$211,000 Apple-1 up and running, wants to know what this ‘cloud’ thing is all about

Wondering whatever became of the Apple-1 that sold at Christie’s for $211,535? Turns out the extremely limited edition system wasn’t destined for airtight museum displays — not for the time being, at least. Auction winner / entrepreneur Mark Bogle brought the Wozniak-built system on stage with him at the Polytechnic University of Turin in Italy this week, and discussed its place in computing history with a group of professors before proceeding to fire it up. According to Italian Apple blog Macity, the process went “smoothly,” and with the help of an oscilloscope and a MacBook Pro, the system was fed into an NTSC monitor, displaying the words “Hello Polito” — a friendly message for the Polytechnic crowd. It’s not Doom, but we’ll take it.

[Thanks, Settimio]

$211,000 Apple-1 up and running, wants to know what this ‘cloud’ thing is all about originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 May 2011 17:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Deal Promises to Keep Your Phone’s Software Up to Date

A gaggle of happy Google I/O attendees listens to the latest Android platform updates. Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

SAN FRANCISCO — Many Android customers know the frustration of buying a new phone, only to find out that they can’t get the latest version of Android on it.

Google has heard their cries, and replied with a plan to get the most-recent updates onto more people’s phones.

At its I/O conference here Tuesday, Google announced a new initiative to fight against software version fragmentation across Android devices. In a partnership with manufacturers and wireless carriers, Google is developing guidelines for how quickly device owners will receive updates to their software.

Beginning today, any new Android smartphones or tablets you buy from participating partners and carriers will receive the most-current version of the Android software, for up to 18 months after the device’s initial release.

Essentially, this means that your phone won’t be made irrelevant through lack of software updates, even when the next generation of smartphones hits the market.

“It’s essentially a logistics problem,” said Android head honcho Andy Rubin at a press conference Tuesday. “We’re not just building one phone, there are over 100 different devices based on Android. And all the operators have different product specs and qualifications.”

Initial partners include major Android-device manufacturers HTC, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Motorola and LG. Also included are the big four U.S. carriers: Verizon, Sprint, AT&T and T-Mobile. Rubin says that Google is open to as many more partners as want to join.

Fragmentation has been a side effect of Android’s success in the marketplace. The more phones that use the operating system, the more different versions of the OS are out there. Because of the way a phone’s OS dovetails with its underlying circuitry, it’s not always easy to deliver OS upgrades. On top of that, carriers and manufacturers have an incentive to encourage you to buy the latest models rather than indefinitely upgrading your old phone.

While fragmentation among Android phones declined last year, it’s still a concern for many customers and for developers.

Rubin and other Google employees didn’t announce any specific details on how manufacturers and carriers would be held to the agreement. Instead, Rubin colored the announcement as “getting [manufacturers and carriers] to the table” to discuss the problem of fragmentation. “Before we could get people to the table, it was impossible to achieve anything.”

Now that the partners are sitting at the table, Rubin claims the work can be done. But with so few details provided thus far, it’s difficult to say how Google and its partners will be able to keep a plethora of new devices current. If you take into account manufacturers with custom interfaces — like HTC’s Sense or Motorola’s Motoblur — things get even trickier.

And it’s difficult to imagine the incentive manufacturers have to keep old hardware current. As technology improves at a faster pace, more handsets are released with beefier hardware specs, like the spate of dual-core phones and tablets hitting the market this year. With more and more devices being churned out at a faster pace, manufacturers more than likely want you to throw your old handsets away and buy the latest and greatest.


A Longer/Slimmer iPod nano Coming?

This article was written on August 25, 2008 by CyberNet.

Kevin Rose claims to know what the new iPod nano is going to look like and if he’s right, Apple is going back to more of the original look. As you’ll see in the photo below, they are ditching the “fat” look and going for a longer/slimmer look:

new ipod nano.png

Here are some claims Rose has made about this new nano and other Apple products:

  • The new nano will be priced much cheaper (thanks to the cheaper iPhone)
  • The iPod touch will receive a few cosmetic changes
  • iTunes 8.0 will launch about the time that the iPods are refreshed and supposedly comes with big changes

If this turns out to be the new look for the nano, is Apple on the right track by ditching the wider nano for one that is more slim and long?

Source: Engadget

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Fingers-On: Adobe’s Photoshop Touch Apps for iPad

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Adobe on Tuesday released three lightweight iPad apps to complement its famous Photoshop editing tool.

Priced from $2 to $5, the three apps are called Adobe Nav, Adobe Color Lava and Adobe Eazel. The apps don’t replace Photoshop, but they aim to enhance the experience for artists and designers.

Here’s a quick look at the three apps.

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Google Conference Swag Already Selling for $1,000 on eBay

The limited-edition Galaxy Tab has Google's Android mascot all over its white back. Photo by Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Google gave everyone attending its developer conference a free Android tablet.

Now, a couple enterprising attendees have already listed the swag on eBay, where the tablets are nearing a bid price of $1,000.

The tablet is a limited edition Galaxy Tab 10.1, with a special white backing adorned with a repeating image of the Android mascot. It’s running Android 3.0 “Honeycomb,” making it only the second tablet to run that version of the operating system (after the Motorola Xoom) that we’ve seen in the office. (Update 12:55pm Pacific: The LG Optimus Pad and Asus Eee Pad Transformer also run Android 3.0, but we haven’t tested them yet.) Wired’s reviewers called an earlier version of the Galaxy Tab the “iPad’s first solid contender.”

It’s an unusually rich bit of swag to give the conference’s 5,500 expected attendees, especially considering that tickets were going for just $450. But Google is known for giving lavish hardware gifts to its developers, and attendees at previous years’ Google I/O conferences got limited-edition Android phones.

The regular-edition Galaxy Tab 10.1 goes for $500-$700, depending on capacity and features.

So even though a nice, shiny new Galaxy Tab might be an irresistible toy for an Android developer, it’s a fair bet that $1,000 is even more tempting.

Hat tip: Jim and Adam


Google Teases New Android OS for Phones, ‘Ice Cream Sandwich’

SAN FRANCISCO — The next Android operating system for smartphones will include some features that were previously exclusive to Android tablets, Google announced Tuesday.

Dubbed “Ice Cream Sandwich,” the platform will debut some time in the fourth quarter of 2011, Google officials said during the company’s I/O developer conference.

“We want one OS that runs everywhere,” Android engineer Mike Claren said at the conference.

Ice Cream Sandwich-powered smartphones will ship with enhancements introduced in Android Honeycomb, Google’s operating system for tablets. Some of these new features include a holographic user interface, enhanced multitasking abilities and the ability to connect the smartphone with a USB device, such as a mouse or an Xbox controller.

The release of Ice Cream Sandwich has been highly anticipated by the Android developer community. Android version 3.0 (Honeycomb) first debuted on Motorola’s Xoom tablet in February, touting a host of enhancements and features new to the Android platform. Developers have been waiting for Google to release the Honeycomb source code, in order to bring some of these features to smartphones.

So far, Google has refused to do so. After a long period of silence and a whole lot of fear, uncertainty and doubt, Google issued a statement to members of the press in March: “While we’re excited to offer these new features to Android tablets, we have more work to do before we can deliver them to other device types including phones. Until then, we’ve decided not to release Honeycomb to open source.”

Google Chairman Eric Schmidt’s February comments at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona shed light on why the company was holding out. Schmidt said that features from Gingerbread — the most recent software release for Android smartphones — and features from the tablet-optimized Honeycomb software would be combined in the next iteration of Android.

“Google is making sure that the OEMs [original equipment manufacturers], who are all desperate to differentiate their products, won’t take the Honeycomb source code and slap it on a bunch of bad products,” Gartner Research analyst Ken Dulaney told Wired.com in an interview. “The bottom line is, this is the right way to do it.”

The Android platform has been incredibly popular since its debut in 2008. To date, over 4.5 billion apps from the Android Market have been installed, according to Hugo Barra, director of Android Product Management. Today, Barra said, the Android Market officially has over 200,000 apps.

To tide over those eager for a new version of Android, Google will be rolling out a new version of its Honeycomb software, version 3.1, over the next few weeks. Owners of Verizon’s Motorola Xoom tablet will be the first to receive the new software.


This Space Sphere Contains a Secret Message to Aliens [Space]

This is LAGEOS. Since 1976, this perfect disco sphere has been orbiting Earth carrying 426 cube corner reflectors made of fused silica glass—except four, made of germanium. It also contains a coded message, designed by Dr. Carl Sagan. More »

Google Rallies Android Troops at I/O Conference

Google’s Android mascot, flanked by phones running the popular platform. Photo by Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Google’s Android mobile platform is a force to be reckoned with. In the three years since the operating system first landed on a phone, Google booted top phone manufacturers RIM, Apple and Nokia from their resting places as market leaders. Two of every five phones sold in 2011 will be Android devices, according to estimates by IDC research.

Among other things, Android’s explosive growth is due to its enthusiastic community of developers. In part, they’re the ones who fuel platform growth by expanding the application ecosystem.

They inject apps like Angry Birds or Fruit Ninja into the Android Market, games which have superseded their place in the tech world and made their way into mainstream pop culture. Developers create the content we want, fueling the sales of new devices and furthering Google’s mobile platform.

And Google wants to take care of its own.

Google’s fourth annual developer conference, Google I/O, kicks off on Tuesday in downtown San Francisco. In its biggest I/O yet, the conference will feature 110 individual developer sessions with more than 250 speakers spanning two days. More than 5,500 developers are expected to attend.

Basically, it’s a coding geek’s Mardi Gras.

It’s also where we often get the first look at Google’s huge new product releases. At the first I/O in 2008, Google engineers demo’d a walk-through of the first smartphone ever powered by Google’s Android platform. Shortly thereafter, the G1 was released on T-Mobile.

According to Google’s blog post published Monday, this year’s keynotes will focus on two big areas of development for the company: the Android mobile platform, and the company’s Chrome browser.

This year’s hotly speculated Android announcement: “Ice Cream Sandwich,” the next generation of the software.

In February at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt dropped hints of what was to come for the platform. Schmidt said that in the next release of the Android software, Google will combine features from the phone-based Gingerbread version and the tablet-optimized Honeycomb version.

Ever since Schmidt dropped the news that Ice Cream Sandwich would bring the two versions together, developers have eagerly awaited news of the latest iteration of the platform.

“I don’t necessarily expect a release of Ice Cream Sandwich,” software developer Chris Soyars told Wired.com, “but probably a time frame of what’s to be expected over the next few months.” Soyars is one of the top team members of CyanogenMod, a highly popular Android-modification software build.

Anticipation of the release has only been amplified by Google’s refusal to release the source code for its Honeycomb software. Google’s decision has been relatively unpopular in the developer community, which espouses “open” principles in regards to software source code.

But some think Google’s decision to hold Honeycomb was a good idea. “If you open up Honeycomb, it gives everyone the freedom to take it and make bad versions of it on phones,” Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney told Wired.com. “They’re doing the right thing by telling people to wait for Ice Cream [Sandwich],” Dulaney said.

Developers like Soyars are hoping that Google sticks to its tentative Android-software release cycle of 6 months between each major version, which would slot an Ice Cream Sandwich debut for sometime in August. Honeycomb, the most recent Android software distribution, first debuted on the Motorola Xoom in February.

Not all of Google’s big announcements have been successful ones. Google Wave was supposed to be the next big thing after its 2009 I/O debut, only to be killed by the company 15 months after its release.

Google TV was the star of last year’s I/O, but has gained only a lackluster following because of a lack of integration with Google apps, as well as problems with television networks blocking Google TV devices from delivering their content.

After its mediocre year on the market, Google may update us on its plans for Google TV at this year’s conference. “If there is an announcement related to Google TV,” said Soyars, “it is likely it would be to announce some type of refresh, including the market,” including possibly integrating the Android Market for phones into the Google TV platform. “I know it’s something they’ve been working on,” Soyars said.

Last year the company introduced a cloud-based music system, which would allow you to access your tracks from your phone, laptop or other web-connected device. If Google were able to launch this, it could put the company in a great position to take on Apple’s iTunes, which still requires you to physically connect your device for music syncing. But it’s been a year since Google demoed the product, and we haven’t heard much in the interim.

Also possible are updates on Google’s social initiatives, though reports suggest that we won’t be hearing much on this front. According to sources speaking to AllThingsDigital, all we may see is a bit of info on Google’s “+1″ button, a feature similar to the Facebook “Like” button. Google has been criticized in the past for being behind in developing social applications, losing out to competitor Facebook.

Tickets to the conference went on sale in early February at $450 a pop. Despite the high entrance fee, the conference sold out in 59 minutes. Aftermarket prices on eBay have reached upward of a grand.

Those who missed out on tickets and don’t want to pay the eBay premium can watch a live stream at Google’s I/O Live web site.

Soyars won’t be in attendance: On the day tickets were released, he got shut out. “I’m hoping to go next year,” Soyers said. “There’s just so many workshops and talks that are great for developers like me.”

Google I/O takes place Tuesday, May 10, and Wednesday, May 11, at Moscone West in San Francisco. Watch for coverage on Webmonkey, here on Gadget Lab and across Wired.com.


Japan Mobile Marketing Round-Up

This is the first column in a new biweekly series introducing newsletter content provided by our local research partners, INterRIDE Inc..

Mobile GPS apps

2010 saw several social media GPS apps join the bulging ranks of digital tools already out there for Japanese consumers. International names like Facebook’s Places — launched in Japan last September as its first market outside of the U.S. — and Foursquare were joined by the likes of local giant mixi also offering their own version of geo-fun. Mixi’s Check In was used 2 million times in its first month alone, indicating the strong potential for these services.

Japanese GPS services can currently be categorized as map-style apps (e.g. Navitime), “spot” or site-searching apps (Hot Pepper FooMoo), gaming apps (CoroPura), or the newer SNS apps (including Tou.ch).

reco-checo-tou-ch-gps-app

The local growth isn’t surprising when set against the overall global advance of geo-services, predicted to continue expanding until 2014 and reach $134 billion. Advertising on GPS services was a mere $2 billion back in 2009 but is expected to increase to some $59 billion by 2014.

Last February saw another major release, RecoCheck by Recruit, which has information on over 4 million sites and integrates Twitter. It aims to be the number one service of its kind by March 2012. Yahoo!’s Loco, set for release in June, also promises to be the biggest in Japan and to push the market yet further.

However, as reported by SPiRE, GPS is still a minority interest for most consumers. In a survey of over ten thousand mobile phone users only 20% used the apps, of which the leader was the rather generic Google Map.

Lawson x GREE

To celebrate the one-year anniversary of its Ponta loyalty card, convenience store chain Lawson launched a campaign with mobile game platform GREE’s virtual reality shop, Omeseya-san. Users collected digital items in order to complete their Ponta mascot-themed Lawson uniform avatar. Omeseya-san’s one million members had to get five items (including digital representations of Lawson products) to claim their prize.

ldp-liberal-democratic-party-japan-jiminto-facebook

Liberal Democratic Party

While last year Japan’s politicians tried to jump on the Twitter bandwagon, the Opposition Liberal Democratic Party (or Jiminto) took a different approach. In February they became the first local party to open an official Facebook page. Within four days a 1,000 people had “liked” the page; this has since grown to over 3,000. Not a lot but in proportion to the numbers of Facebook users who are LDP supporters it might be a large number indeed!

In an age where Presidents are announcing their bids for re-election via their Facebook pages this might not seem a radical move, but considering the opacity and intransigence of local politics, and the stolid growth of Facebook here, it’s an interesting development.

Osaifu Keitai for Smart Phones

As smart phone sales continue to prove healthy there will be innovations to localize them, or adapt other technology to work with them. This is especially true of popular Japanese mobile actions like reading QR codes, infra-red data transfer, and e-money functionality via FeliCa chips (osaifu keitai).

smart-sound-touch-felica-e-money

Previously mophie announced plans to create an add-on casing to the iPhone so that it could work with FeliCa readers, and Softbank more recently began selling a cruder solution in the form of “e-money stickers” that could be placed on your handset to allow it to connect with an e-money system like Waon or Edy.

Now BUG (pronounced as an acronym, not an insect) has developed the Smart Sound Touch system, where stores uses readers at the POS to allow even non-FeliCa-integrated smart phones to be scanned and read, to launch apps or connect to coupon websites. This ultimately means that smart phones will be able to offer loyalty programs and e-money services. (The readers apparently also work with FeliCa-integrated handsets too.) All the SST hardware requires now is for service providers to develop apps for consumers to download.

japan-new-normal

Download iPhone Firmware 2.0, iTunes 7.7, App Store, and More

This article was written on July 10, 2008 by CyberNet.

The next 24 hours is going to be pure chaos for Apple fans, and the madness started early this morning when Apple released iTunes 7.7. That was then followed by the App Store launch, then a “leaked” iPhone 2.0 firmware, and more. It’s madness I tell you.

I’m sure you’ve seen plenty of Apple news on the gadget sites already, and so we wanted to throw all of the news into one convenient post. Here’s a roundup of the events from this morning:

–Download the iPhone 2.0 Firmware-

MacRumors somehow grabbed a direct download link for the new iPhone 2.0 firmware on Apple’s servers so that you don’t have to wait until tomorrow to make use of the new App Store. The first thing you’ll need to do is grab the download, and then perform a little trickery:

In order to install the firmware, you will have to do it manually by pressing the Option key when pressing the “Check for Update” button in iTunes. Then select the .ipsw file manually. If for some reason your download is a “.zip” file, rename it to “.ipsw” before proceeding.

Be careful though… this update apparently erases all of the data on your iPhone. Unfortunately this does not work on the iPod Touch.

–iTunes 7.7–

Apple has released iTunes 7.7 today which is a requirement for anyone planning on picking up an iPhone 3G tomorrow. This version also includes support for the App Store, but we’ll get into that a little bit more in a minute.

One thing that jkOnTheRun has already noticed is that there’s now an option to sync your contacts with Google from within the iTunes settings. Apple also added remote control functionality so that you can use your iPod Touch or iPhone to control your iTunes. This will, however, require that you install a free app Apple provides called Remote.

itunes 77.jpg

–App Store–

The new iTunes also includes support for the long awaited App Store where developers can share and sell applications that they’ve made for the iPod Touch and iPhone. There are over 500 apps available right now broken up into over a dozen categories, and about 25% of them are free downloads. Of those that do cost money over 90% are under $9.99, which is actually a reasonable price. The most expensive is one called ForeFlight that provides weather and data for pilots. The cost? It’s $69.99.

What’s nice is that Apple has made it easy to browse through the App Store and have it show only those programs that are free. I’ve already skimmed through all of the free offerings, and currently have about 15 that are ready to be installed on my iPhone. These include eBay Mobile, Facebook (not that I’ll really use it), NetNewsWire, Pandora Radio, SportsTap (for sports scores), Twitterrific, WeatherBug, and the Yellow Pages. You can see all of the ones I’ve downloaded in this screenshot:

itunes app store-1.jpg

Note: To get the Applications section in my Library I had to enable it in the preferences. Then to browse through the available apps just click the Get More Applications link shown in the bottom-right corner of the screenshot. Or you can just click here to open iTunes and be taken directly to the top free apps.

The application that I’m the most excited about would have to be NetNewsWire because I felt that Newsgator’s mobile interface wasn’t as slick as what Google Reader offered for the iPhone. This free feed reader will synchronize all of your feeds across all of your computers (both Windows and Mac) which is very nice. I haven’t been able to try it out yet, but judging by the screenshot it should be just what the doctor ordered.

Any iTunes user can start downloading the programs that are currently available in the App Store, but you obviously won’t be able to load them onto your device until you get the new firmware 2.0 upgrade.

–App Store on the iPhone–

iphone app store.jpgApple hasn’t officially released the new 2.0 firmware yet, but Gizmodo has been posting videos of how the App Store works on the iPhone. I have to say that it’s pretty slick how you uninstall an application the same way that you remove a web bookmark that you’ve added to your home screen (pictured to the right).

Overall Gizmodo seems to be really impressed with how smooth the whole process is. Apple might have really knocked one out of the park with the new App Store.

–MobileMe–

Apple is also preparing for their full scale launch of MobileMe, which is the rebranding process of .Mac. As TUAW noticed there is already an update for both the Mac operating system and Apple TV that switches over the branding to MobileMe.

–AT&T Gets iPhone 3G Shipments–

This is a video of an AT&T store receiving and stocking the new iPhone 3G’s for tomorrow’s big release. There’s really nothing that interesting with the video other than the fact that the white 16GB iPhone 3G’s come in a white box.

Thanks to everyone who sent in the tips!

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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