Jobs Skipping Final Macworld Apple Keynote
How the News of a Job-less Keynote Was Forced Out
Valleywag: Control freak Steve Jobs’s chaotic Macworld no-show news
Will Trade Shows Survive?
On Steve Jobs-less Keynote: Sometimes I Hate It When I’m Right
Do You Think Steve Jobs Is Retiring Very Soon?
Is Steve Jobs Preparing His Farewell?
The Quiet Man Who May Become Apple King

Apple Announces Its Last Year at Macworld

CUPERTINO, Calif., Dec. 16 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Apple(R) today announced that this year is the last year the company will exhibit at Macworld Expo. Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing, will deliver the opening keynote for this year’s Macworld Conference & Expo, and it will be Apple’s last keynote at the show. The keynote address will be held at Moscone West on Tuesday, January 6, 2009 at 9:00 a.m. Macworld will be held at San Francisco’s Moscone Center January 5-9, 2009.
Apple is reaching more people in more ways than ever before, so like many companies, trade shows have become a very minor part of how Apple reaches its customers. The increasing popularity of Apple’s Retail Stores, which more than 3.5 million people visit every week, and the Apple.com website enable Apple to directly reach more than a hundred million customers around the world in innovative new ways.
Apple has been steadily scaling back on trade shows in recent years, including NAB, Macworld New York, Macworld Tokyo and Apple Expo in Paris.

Apple ignited the personal computer revolution in the 1970s with the Apple II and reinvented the personal computer in the 1980s with the Macintosh. Today, Apple continues to lead the industry in innovation with its
award-winning computers, OS X operating system and iLife and professional applications. Apple is also spearheading the digital media revolution with its iPod portable music and video players and iTunes online store, and has entered the mobile phone market with its revolutionary iPhone.

(C) 2008 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Mac, Mac OS and Macintosh are trademarks of Apple. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

TraderTools’ keyboard for traders — all that’s missing is the panic button

We don’t usually see many gadgets aimed at the high rollers in the foreign exchange market who read this site religiously, so when we ran across this sweet piece of PR for the Al-1 Compact Keyboard for TraderTools’ Liquidity Management Platform, we pounced! Sick of all those other trading keyboards that have been piling up with each new piece of software? This guy has been “humanly engineered” to replace all of ’em, with extra large, color-coded keys for the those things you do best — like destroying the lives of average Americans. Now you can “buy low” and “sell high” with a single keystroke. This keyboard will have you aggregating liquidity with the best of them. There’s no word yet on pricing or a release date, but keep your eyes open — with the way this economy’s headed, we’re certain these units will be flooding eBay (and estate sales) soon enough.

Continue reading TraderTools’ keyboard for traders — all that’s missing is the panic button

Filed under:

TraderTools’ keyboard for traders — all that’s missing is the panic button originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Dec 2008 16:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

138 Scenes You Won’t See in Terminator Salvation

For this week’s Photoshop Contest, we have a boatload of highly unlikely scenes from the upcoming Terminator Salvation. I’m pretty sure even McG won’t screw up the franchise this badly.

We got a ton of great entries this week, including like 30 ET jokes (sorry, I didn’t include many of them). Overall, top rate work, folks! And here’s hoping the actual movie is less laughable than these entries. If anyone can do it, it’s Christian Bale.

First Place — Pulaski
Second Place — Robert M.
Third Place — Marvko

Panasonic Gel Remote Concept: Slippery, Slimy, and Occasionally Erect [Remotes]

Gel is great for some things—shoe inserts, hair product and, of course, holiday desserts involving various layers of suspended fruit. But remotes, Panasonic?

When not in use, this Panasonic concept remote is said to slumber peacefully, its limp body pulsating with light not so differently than a gently sleeping MacBook. But when touched, the remote wakes and becomes rigid…ready to be wielded and fulfilling pretty much any adolescent metaphor you’d already been scheming while reading this post. Luckily my current remote is working just fine, thankyouverymuch. [AdBusters via bbGadgets and Next Nature]






Nextar’s 2GB “Ribbit” MP3 Player Retailing For $25 [Portable Media]

Nextar is bringing the big guns to CES this year with their upcoming frog-shaped “Ribbit” MP3 player. Besides the unique design, it features 2GB of storage space and an OLED screen for only $25.

Nextar Ribbit MA589 MP3 Player —Product Features & Specifications:

•Support MP3 and WMA
•Built-In Memory: Up to 4GB (Price TBD on 4GB)
•Screen: OLED display
•Size: 1.49″ x 1.27″ x 0.93″
•Supports 7 languages support: English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Chinese Simplified.
•Supports voice recording
•8 EQ modes include Normal, Pop, Rock, Classical, Jazz, Bass, Soft, SRS WOW
•Supports play-list function
•High-speed USB 2.0 interface
•Upgradable to future formats and features
•Full charged lithium-ion battery lasts 5-6 hours of continuous playback
•Supports 5 Play Modes including normal, repeat one, repeat all, folder, repeat folder
•Accessories includes: Earphone, USB Cable, Lithium-Ion Battery, Instruction Manual, and Install CD

Hey, for only $25 I’m willing to overlook the emasculating frog-shaped design for a 2GB MP3 player that works well. We shall see whether it truly is a bargain when CES rolls around. [Nextar]






Gemei and RAmos to offer 800 x 480 PMPs

Remember the Ainol V3000 we saw a while back? It looks like Gemei and RAmos are playing catch-up with some 800 x 480 PMPs of their own. It’s been speculated that like the Ainol handheld, Gemei’s X690HD will be rocking an Ingenic chipset, while the RAmos T9 could follow up its iMovie with either an Ingenic or a Rockchip. Hopefully this bombshell makes your day, because there really are no other specs to report. We assume you’ll see these guys with FM tuners, TV outs, batteries, and storage at some unspecified point in the future. The usual. Keep your eyes peeled, Mainland China!

Filed under: ,

Gemei and RAmos to offer 800 x 480 PMPs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Dec 2008 15:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Dell Inspiron Mini 12 gets more netbook-y with Ubuntu, XP options

Dell’s Inspiron Mini 12 was already blurring the lines between netbooks and traditional laptop when it was shipping with Vista and Vista only, but it looks like Dell is intent on breaking down the walls between the two categories, with it now offering both Ubuntu and Windows XP on the, er… system. Expectedly, there’s no changes to be found on the hardware side of things, and you can get either of the new operating systems installed on both the 1.33GHz and 1.6GHz models, the former of which now starts at $499 with Ubuntu pre-installed. And, yes, you can still get Vista if you like — at no extra cost, no less.

[Thanks, TxdoHawk]

Filed under:

Dell Inspiron Mini 12 gets more netbook-y with Ubuntu, XP options originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Dec 2008 15:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

MacBook Air 2nd Gen Review

Externally, the new MacBook Air hasn’t changed at all since launch. Internally, however, it’s significantly more powerful. This latest update shows the difference between being thin by starvation and being thin through exercise.

To recap: the latest MacBook Air has the same display as before (one step up from the standard MacBook displays since the Air is somewhat of a “Pro” machine), the same form factor and the same exact feel as the one released in early 2008. On the inside, however, Apple increased both the solid state hard drive and the standard SATA hard drive storage to 128GB and 120GB, respectively. There’s also a Mini DisplayPort port connection for the revamped 24-inch Cinema Display, a faster CPU and faster front side bus, plus that Nvidia 9400 graphics chipset that’s in the MacBook and MacBook Pros. Here’s how the machine stacks up.

Benchmark: The most important thing to measure in this incremental upgrade is the performance comparison vs. other MacBooks. I’ve updated the chart from the MacBook and MacBook Pro graphics deathmatch (performed with 3DMark 06 under Windows XP) to include the MacBook Air, and it performs about as well as you’d expect in most departments. Since the MacBook Air and the Macbook now have the same GeForce 9400M integrated graphics chip, it makes sense that they’re fairly close in score, with the Air falling behind due to the wimpier processor. It is quite a surprise that the CPU test has the Air so far below the MacBook, scoring at only 56% of its cheaper, but fatter, brother. It’s still the slowest MacBook you can currently buy.

Battery: In regular blogging use (Wi-Fi on, screen 3/4 brightness, music on, lots of web browsing and webapps), we got a respectable 2.5 hours with the Air. That’s about what we got with the MacBook and MacBook Pro when they were playing back movies, something that’s more taxing on the system. But on the other hand, when you compare this version to the original MBA when rendering movies, the updated 9400M GeForce graphics actually lowers CPU usage, which helps to extend battery a bit.

Screen: Since it has the same screen as the old MacBook Air, it’s going to be just as good—which is to say, better than the MacBook’s screen. You get clearer blacks and no color distortion with wider viewing angles off to the side. It’s LED-backed and glossy, so those of you who work outside (a light laptop would mean more of you do) may have difficulty finding a good angle to sit at to not get an annoying glare.

Monitor: One very interesting use case with the MacBook Air is to drive the newly released 24-inch Cinema Display. Apple’s 24-inch monitor is very much made with the Air in mind, with its USB, Mini DisplayPort and MacBook Air-style slim MagSafe adapter. The good news is that the Air drives this display very well in either mirror mode (lid closed is optional) or as a separate display, proving that the GeForce 9400M is more than enough to run 1920×1200 sans slowdowns. The bad news is that the the laptop’s USB and Mini DisplayPort is on the right, but the power is on the left, meaning that the three built-in connectors from the monitor are able to connect, but you get a weird forking thing going on behind the display. Not as elegant as when you plug in the display to a MacBook or a MacBook Pro where all the ports are on one side. But, it’s a minor quibble.

General Usage: It’s essentially the same laptop but improved, so all of our caveats from our first review apply now. You still need to either use the external USB optical drive or “borrow” one from another machine. It’s not a fast laptop when compared to its bigger brothers, but it’s not a slug either. People who just want a thin, portable and light machine—mainstream folks—are the primary target. But, at $1799 and $2499 for the 1.6GHz and 1.86GHz versions, the Air still lands somewhere, in both price and features, between the pro user and the casual user, meaning that you should think twice and see if either the MacBook or the Pro would be better suited for you. [Apple]

Analyst Predicts Apple Netbooks for Macworld 2009

Applebite

An analyst is betting Apple will introduce a pair of netbooks in
January, even though Steve Jobs just two months ago said he wasn’t
ready to.

"I don’t have any inside information," said Ezra
Gottheil, a Technology Business Research analyst, in an interview with
Computerworld. "This is just by triangulation."

Gottheil backs
his speculation by noting the declining state of the economy as well as
the booming success of inexpensive netbooks. These factors combined
will force Apple to introduce a netbook as soon as January at Macworld
Expo in San Francisco, Gottheil says.

However, Gottheil’s guess comes as nothing
new. Using the same reasoning (i.e., the collapsing economy and the low
cost of netbooks), some analysts were predicting
that Apple would unveil a netbook at its special notebook event in
October. But Jobs proved them wrong when he introduced only a refresh
for the MacBook family and a new LED cinema display.

Jobs even explicitly said during an October earnings call that he felt the netbook category was too "nascent" for Apple.

"We’ll
wait and see how that nascent category evolves, and we’ve got some
pretty interesting ideas if it does," said Jobs, during a
question-and-answer session.

While it’s true Jobs doesn’t rule
out the possibility of an Apple netbook in the future, I would consider
that quote as hinting at plans farther down the line — not as soon as
January. Jobs is a tricky man, but releasing Mac netbooks just two
months after saying he isn’t ready to would make the CEO come off as a
liar.

The rumors have been quiet about what exactly Apple’s
major launch will be at Macworld Expo. The only solid idea we have for
Macworld is that a new Mac Mini is coming,
according to an Apple corporate employee who contacted Wired.com. But
that hardly sounds exciting enough to be the big item of the event.

So what’s going to be the highlight of the show? Your guess is as good as ours (and Gottheil’s). We’ll continue to dig around and see what we can come up with.


Apple will unveil netbooks next month, says analyst [ComputerWorld]

See Also:

Photo: lindawild/Flickr





Add to Reddit
Add to Facebook
Add to digg



LightSpeed Binoculars Transmit Secure Video and Audio Via Infrared [Binoculars]

Designed primarily for military use, these LightSpeed binoculars are capable of transmitting “untappable” voice and video signals to another set of binoculars using infrared.

The LightSpeed system exploits free-space optics—the ability to pass data between two points via an optical beam. The method usually involves lasers, but this system uses eye-safe infrared LEDs, similar to those used in TV remotes, says Leo Volfson, president of Torrey Pines Logic, which created LightSpeed. “The binocular has an attachment that fits over the ocular side,” Volfson says. “It produces a beam that comes out of the right eye of the binocular. On the left side is a receiver. If you look at me and I look at you, we’ll be able to talk or send information.” Range is determined by the strength of the optics. Unlike radio-wave transmissions, data transfer through the LED beam is undetectable.

There is no word on how much these things might cost, but the Volfson believes that his product has potential outside of the defense industry. That’s right—bird watcher’s worlds are about to get rocked by technology. [Popular Mechanics]