iPod Classic Still a Top Media Player

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I still have an iPod classic. Not sitting in a desk drawer back in my apartment–I’ve got the thing on my person at pretty much all times. It’s my primary media player, and I’m not ashamed to admit it. Hey, I’m the kind of person who likes to have 120GB of music on him at all times. I honestly never know when I’m going to need to listen to some Norwegian black metal or Nigerian electric highlife. It’s my cross the bear.

It’s nice to hear that I’m not alone in this. According to new numbers from the analysts at NPD, the iPod classic is still one of the most popular music players. The hard drive-based player was the fifth best-selling media player for 2010–following four different iterations of the iPod touch (not surprisingly, all but one of the players–a 4GB Sandisk model–were iPods).

The 160GB classic was the only hard drive based player to make the list. Apple has been long rumored to be canceling the product–but such a move would likely require the introduction of an iPod touch with similar capacities–or, perhaps, the introduction of the long-rumored cloud-based version of iTunes (a result of the company’s Lala purchase), which would relieve some of the need for a massive amount of storage on the portable device.

Apple has certainly taken nearly all focus away from the player, which has, admittedly, lost a little bit of its luster in the face of shiny new touch and nano models, but the classic line has quietly carried on. As long as it continues to be a leader in the space, it’s likely not going away any time soon.

iPad 2 in Production – Rumor

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The iPad 2 is real. We sort of new that already, right? That we’ve seen the countless rumors and confirmations, coupled with the fact that Apple likes to keeps its devices on a more or less yearly schedule, leads us to feel pretty confident that the thing is coming pretty soon.

Hardware parts, leaked video, and stray sightings have been cropping up everywhere lately, including, memorably, CES and a recent launch for New Corps’s The Daily iPad newspaper. Also, that weird Elton John thing….

The latest word is that the upcoming version of the popular tablet has apparently just gone into production, according to the proverbial “people familiar with the matter,” says The Wall Street Journal.

According to the paper, the iPad 2 will be thinner and later than its predecessor all will feature better graphics, more memory, and “at least one camera on the front of the device for features like video-conferencing.” No real revelations there. Oh well.

iPad Immigrant Smuggling Game Submitted to App Store

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Apple’s infamous App Store vetting process is set to come under fire yet again, with the pending release of Smuggle Truck: Operation Immigration, an iPhone/iPad game that revolves around the smuggling of immigrants across the US-Mexican border.

Alex Schwartz, the Owlchemy Labs developer behind the title claims to have been inspired by his own friends who had trouble making it over the border. “As we lived through a painful 12 months of our friend struggling through the absurd legal minefield that surrounds U.S. immigration, we felt that we should create a game that touches on the issue,” says Schwartz.

Not surprisingly, the game is being met with all manner of criticism, claiming that the title trivializes the hot button topic. The game is due out in March, pending approval. Trailer after the jump.

Did Elton John Leak the iPad 2?

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Does Elton John have an inside track into the upcoming iPad? Did he accidentally leak Apple’s sensitive information during an interview about the CGI film Gnomeo and Juliet? The blogosphere seems to think so
Asked about technology, John told a BBC interviewer, “I don’t have a phone. I don’t have a computer, I don’t have an iPad, and I don’t have an iPod. I’m a luddite.” He did quickly add, however, “However, I am going to get an iPad in April. I’m going to get a Skype iPad to see Zachary [John’s infant son] when I’m not there. Finally entering the 21st century.”
What is a “Skype iPad?” An iPad with camera, one assumes–something nearly everyone expects will be added to the next version of the popular tablet, particularly given Jobs’s love of his company’s Facetime software.
Does Elton know something we don’t? Hm. It seems likely that a self-proclaimed “luddite” might well have a fundamental misunderstanding of the device’s feature set, right?

iPhone Confession App Gets Church’s Approval

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In this fast-paced world, it can often be difficult to find your way to a confession booth. Don’t worry, though, your iPhone can help. A new app called “Confession: A Roman Catholic App” is giving Catholic iOS users a quick and easy way to confess their sins.
The app features a “step-by-step guide to the sacrament,” including a “custom examination of Conscience” based on age, gender, and marital status, as well as a confessional walk-through and seven acts of contrition. You can also add custom sins to the thing.
According to the BBC, senior church officials in the U.S. have given the app a big thumbs up–an apparent first. The app comes a couple of weeks after the Pope preached Internet responsibility. You can download it now for $1.99. A small price to pay, perhaps.
The app will run you $1.99–which may be a small price to pay, depending on who you ask…

New York Hotel Offering iPad in Every Room

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New York City’s ritzy Plaza Hotel is upping the ante of luxury (read: not having to leave your bed, ever) with the addition of Apple iPads to every room. The gadgets come loaded with Intelity’s ICE (Interactive Customer Experience), which will let guests order room service, talk to the concierge, schedule wakeup calls, make reservations at restaurants, get info on New York destinations, and check airline information. The iPad can also be used to control the room’s lights and temperature.

The Plaza insists that the device isn’t going to replace actual hotel workers, however. “They are not meant to replace our concierge service and the personal touch we are known for,” Plaza general manager Shane Krige told the blog Luxist. “It is to provide more choice. At a five star hotel you should have choices—if you want to use the iPad, you can do so. If you want a butler service, that is available, too. If you want to be left alone, that is a choice, as well. By putting the iPads in the guest rooms, we are bringing a new technology to everyone’s fingertips.”

The hotel claims to be the first to offer these services through the iPad. The Plaza first adopted the device for its Palm Court Hotel, back in June.

The Plaza is located at Central Park South and 5th Ave in Manhattan, conveniently across from Apple’s flagship store.

Prison Inmates Make $1 Million Selling Apple Gear Bought with Stolen Credit Cards

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If there’s anything about the prison system that’s undeniably true, it’s that most prisoners emerge from it knowing how to be better criminals than they went in. Whether they opt to commit more crimes is a different matter entirely. Even so, some inmates at New York’s Rikers Island decided that hey, they were in jail already, so what’s a little white collar crime while they’re serving hard time? A little extra cash never hurt, even if you’re stuck in jail, right? 
That was the logic behind Shaheed Bilal’s new enterprise: allegedly directing his girlfriend and three brothers on the outside to forge stolen credit card information on magnetic strips and apply those strips to new cards. While he passed out the information to his girlfriend and brothers, they generated the cards and passed them out to friends, all of whom were tasked to buy as many iPads, MacBook and MacBook Pros, and iPod Touches they could soak up with the stolen card information. 
Once they’d hauled in all of the gear, Bilal and his crew then re-sold the gear at a discount to unwitting buyers who didn’t know the Apple products were all stolen goods. Bilal and his crew kept the money, handed over the laptops, tablets, and music players to their buyers, and the people with stolen credit card information were stuck holding the bag. Bilal pulled the strings for the entire syndicate from behind bars. 
That is, at least until the Manhattan District Attorney and the Secret Service caught on to the scheme, tracked the group’s activities for over 18 months, and finally charged Bilal’s girlfriend, his brothers, and 27 other people in association with the crime. The crime ring ran across 13 different states and Washington DC, in what amounted to millions of dollars of losses from hundreds of bank accounts. That said, there are probably a lot of happy Mac owners out there who have no idea exactly how much of a bargain their new MacBook Pro really was. 

Verizon Guy Returns to Sell iPhone

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Verizon’s icon, if slightly grating “Can You Hear Me Now” Guy is back in the role he’s waited years to play: iPhone sales man. The carrier debuted a dramatic–and decidedly smug–new ad for the long awaited Apple handset featuring the slightly smug, “Yes [looks knowing into camera], I can hear you now.”
All said, he doesn’t look to tired, given the fact that he had to be up at three in the morning to order the thing from Verizon’s site. Video, naturally, after the jump.

iPad 2 Pops Up at “Daily” Event

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I take it back! Contrary to what I suggested, yesterday’s event for “The Daily” in Manhattan was a big deal–not because of the content of the publication, so much as the fact that there was apparently an iPad 2 in the house. Reuters is reporting that, for some strange reason, someone brought a prototype of the forthcoming Apple tablet to the event.

The tablet, according to the newswire service, had that front-facing camera that we’re all expecting. The existence of the device has apparently been confirmed by an anonymous source. Apple, shockingly, opted not to comment on this round.

“The Daily”: Old Media’s Last Gasp?

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There’s plenty going on in the world of technology right now. At the top of the list–and rightfully so–is the fact that, according to a new traffic analysis, Egypt recently restored Internet access after last week’s post-protest blackout.

There’s also Google’s big Honeycomb unveiling today–something that’s sure to make a huge impact on the consumer electronics world as we know it. Microsoft is battling with Google, some iPad hardware may have leaked out, and oh, NASA found a bunch of planets outside of our solar system. Neat.

Somehow, though, every news outlet can’t stop talking about The Daily–Rupert Muroch’s attempt to single-handedly save traditional print media. The iPad app launches today for $0.99, plus a $39.99 yearly subscription fee.