Apple prepares to bring Retina-quality graphics to its online store

Apple is planning to roll out high resolution graphics on its online store to welcome those who have the new iPad and new MacBook Pro with Retina display. Apple started upgrading graphics on the website back in March before the third-generation iPad with Retina display was released, but parts of the online store still have older graphics that don’t look so great on the latest devices.

Developer Callum Strong from Fat Media discovered new Retina-quality graphics on Apple’s servers, which are likely intended for upgrading the online store. The new graphics have double the resolution of the ones currently online and have “2x” tags to differentiate between the old and new quality files.

Apple currently has five products that it says are suited for Retina-quality graphics, which obviously include the new 15-inch MacBook Pro and the third-generation iPad, along with the iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 and fourth-generation iPod Touch. The latest iPad has already been out for months and Apple undoubtedly has plans to add Retina displays to many of its products in the future, so we can only expect that the high resolution graphics will quietly pop up in the online store very soon.

[via Apple Insider]


Apple prepares to bring Retina-quality graphics to its online store is written by Elise Moreau & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Sonos for iPad gets Retina upgrade

Sonos has updated its free controller app for the new iPad, bringing Retina Display graphics support to the multi-room remote software. Sonos Controller for iPad v3.8.1, fresh to the App Store today, also introduces a new – and much requested – feature for controlling volume, repurposing the iPad’s physical volume buttons to control audio levels from Sonos rather than the tablet’s own media playback.

You’ll need to be running iOS 4.3 or higher in order to use the volume keys in that way, and the Sonos app itself needs to be active. If you’re using the iPad for something else, then the buttons will control sound effect or local media volume as usual.

Nonetheless, it’s a useful addition, and the updated app looks great with its Retina Display graphics. Unfortunately not all album art lives up to the UI; Spotify graphics, for instance, are notably crunchy.

You can download the Sonos Controller for iPad app in the App Store here [iTunes link], though you’ll obviously need at least one Sonos device in order to actually use it. Check out our review of how the PLAY:3 holds up in a smaller installation here.

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Sonos for iPad gets Retina upgrade is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Why Your HDTV Is Already A Retina Display [Retina Display]

The term “retina display” is tossed around with increased frequency and decreased meaning. Is there really a strict definition anymore? Screen mega-expert Ray Soneira of DisplayMate points out that the biggest monitor in your house has been retina all along. More »

Parallels Desktop 7 for Mac and Parallels Mobile now feature Retina Display support

Parallels has just announced that its Parallels Desktop 7 for Mac and Parallels Mobile now feature support for Apple’s retina display. If you are unfamiliar with Parallels, it traditionally allows you to switch from Mac OS X to Windows.

Parallels Desktop 7 for Mac is able to run multiple operating systems such as Windows 8 release preview, Chrome, Ubuntu, and will later provide support for Windows 8 and the final version of Mountain Lion once they have been released. Parallels Mobile allows you to control your computer via your iOS device. Will Retina display support convince you to purchase Parallels Desktop 7 for Mac? Let us know in the comments section below.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: OS X Lion points towards future Retina Display in Macs [Rumor], New Mac OS X malware discovered,

Parallels Desktop 7 and Parallels Mobile updated to support Retina Display

Parallels has announced that its Parallels Desktop 7 for Mac and Parallels Mobile software has been updated to support Apple’s Retina Display on the latest MacBook Pros and the new iPad. This, of course, allows users to take advantage one of the more impressive features found on new Mac products while running a different operating system. In an effort to build some hype around this latest update, Parallels has released a video of the program running with Retina Display, which you can catch after the jump.


In the short demo posted below, we get to see Windows 7 running on a Mac with Retina Display enabled. After turning Windows 7′s resolution to the highest possible setting for the computer he’s using, our narrator then opens Mac OS X Lion and the Windows 8 Preview, running them all side-by-side to show off Parallel’s prowess at running multiple OSes simultaneously with Retina Display pumped up to its max. Pretty neat stuff, if you ask us.

In addition to announcing this update, the company also said that both Parallels Desktop 7 and Parallels Mobile will be updated to support the final releases of Windows 8 and Mountain Lion when those finally arrive. For more information on Apple’s Retina Display, be sure to check out our story timeline below!

[via Parallels]


Parallels Desktop 7 and Parallels Mobile updated to support Retina Display is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Retina MacBook Pro 13-inch appears in Geekbench

This afternoon several benchmarks have appeared in the greater archives of Geekbench (a system we also use for computer reviews) which show a brand new Apple MacBook Pro with 13-inch Retina display. This is different from the current model 15-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display we’ve already reviewed in that, one, of course it has a different size display, and two, that it has a significantly lower score in Geekbench than we got – a total of 7806 compared to our 15-incher’s 12970. Of course it’s all relative, and the important part is the fact that this device may well exist.

This device is being displayed at MacBookPro10,2 in the benchmark. The new non-Retina 13-inch MacBook Pro (also released in the last few weeks) goes by MacBookPro9,2 while the 15-inch non-Retina model goes by MacBookPro9,1. The Retina model with a 15-inch screen is called MacBookPro10,1 – making this device, of course, a 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro.

This device appears to be running a 3rd Generation Intel Core i7 processor at 2.90 GHz and is working with 4GB of RAM. That’s a bit strange. The 2.9 GHz Core i7 processor should by all means be paired up with no less than 8GB of RAM, and certainly is on all other Macs on the market today – this is why the score is so low in Geekbench, too. Two possibilities exist (or more, of course), one being that this simply isn’t a real device, that it’s faked. The second is that this will be a low-cost model with a strange new configuration we’ve not yet seen.

Stay tuned for more info as this next model Retina MacBook Pro gets nearer and nearer reality – we’ll see if it ever reaches the public!

[via Mac Rumors]


Retina MacBook Pro 13-inch appears in Geekbench is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Apple launches new iPad in China on July 20th (update: here’s why)

iPad 2012

Apple is about to complete an important part of the puzzle for the new iPad’s world rollout: it just confirmed that its Retina display-packing tablet will reach mainland China on July 20th. The company isn’t specific about local pricing, but it’s promising both WiFi and cellular versions at its own stores and through resellers. The company is keen to avoid some of the mobs and scalping it’s seen in the past and will open reservations for pickup starting on July 19th — although the company is unusually limiting the reservation window to just three hours each day, between 9AM and noon. No matter how it shakes out, the official Chinese expansion is likely to keep the number of slingshot-delivered imports to a minimum.

Update: As some commenters have noted, the Chinese launch is helped mostly by the truce with Proview. The current iPad design has been certified since March; Apple isn’t about to mention Proview by name in the release, but it likely wasn’t keen on risking another store ban when it could just avoid the battle altogether.

Continue reading Apple launches new iPad in China on July 20th (update: here’s why)

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Apple launches new iPad in China on July 20th (update: here’s why) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jul 2012 08:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPad reportedly getting hardware tweaks but no new model

In a relatively unheard of – or unspoken of move, at least, on Apple‘s part, the iPad has been reported as making some changes to the current hardware that makes up the iPad 3. This 3rd generation iPad (with Retina display) will supposedly be getting a slightly thinner chassis as well as a lighter design overall. It will also be getting a larger camera lens hole, though no word has been spread quite yet on if the actual camera will be affected.

These reports come from DigiTimes who have let it be known that their sources, leaking information first to a Taiwanese tech journal then to them, come from an Apple manufacturing plant of some sort, and also have a bit to say about the batteries in the current generation iPad. These sources are reporting that some of the reported heat issues present in the current iPad will be all but erased with the new build as the batteries are getting both smaller and more energy efficient.

It’s highly doubtful that Apple would release another iPad this year with the 3rd generation iPad still so fresh in everyone’s minds, but you never know. There’s also always the possibility that Apple could release a software update that would replicate the “fixes” that the sources speaking above are implicating, with the hardware changes adding to future possibilities of long-lasting units.

Have a peek in the timeline below to see all the most recent iPad news bits, and notice how it’s not the standard model iPad that’s getting all the press, it’s a much smaller “iPad Mini” model instead. Which will cross the finish line first – a smaller model, or just a slightly thinner model?


iPad reportedly getting hardware tweaks but no new model is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


iPad Mini still missing the killer context

Apple’s iPad Mini plans are, if the leaks are anything to go by, shaping up for a launch later in 2012, but hardware is only half the story: Apple needs a solid context with which to frame its smaller slate. One of the company’s most significant strengths is not only launching new devices, but telling us why we should want them and how they’re “perfect” for our lives. However, with Steve Jobs’ scathing comments about “tweener” tablets still ringing strong, how will Apple sell us that this is a sensible inevitability not a blushing backtrack?

Jobs’ argument was that a 7-inch tablet was simply too small for adult hands to use the UI properly. “While one could increase the resolution of the display to make up for some of the difference,” he justified, “it is meaningless unless your tablet also includes sandpaper so that the user can sand down their fingers to around one quarter of their present size.”

Now, it wouldn’t be the first time that Apple has said it insists on doing one thing, and then promptly does something else. Nonetheless, holding back from the 7-inch tablet market and then diving in with a new iPad Mini would be one of the biggest turnarounds to-date. It’ll take more than the famed “reality distortion field” to give a smaller tablet some believable justification.

Perhaps that context will be what Apple has learned from a few generations of iPad. When Steve Jobs made his sweeping dismissal of 7-inchers, it was back in October 2010; the original iPad had only been on sale since April that year, and stock was seriously constrained for several months. In some ways, Jobs was commenting blind; or, at least, based on Apple’s own opinions around tablet use rather than what the market was telling them.

In the intervening period, we’ve seen tablets overshadow ereaders in many ways, while smartphones have grown in scale to the 5.3-inch monsters from Samsung and others. Apple has launched iBooks Textbooks, too, pushing the iPad further into eduction settings. We’ve also seen Retina Display technology arrive, refining the resolution of the interface. As we speculated yesterday, Apple might see Retina as an essential addition to the iPad Mini if it’s to fit into the overall strategy of the firm.

So, could Tim Cook take the stage and push ebook and digital textbook consumption as a primary goal of the iPad Mini? “Since we launched the iPad, we’ve seen it enter markets we hardly dreamed of back in 2010″ the Apple CEO might say. “Readers, both at home and at school, have seized on the iPad as a magical way of exploring new literary worlds and expanding their horizons; now, we’re lowering the cost of entry to all that, and we’re making it even easier to take knowledge with you.”

Apple is stubborn when it feels it needs to be – it waited out the Flash argument until Adobe conceded defeat and adopted HTML5, for instance – but it’s also not afraid to do an about-turn if it smells a new market it can cash in on. The time may be right for a “tweener”; the big question is how Apple might convince us that time is now.

[Image credit: Ciccaresedesign]


iPad Mini still missing the killer context is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Where have all the iMacs gone? Refresh incoming!

Dwindling supplies of Apple’s 27-inch iMac have kickstarted expectations of an imminent refresh, with the company predicted not only to inject some 3rd-gen Core i7 processors but Retina Display too. Availability at big-name US stores – including Best Buy and J&R – has dried up, leading to chatter that a new model with significantly boosted specifications is waiting in the wings.

Counting availability has generally been a solid way of predicting Apple’s Mac refreshes over the past few years, with supplies of the coveted products generally drying up just ahead of new generations being released. We saw the same in the weeks prior to the freshly-Ivy Bridge updated MacBook Pro line a few weeks back, for instance.

As for what, exactly, the new iMac might deliver, there are a few likely possibilities. The most obvious is a refresh in processor, with Intel’s Ivy Bridge Core i5 and i7 chips likely to take pride of place under the hood. A switch from the current-generation AMD graphics to NVIDIA’s GeForce GPU may also feature, given Apple has done the same in its notebook range.

Whatever the source, those graphics chips are tipped to be driving a seriously pixel-updated display, with Apple said to be putting Retina Display high-res panels in place rather than the current 2560 x 1440 screen. However, conflicting rumors also suggest that we’ll need to wait until 2013 to see that happen.

Apple has opted for a more low-key reveal of its new iMac models in the past, pushing out a press release rather than holding a whiz-bang event such as last month’s WWDC 2012 keynote.

[via AppleInsider]


Where have all the iMacs gone? Refresh incoming! is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.