Silicon Valley, Boston Top List of Markets with Most Apple Users

Apple MacBook 13-inch (Aluminum)

Where do most Apple fan boys and girls reside? Not surprisingly, California’s San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose market has the most users of Apple products in the country, according to Friday data from Experian Simmons. In that region, which houses Silicon Valley and Apple’s Cupertino headquarters, 32.3 percent of adult residents own or use at least one of the three core Apple products: the iPod, iPhone, or Mac computer.

Coming in at number two is Boston, where 31.3 percent own Apple products, followed by San Diego, Calif., with 31.8 percent.

Nationwide, about 21.6 percent of adults have an iPod, iPhone, or Mac. Rounding out the top five on Experian’s list are New York with 30.4 percent and Washington, D.C., followed by Chicago, Denver, Monterey-Salinas in California, Santa Barbara-Santa Marina-San Luis Obispo in California, and Las Vegas.

How to turn a hardcover book into an iPad case

Oh, the delicious irony of transporting your e-book viewer in the hollowed-out pages of an actual book! Perfect little DIY project for the weekend. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-31747_7-20002710-243.html” class=”origPostedBlog”iPad Atlas/a/p

Zune HD hacked, OpenZDK now available to developers

Well, it looks like the first 64GB Zune HDs landing in customers’ hands may not be the biggest Zune news today after all. As proudly announced the ZuneBoards website, the Zune HD — and all earlier Zunes, although the potential there is a tad more limited — “have been hacked.” While obviously not the first hack of any sort for the devices, this is described as the “first true hack,” and it has made the concurrently-released OpenZDK possible. That effectively gives developers “access to everything XNA withheld before,” which more or less opens to doors to any type of application that can run on the Zune hardware — games, emulators, app stores, you name it. Of course, there’s not a ton for average Zune users to play with at the moment, but developers can find all they need to get cracking at the source link below.

[Thanks, jhoeforth & Dilpickle1]

Zune HD hacked, OpenZDK now available to developers originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Apr 2010 13:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The 404 561: Where Anna David tells us why Reality Matters (podcast)

Anna David gets real with The 404.

(Credit:

Matt Vacca
)

Established author, frequent guest, and friend of The 404 Anna David joins us on today’s episode to accomplish two very specific goals:

  • Talk about her new book “Reality Matters,” a collection of essays penned by a handpicked pack of storytellers that examine our obsession with reality television.
  • Drag Justin’s name through the mud.

As an exclusive treat for our live chat room, this morning’s pre-show (and a good quarter of the actual show) features some of the tallest tales ever to fly out of Jeff and Wilson’s loose mouths. Don’t believe the stories these kids tell about me; as Albert Einstein once said, “Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds,” and I look forward to thanking them in the credits of my first novel, with Anna’s expert help of course (after all, Anna’s accomplishments as a book editor are well-documented).


(Credit:
Harper Collins)

Reality Matters” is Anna’s third novel grounded in reality. Her first book, “Party Girl,” deals with the nuances of the addiction and recovery process, while “Bought” brings the reader into the world of “paid companionship.”

This anthology examines each writer’s personal thoughts on shows like “American Idol,” “Real Housewives,” “Survivor,” and The 404’s favorite–“The Real World.” And it’s not at all inflammatory fluff pieces making fun of Snookie’s budget pompadour, either. Anna brings together well-known writers like Neil Strauss, Jerry Stahl, and James Frey to take a serious (and sometimes snide) look at the pervasiveness of reality shows on the airwaves and what these individuals can teach us about our role in the REAL real world.

Speaking of which, Anna also tells us a hilarious story lifted from the pages of her own life about an experience trying out for the early days of “The Real World” in San Francisco. Unfortunately the network turned her away for not fitting into one of the show’s one-dimensional archetypes, but the real story is the crazed convict that develops a disturbing obsession with Anna as a result of her newfound “fame.” Tune in to the show and pick up a copy of “Reality Matters” for more details!


Half an hour of showtime is never enough with Anna, but you can read much more about, her including the schedule of her book readings, speaking engagements, and Red Eye appearances on her personal Web site, and she also offers sex and relationship advice on Annalytical Answers.

If you enjoyed today’s episode of The 404 Podcast as much as we did recording it, call us up at 1-866-404-CNET and let us know your thoughts, or you can shoot us an e-mail to the404(at)cnet(dot)com and we’ll read it on the air! Have a great weekend and we’ll see you back here on Monday!



EPISODE 561


Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

Subscribe in iTunes audio | Suscribe to iTunes (video) | Subscribe in RSS Audio | Subscribe in RSS Video



Originally posted at The 404 Podcast

Gallery: 8 Tablets That Aren’t Made by Apple

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Few product categories get a second chance to make it big. Wristwatch calculators, 8-track tapes, mopeds, unicycles and Polaroid film are never going to be wildly popular again. But tablets are poised to make the kind of comeback that would make Robert Downey Jr. proud.

PC makers have offered slates and convertible notebooks for nearly a decade, and they’ve never caught on. But now, a new generation of attractively designed and low-priced screens are looking to lure in consumers. Most of these sleek slabs of glass rely on simplified touch interfaces and will probably work best as content consumption devices: Something you’d use for reading, web browsing and watching movies.

The new generation of tablets might just pull it off. So far, Apple has sold more than 500,000 iPads and it says it can’t keep up with the demand, suggesting that computer makers are right to jump on this trend now.

As they do, they’re exploiting the iPad’s weaknesses. Typing on the iPad isn’t easy and it is an underpowered device for its price tag — the same money could buy you a nice laptop. Its browser doesn’t support Adobe Flash, and you can’t run software on it unless that software comes from Apple’s App Store.

So if you don’t want to buy into the Apple hype machine, there are plenty of alternatives. From Dell to HP, almost every major PC manufacturer is working on a tablet. And there’s no dearth of upstarts. Asian brands and European startups are vying to get their tablets out, too.

Wired looks at some of the most interesting screens that will get into consumers’ hands this year.

Above:

JooJoo

JooJoo (nee CrunchPad), the tablet from the Singapore company Fusion Garage, is an ostensible competitor to the iPad. It launched on the same weekend as the iPad and is very Apple-esque in its hardware design. But the JooJoo is far from being a device that could change the future of computing.

With its 12.1-inch display, JooJoo is a plus-sized monster that is almost a pound heavier than the iPad and offers half the battery life. It runs a custom operating system based on Linux and supports HD videos and Flash.

But in the days after its release, JooJoo has been buggy with surprising user interface glitches and at times difficult-to-navigate screen. And without access to apps or the ability to install your own software, JooJoo is a dumb terminal. It’s good enough to check Facebook, Twitter and read websites, but not much more.

A few hours with the JooJoo and it raises the question: Do you really need a tablet? That’s not the kind of question a tablet maker wants to raise.

Price: $500
Availability: Online order through JooJoo’s website


NASA to Launch Supercomputing App

NASA_Pleiades_Supercomputer.jpg
Who said supercomputers were dead? NASA on Monday will unveil a powerful new supercomputing application called NASA Earth Exchange (NEX), which will let scientists model and analyze large Earth science data sets, InformationWeek reports.
The program will enable collaborative work via social networking-enhanced virtual environments, so that scientists can share research and work on projects together from remote locations.
The report said NEX will run on the 609-teraflops Pleiadies, NASA’s most powerful supercomputer and the sixth most powerful supercomputer in the world. It will also hook into a 450-terabyte internal storage cache, a 160-terabyte external storage cache, and a potential 10+ petabyte tape archive. (Image credit: NASA Ames)

Smartphone Mobile Gaming Skyrockets Amid Overall Decline

ZombieSmash_iPhone.jpg
Confirming what seems to be an obvious trend, the number of smartphone gamers has skyrocketed 60 percent to 21.4 million, according to a new comScore report.
Perhaps more surprising, this was offset by a 35 percent decline in the number of mobile gamers among feature phone owners. Since the latter represents 80 percent of the market, the numbers combined to result in a 13 percent decline overall for mobile gaming in the U.S. over the past year.
The report also said that smartphone subscribers are three times more likely than feature phone subscribers–47.1 percent versus 15.7 percent–to play games on their devices at least once per month. Smartphone owners were five times as likely to play games almost every day, and “far surpass” feature phone owners across various methods of gameplay.
Check out the full comScore report for more numbers than you can probably deal with, at least without afternoon coffee. (Image credit: Gamedoctors/ZombieSmash)

2TB hard drive review roundup: Samsung, Seagate and WD throw down

It’s a 2TB world, folks, and if you’re looking to select a new drive to archive your upcoming vacation footage, you owe it to yourself to do a little research before pulling the trigger. Currently, 2TB options are on the market from Seagate, Western Digital and Samsung, and while all are in the 3.5-inch SATA form factor, they certainly aren’t equal. The benchmarking gurus over at Hot Hardware decided to toss no fewer than ten 2TB drives into the mix, and after running 250 or so tests, they found that WD’s RE4 2TB came out on top. ‘Course, that just so happens to be the most expensive platter in the bunch, checking in at around $0.16 per gigabyte; the admittedly slower Caviar Green 2TB and Seagate Barracuda LP 2TB both came in at less than half of that. Go on and give that source link a look if you’re into bar charts and in-depth analysis of bits and bytes — and remember, friends don’t let friends buy lousy storage.

2TB hard drive review roundup: Samsung, Seagate and WD throw down originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Apr 2010 13:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Could a Keyboard Sleeve Turn Tablets into Cheap(er) Notebooks?

sweetbook-notebook-case.jpgLenovo’s U1 Hybrid could signal the future of the iPad and tablet industry, if any accessory manufacturers want to jump on board.

Lenovo’s U1
is something truly novel: a Linux-based tablet that can be docked back into a notebook form factor, adding a keyboard, a second processor, a Windows operating system, and additional battery life to the mix. But what if all a user wanted was a keyboard?

Let me explain. I haven’t been lucky enough to play with the iPad yet, so I can’t comment on the usability of its keyboard. But the disadvantage of any touchscreen device, in my mind, has been the lack of a quality keyboard, that can be used as effectively as a physical keyboard over long periods of time. And this, I believe, is a concern: by adding iWork to the iPad software ecosystem, Apple has signaled that it hopes customers will perform some light content creation. Patrick Moorhead of AMD, who used the iPad for a week as a business tool, noted that his wrists became cramped after a few hours of work.

From a physical standpoint, here’s what differentiates a notebook from a tablet: A hinge. And a keyboard.

Leaked: Dell’s 7- and 10-inch Streak tablets

The newly leaked Dell Streak 7 and 10 appear to be nearly indistinguishable from the iPad’s bezeled-but-grippable LCD in a frame design–at least from a head-on view.