Review: Microsoft Arc Touch Mouse
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe Arc Touch Mouse is different enough in its form and in some of its functions that it should appeal to people looking to make a statement with their technology.
The Arc Touch Mouse is different enough in its form and in some of its functions that it should appeal to people looking to make a statement with their technology.
Madden NRL Superstars lets players create a fantasy football team and compete against others on Facebook. If you want to win, though, be ready to cough up cash. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-20015277-17.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Digital Home/a/p
With the latest Powerline adapters from Netgear, finding a strong wireless signal is as simple as plugging in to an electric outlet.
The Powerline AV 200 wireless-N extender kit hooks into an existing wireless network. When the adapter is plugged into an electric outlet, the network signal travels along the electrical wiring and rebroadcasts elsewhere in the house. Any free outlet becomes a Wi-Fi hotspot.
If you have a weak to non-existent in certain parts of the house because of walls or the router is too far away, don’t bother with a repeater to just boost your signal. Plug in the Powerline extender kit and it will piggyback your existing electrical wiring all around the house.
Netgear also announced the Powerline AV 500 family, which uses the electric outlet to extend your gigabit wired network. The adapters connect to an Ethernet port on one end, and plug into the wall on the other. Plug one adapter into a free LAN port on your network router, and the second adapter into whatever device you want to add to your network.
It’s perfect for connecting HDTVs, Blu-ray players, DVRs, PCs and game
consoles. It can also connect to
Netgear’s storage devices to set up multiple video and music streams.
The Powerline adapters won’t cover up the second outlet when plugged into the wall, and more importantly, they include a pass-through socket so you don’t lose an outlet just because it’s being used for networking.
Because the signal is transmitted on the household cooper wiring, heavy electrical use will cause interference. You may want to hold off on using a vacuum cleaner or microwave if you are working on something critical, though.
The adapters are expected in Q4 of this year. Pricing is not yet available.
We just landed at Sony’s IFA 2010 press event. You know what that means: put on your 3D specs. In fact, just in case we didn’t get the subtle hint of the 3D glasses sitting on our chair, there’s a 3D intro video playing right this very second to put us in the mood.
Continue reading Live from Sony IFA 2010 press event
Live from Sony IFA 2010 press event originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Sep 2010 11:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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After the overt teasing, leaking, and then more leaking, Microsoft’s finally ready to spit out the details on its Arc Touch Mouse, which at the end of the day is really just… a mouse. As we’ve seen, the peripheral has an incredibly unique design — the flat device arches its back to click into a mountain shape, which actually ends up powering the little rodent up. So, where does the whole “touch” factor come into play? Well, very similarly to the Mad Catz Eclipse mouse, the Arc Touch has a capacitive touch strip with sensor pads between the mouse buttons that can be used for scrolling and customizable shortcuts. We’ve got you covered with some hands-on impressions and video after the break, but that’s about all you’ll be getting for a while since the press release below says the $69.95 mouse won’t hit the market until December. Yep, December! That’s a bit odd to us, but they’ll be taking pre-orders today so hit the break to finally see this thing push the cursor around.
Microsoft Arc Touch Mouse seriously, finally, officially announced, doesn’t ship until December originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Sep 2010 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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That chair you’re sitting on right now–it’s nice, but is it really, you know, gamey? I mean, you don’t really plan on doing all of your gaming on that thing, do you? n00b. It’s hard to find good dedicated gaming furniture these days. Thankfully, professional gamer/licenser of video game-related products, Johnathan “Fatal1ty” Wendel, is on the case.
Fatal1ty has signed on with Southern Enterprises, a Dallas-based furniture company, with the intention to “develop and distribute a custom line of gaming furniture tailored specifically to the ergonomic requirements and performance enhancement features of gamers.”
So, what precisely are the needs and concerns of your average hardcore gamer? Says Fatal1ty, “I’ve played on a lot of different setups at LANs and tournaments and plan to build the ultimate experience in furniture for a gamer to dominate his world.”
Okay, well, that’s not really helpful. Let’s see what Southern Enterprises’ executive VP Dirk Brinkerhoff has to say about the matter,
It is our hope that our collaboration with Fatal1ty will enable us to create furniture gaming pieces that will provide enhanced capability and functionally, added comfort and ease of use, and that the combination of these features will ultimately enable each player who uses our Fatal1ty branded furniture to be a better gamer than they were without it.
Comfort and functionality, check. What about the cupholders?
The fruits of Fatal1ty and Southern Enterprises’ labor will arrive in spring of next year.
Sony’s not taking competition from the Amazon Kindle lying down. The company has added touchscreens to its three e-reader models, while switching to the new ‘Pearl’ screen from E Ink for better contrast and improving the user interface on the devices.
What the company hasn’t done is drop the price. Sony’s cheapest e-reader will cost $180–and that’s without Wi-Fi or 3G–while Amazon charges $140 for the Wi-Fi version of the Kindle.
“The bottom line is we didn’t want to compete on price,” says Steve Haber, president of Sony’s digital reading business division. “We wanted to build quality and overall experience. We want to give consumers the feel of buying an e-reader, not a toy.”
Sony three e-reader models are the Pocket, Touch and Daily Edition. The $180 Pocket Reader has a 5-inch display, 2 GB memory and will come without W-Fi or 3G access. That means users can only load books by connecting the device to their PC using a USB cable.
The $230 Touch Edition has a 6-inch display, 2 GB onboard memory, expansion slots for up to 32 GB of additional memory, the ability to play audio files and Wi-Fi connectivity.
The $300 Daily Edition model includes both Wi-Fi and 3G connectivity and sports an even larger 7-inch display. It too has 2 GB of onboard memory and an expansion slot for up to 32 GB additional.
Sony’s new e-readers raise the stakes in the e-reader market. In July, Amazon introduced the third generation of its Kindle e-reader, including a Wi-Fi only model, and slashed the price to make it more competitive with rival Barnes & Noble’s Nook. The move took a toll on smaller e-reader makers who haven’t been able to compete on either price or scale of their book stores. Earlier this month, Foxit announced it will stop development on its eSlick e-reader. Plastic Logic canceled its plans to bring its e-reader to market, while Cool-er’s e-readers have been listed out of stock in the U.S. for months.
Sony is betting on better design to draw in users. Its new e-readers are colorful (hot pink, red, silver and black) and have an aluminum body that gives them a better finish and feel compared to the plasticky- shell of the Kindle or the Nook.
But the biggest change has been the introduction of the touchscreen across all models. Previously only one of the models called Touch Edition had a touchscreen.
Unlike the capacitive touchscreens popular on mobile phones, Sony’s e-readers use optical touchscreen technology so it responds to both finger and a stylus.
A major problem with the earlier version of Sony’s touchscreen e-reader was the touchscreen layer added to the top of the display. The layer decreased contrast, making the e-reader’s display difficult to read compared to the Kindle or the Nook, and also offered a sluggish response to touch. The optical touchscreen technology seems to have solved some of the problems and in my brief hands-on with the devices I found the display to be startlingly responsive and quick.
The Pearl display has also helped improve contrast and render crisper text.
“The number one focus for us is the reading experience,” says Haber.”The e-reader is not the Swiss Army knife of devices so we have done everything to make the experience immersive.”
Over the next few weeks, Sony also plans to launch mobile apps of its reader software for the iPhone, iPad and Android.
In improvements to the user interface, Sony will incorporate book reviews from the GoodReads site into its book store. It has also expanded the news stand section of its book store and partnered with more news publishers such as The Guardian and The Harvard Business Review.
Sony hopes to ship the Touch and Pocket models in the next few days. The Daily Edition e-reader will not be available till early November.
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Photo: Sony Touch e-reader/Sony
IBM/Apple PowerPC 750 350MHz G3 by David Lieberman/Flickr. Used gratefully under a Creative Commons license.
Apple ditched IBM’s PowerPC for Intel because the chip didn’t have a low-power roadmap for laptops. Then it passed up Intel in favor ARM on its iOS devices for similar reasons. So it’s no surprise that IBM and Intel are pumping up their R&D and acquisition efforts to get back in the game with tiny, low-power, low-heat speed demons for tomorrow’s mobile devices.
At a research conference last week, IBM engineer Michael Floyd presented a new deep-sleep mode, codenamed “Winkle” (after Rip Van). Along with a “nap” mode where the processor uses a fraction of full power but can return to full power quickly, “deep-sleep” reduces power to near-zero, but takes longer to wake up. It’s kind of like the “Hibernate” mode in Windows XP, but at the processor/controller level.
Floyd gave no specific indication of when IBM would actually be rolling out Winkle. It may be introduced for the company’s current line of Power 7 chips, but the Power 8, which doesn’t yet have a release schedule, could be more likely.
Intel, on the other hand, isn’t waiting. Instead of (or maybe in addition to) pushing its new Moorestown line of Atom processors for mobile phones, they’re buying the wireless-chip division of Germany’s Infineon Technologies AG for $1.4 billion, in a deal that should close in Q1 2011.
As R&D Magazine reports, buying Infineon would make Intel the fifth-biggest supplier of mobile-phone processors in a list topped by Qualcomm, Texas Instruments, and STMicroelectronics.
It’s not a huge slice of the market, but it’s a solid foothold. Infineon’s most visible customer? Apple, who uses their chips for 3G. And now Intel/Infineon will be inside RIM, Samsung, and Nokia mobile devices too.
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This article was written on April 03, 2007 by CyberNet.
I signed up for a Flickr Pro account the day that they announced the new Collections feature. I keep all of my photos organized in a nice hierarchical structure that is difficult or impossible to replicate using only tags. Once Flickr implemented the feature, I knew that it was exactly what I was waiting for.
For the $24.95 per year you receive unlimited everything (bandwidth, photo storage, etc…) and I can honestly say that it was worth every penny. Getting to know the interface and their Organizr took a little bit of time, but they did a truly amazing job of making it intuitive yet powerful.
I now have all 6,000 of my photos on their service neatly organized in sets and collections, which are two things that make up their folder-like structures. All of my photos are private and only for viewing by family members, which brings up another point: Flickr’s privacy features are very well implemented. You can choose to make your photos completely private so that only you can see them, private so that you and your family/friends can see them, or public so that they are available to anyone. You keep a contact list of friends and family so that Flickr knows who can see what.
Now the thing that I love about Flickr is that there are 100’s of services online that can interact with your account as well as a large selection of offline applications. I’ve tinkered around with some of the various tools available for uploading and find that the standard Flickr Uploadr is the fastest tool to get the job done.
Some people I know don’t want to use Flickr because at first glance it might seem a little complicated to a casual user. After all, there are still a lot of people who don’t understand tags and geo-tagging which are two different things that can be done on Flickr. Webware just posted a great article for anyone who is just starting out on Flickr and trying to learn the ropes. They walk you through tagging and geo-tagging photos, and they also help you understand how to use notes, sets, and collections.
One thing is for sure and it’s that you can never be too safe with your photos, which is why I wanted an offsite backup of my most important photos. And if you think that the $25 for a Pro account sounds expensive then look at the prices for Google’s PicasaWeb photo storage:
Not to mention the insecure privacy features that are constantly being found with PicasaWeb.
Now that I’m a Flickr Pro user I would highly recommend it to anyone wanting to post photos online, and there are definitely a lot of features under-the-hood that you don’t even know exists on there yet.
Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox
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Apple is likely introducing a family of new iPods (and maybe a revamped Apple TV) today at its annual music event in San Francisco.
Scroll down or click for the live blog updates.
Additional coverage of Apple’s event on Wired.com:
The press conference kicks off 10 a.m. PT at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, where CEO Steve Jobs traditionally takes the stage to unveil his company’s latest creations.
In a surprise move that may offer a hint of what’s to come, Apple said it will be live streaming its event using “Apple’s industry-leading HTTP Live Streaming, which is based on open standards.” But you’ll have to be an Apple customer to view the broadcast: Viewing requires a Mac running Snow Leopard, or an iPhone, iPod Touch or iPad running iOS 3.0 or higher. (Mac and Windows users with the VLC media player may be able to view the live stream, with some limitations, MacRumors reports.)
Live streaming a press conference, while routine for most companies, is a first for Apple and Steve Jobs, whose mastery of the stage has transformed a dull staple of PR — product announcements — into an event of rock star proportions. It may also hint at streaming-media products to be announced at the event.
This time around, multiple independent rumor reports and a few pieces of evidence hint at major upgrades for the iPod Touch, iPod Nano and Apple TV. We also expect some major software updates for iTunes and the iPad (iOS 4), which may include cloud-based media storage and the ability to stream videos on demand. For a full summary on what to expect, read Wired.com’s list of predictions.
Yours truly will be live blogging today’s event with photography by Wired.com’s Jon Snyder and live tweet updates by Mark McClusky (@markmcc). Refresh this post for live updates as the event unravels. If you prefer video, catch Apple’s live video stream of the keynote.
Scroll down or click for the latest live blog updates.
Photo: Jon Snyder / Wired.com
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11:20 a.m. So that’s the end of the show. Stay tuned for our hands-on with Apple TV and the new iPods.
11:15 a.m. Chris Martin is now playing “Viva La Vida.”
11:12 a.m. It’s basically over. Aw, this is such a classic song. I haven’t listened to it in ages.
11:12 a.m. Wow. Chris Martin from Coldplay is here and on stage. He’s playing “Yellow.”
11:10 a.m. A new iTunes and iTunes Ping – a social network for music. “We think this is going to be really popular very fast.” Apple TV – a “phenomenal new way” to watch TV shows in your living room whenever you want.
11:09 a.m. Steve’s reviewing everything we’ve gone over today–Shuffle, iPod Nano, iPod Touch. No iPod Classic, notably.
11:08 a.m. Apple TV will be shipping in four weeks and you can pre-order today.
11:07 a.m. Apple TV costs just $99. Used to cost $230.
11:06 a.m. So the iPad is basically a remote for the Apple TV. Neat. You’ll be able to watch a movie, walk into the living room and watch it right there on your Apple TV.
11.06 a.m. On the iPad he launches the video player and chooses the Pixar movie Up. While he’s playing it, using the volume control on the iPad he can push it and stream it to the Apple TV.
11:06 a.m. Now Steve’s showing a slide from his presentation. The slide has an iPad and an Apple TV.
11:05 a.m. Steve’s showing a slideshow of photos. Music in the background, the photos pop up with fancy transitions.
11:03 a.m. Steve’s watching Glee. On the internet you’ve got built-in Netflix. Go into instant queue and you can watch all the stuff you’ve queued up in Netflix.
11:03 a.m. Apple TV interface is somewhat similar to iOS. Grab a title you want to rent and the icon jiggles.
11:02 a.m. Steve’s showing Iron Man 2. It looks really clear. He skips forward halfway into the movie and it’s still streaming fine.
11:00 a.m. Steve’s demonstrating movie rentals. You can see Rotten Tomato ratings and stuff. Click rent and hit OK and in a few seconds you are ready to start watching.
10:57 a.m. If you’re a Netflix subscriber you can stream content from Netflix’s streaming library. You can also watch anything you want on YouTube and see photos on Flickr, and videos and photos on MobileMe.
10:56 a.m. These HD shows are commercial-free as well. This is a big step for studios to make and not all of them have gotten on yet. So right now they’ve got ABC and FOX –just like The Wall Street Journal reported earlier.
10:56 a.m. The price used to be $3 for HD TV shows to buy them. Now you can rent HD TV shows for 99 cents.
10:56 a.m. You can rent first-run HD movies for $5 – the day and date they come out on DVD. This is a big deal, before there were lengthy time windows for iTunes movies.
10:55 a.m. You stream content from your computer if you want it – photos, videos, music. No syncing required. You can stream photo slideshows, too. And it’s “silent, cool and tiny.”
10:55 a.m. Apple has gone to the rental model, no more purchases. You rent everything.
10:55 a.m. With new Apple TV, you plug in two cables, power the HDMI. It’s got a really simple remote.
10:54 a.m. You can hold it in the palm of your hand. It’s got HDMI, a power supply built in it, optical audio, Ethernet
And it’s got Wi-Fi.
10:53 a.m. The new Apple TV is a puny little square that is a 1/4 of the size of the current Apple TV
10:52 a.m. Consumers don’t want to sync to a computer. “Most of them haven’t even figured out what that is. They don’t want that syncing stuff, it’s too complicated,” says Steve. And users want whatever hardware they have to be silent, cool and small.
10:51 a.m. Steve says Apple has learned a lot. People want Hollywood movies and TV shows whenever they want them. They want professional content, and everything in HD. They’d like to pay lower prices for content. They don’t want a computer on their TV, don’t want to manage storage.
10:50 a.m. We’re talking about Apple TV. “Nothing’s really hit in the living room yet. We’ve talked to people who’ve used Apple TVs and they love them. They absolutely love them and use them a lot,” he says.
10:50 a.m. “Actually it’s one more hobby,” says Steve.
10:50 a.m. iTunes 10 is available for download today. Now we’re moving on to one more thing.
10:49 a.m. Ping is available also on your iPhone and iPod Touch, right in the iTunes Store. There’s a new button popping up right on your phone or your iPod where you get your activity.
10:48 a.m. Steve’s showing his own Ping account. I doubt it will be public.
10:46 a.m. He’s showing Katie Cotton’s Ping account. Katie Cotton is Apple’s head PR woman. Hah! There’s a video playing of Lady Gaga talking about Ping. No wonder there were photos of Lady Gaga visiting Apple recently.
10:45 a.m. Now a demo of Ping–the social network for music. They are showing the new “hybrid view” with album art. Also showing friends posting concert photos, songs, album review. You can preview songs then buy it if you want to.
10:43 a.m. You can customize settings to require approval of who’s following you if you want. You can be as private or as public as you want. “Super simple to set up,” says Steve.
10:41 a.m. So Ping is sort of like Last.FM, but stuffed into iTunes. You get a custom top-10 chart that’s customized based on what people you follow are downloading from iTunes.
10:40 a.m. iTunes 10: Introducing Ping. It’s a social network for music. “It’s sort of like Facebook and Twitter meet iTunes,” he says. You can follow your favorite artists and friends and discover what music they’re talking about, listening to and downloading.
10:39 a.m. There’s a new hybrid view where if you have more than five songs from the same album, it breaks out the view to show the album artwork with the album. So far it looks mostly the same but it will be very important if it’s going in the cloud.
10:38 a.m. Now they’re launching iTunes 10. I was hoping it’d get a new name, but oh well. Steve says he’s ditching the CD in the logo since it looks like iTunes is surpassing CD sales next spring. It’s just a blue bubble with a music note.
10:37 a.m. 11.7 billion songs have been downloaded through iTunes. 450 million TV episodes, 100 million movies, 35 million books. And there are over 160 million accounts with credit cards and one-click payments.
10:37 a.m. Now we’re moving on to iTunes.
10:35 a.m. Nope.. it’s not Apple TV. He’s showing a new ad for the iPods.
10:35 a.m. OK, is it time for the Apple TV? Let’s see…
10.34 a.m. The iPod Touch also has a high resolution camera just like the iPhone 4. It’s for shooting photos and HD video, and not just Facetime.
10:34 a.m. New iPod Touch is basically the same as the iPhone 4 but without the phone. And it’s thinner.
10:33 a.m. iPod Touch also has the A4 chip, the three axis gyroscope, iOS 4.1 with Game Center and a front-facing camera with FaceTime.
10:32 a.m. The new iPod Touch is even thinner. It has the retina display – the 326 ppi 24-bit color LED screen, just like the iPhone 4.
10:31 a.m. iPod Touch is the most popular iPod. It’s the #1 portable game player in the world, Steve says. Outsells Nintendo and Sony portable gameplayers combined. 50% marketshare both US and worldwide. “It has become by far the most popular portable game player in the world,” he says. 1.5 billion games and entertainment downloads.
10.30 a.m. Now we’re moving on to the iPod Touch.
10:30 a.m. It sells for $149 in the 8 GBversion and $179 in the 6 GB version.
10:29 a.m. Steve’s launched the photos app and he’s flicking back and forth between shots. It comes in seven colors. Guess there’s no Wi-Fi — oh well.
10:29 a.m. Steve’s launched the photos app and he’s flicking back and forth between shots.
10:28 a.m. If you listen to “Albums” a lot–as opposed to artists or songs–you can choose that shortcut and move it over your home screen. Apps jiggle like when you rearrange them on an iPhone.
10:27 a.m. It has four little apps — like a corner of an iPhone. Steve launches the music player, scrolls to the letter of the artist he’s looking for, picks Ella Fitzgerald and plays a song. (But is there Wi-Fi? That’s the major question.)
10:26 a.m. You’ve got a clock, a built-in FM radio, you can see photos app. Steve’s giving us a demo.
10:25 a.m. The Nano has hard volume buttons, voiceover, FM radio, Nike+ and 24 hours of audio playback.
10.24 a.m. The iPod Nano has been super popular. They’re eliminating the click wheel and making it touch based. It’s now multitouch, a small square touchscreen, just like the rumors said.
10:24 a.m. Now we’re looking at the iPod Nano.
10:23 a.m. The packing looks like a little square dome. It’s going to cost 50 bucks, 2 GB space.
10:22 a.m. The Shuffle has a clip so it’s instantly wearable, and it’s got some playlists. You dictate a playlist to pick it. Genius mixes and VoiceOver, which tells you which playlist it is playing. 15 hours of battery life.
10:21 a.m. Starting off with the iPod Shuffle: the puny belt clip with some simple controls. The current one is button-less, and Steve says people missed the buttons. The new iPod Shuffle is a puny square with buttons and voice control.
10:21 We have new designs for every single model of iPod. “It’s the biggest change in the iPod line ever,” says Steve.
10:20 a.m. Apple has sold 275 million iPods. “One of the secrets to the iPod’s success is that even though the iPod has a very high market share, we’ve never rested on our laurels. Every year we try to improve iPods – make them even better for our users. And this year we’ve gone wild,” says Steve.
10:20 a.m. Now we’re moving on to iPods.
10:19 a.m. iOS 4.2 is coming out November for iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch. Free update. That means the operating system is finally going to be one unified operating system across all the devices, whereas the iPad was an awkward loner for a while.
10:17 a.m. iOS 4.2 on iPad: Steve is showing all the new stuff we’re already familiar with in iOS 4 on other iOS devices. Multitasking, multi-threaded e-mail and folders.
10:16 a.m. Steve’s giving a demo on printing. Simple print option inside a document. Then the Print Center app shows up in the app tray at the bottom of the screen, where you can cancel a print if necessary.
10:15 a.m. Steve is giving us a sneak peek at iOS 4.2 for iPad. It will be coming out later this year and brings everything in iOS 4 to the iPad. The big feature: wireless printing. (Woohoo!)
10:15 a.m. iOS 4.1 will be out for iPhone and iPod Touch next week.
10:13 a.m. Frankly game demos are the most boring part of these Apple pressers. They’re just time fillers before the real news. Thor, the game, is going to be out on the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.
10:12 a.m. Mike Capps of Epic Games is showing the 3-D world of the Thor medieval game. With Game Center a friend sends an invite and he can accept or decline in the push-notification.
10:11 a.m. Steve’s demonstrating invitations to games – they show up as push notification alerts. (“That won’t be too annoying,” Mark McClusky, Wired magazine editor sitting next to me, says sarcastically.) Mike Capps, president of Epic Games is on stage to demonstrate his game called Thor.
10:10 a.m. Another thing built in is Game Center. Multiplayer games, allows you to challenge friends. If you don’t have any friends it will auto match you with people. You can discover new games, too.
10:08 a.m. High-dynamic range photos: When we take a photo a lot of times there’s a lot of blown out bright light. Now you can take three photos in rapid succession — one normal exposure and one that’s over and one that’s under exposed. Combines these three to produce an HDR photo. We keep the normal photo and HDR photo in the photos app.
10.07 a.m. Steve: “We think we’ve nailed a lot of them and we think you’re going to be pretty happy with them.” Second, there are high dynamic range photos (explanation coming soon.) HD video upload over Wi-Fi, TV show rentals and Game Center is making debut for end users.
10.07 a.m. Today they’re releasing iOS 4.1 — lots of bugs have been fixed. Proximity sensor, Bluetooth, iPhone 3G bugs.
10:07 a.m. 250,000 apps in the store. 25,000 are now iPad apps.
10:06 a.m. 230,000 iOS activations per day, says Steve.
10:05 a.m. Steve wants to talk about iOS, the OS for iPhones, iPads and iPod Touches. “Touch user interfaces were completely different before the iPhone. And mobile applications were completely different before the iPhone,” he says. iOS devices shipped: 120 million. (Audience applauds)
10:04 a.m. Over 1 million people visit their stores some days, compare that to 30,000 people who attended Macworld Expo, Jobs says. It’s clear why they opted out of the show. More than 50 percent of customers are buying their first Mac.
10:03 a.m.
Altogether Apple has 300 Apple Retail Store. Yeesh. In 10 countries – US, Canada, UK , France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Japan, Australia, China.
10:02 a.m.
The third big store Apple has opened recently is in London. “Beautiful old building we’ve restore. It’s fantastic.”
10:02 a.m. Steve’s giving us an update on Apple retail stores, the one in Paris looks really pretty. Apple has also recently opened a store in Shanghai, a 40-foot high glass cylinder with a spiral staircase.
10:01 a.m. Steve says his “partner in crime is here today, Steve Wozniak” and invites him to stand up.
10:00 a.m. Steve Jobs is on stage. The audience is applauding. “Woooooooooo!”
9:50 a.m. Just got seated. They’re playing Beatles music. Hmm….will Beatles finally come to iTunes?
9:20 a.m. Press passes are hot pink this time! Snazzy!
Apple got colorful with its media pass for the event. Photo: Brian X. Chen
9:10 am. We’re in line outside the Yerba Buena Center. It’s a beautiful day in downtown San Francisco, and the line is piling up fast. Photographer Jon Snyder, who’s in a separate photographers’ line, texts me: “Gettin’ dizzy. Just saw Woz.”