No, Apple’s Not Trying to “Bust Your Phone”

No, Apple's Not Trying to "Bust Your Phone"

This coming Sunday’s New York Times magazine blows the lid off of an Apple conspiracy more outrageous than a dozen Foxconns. Cracking the Apple Trap, it’s called in the print edition. Why Apple Wants to Bust Your Phone, online. But in our hearts, let it be known only as Uhh… Seriously? Time to sigh together, point by point.

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Kodak announces ‘asset protection’ cinema film, thumbs nose at your digital movie collection

Kodaks announces asset protection cinema film, thumbs nose at your digital movie collection

Kodak may not be beloved by digital filmmakers, but it’s not fallen out of love with the talkies. It’s new “asset protection” cinema film is designed to save motion pictures from being lost if your digital-storage-medium-of-choice is rendered obsolete. It’s designed for long-term archive storage, with your Hollywood blockbuster stored in a “human-readable” format that’ll remain usable “well into the future.” As such, the reels are loaded with dyes that will reportedly remain stable for “decades,” but the company thinks will remain viable for over a century — in stark contrast with the short life of your average hard-drive. It’ll add a monochrome offering to the range later in the year, but if you want the color version now, your people will have to talk to Kodak’s people, Mr. Producer.

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Kodak announces ‘asset protection’ cinema film, thumbs nose at your digital movie collection originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Aug 2012 14:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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9 Obsolete Gadgets You Can Still Buy Brand New For Some Reason [Obsolescence]

Today, we wirelessly sync our powerful, dual-core smartphones to our pencil-thin laptops, then go home and stream just about any album or movie conceivable to our TV. In HD. So why are people still selling dead tech from the past? More »