The Daily generated 800,000 downloads, $10 million loss in first quarter of operation

It’s still too early to pass judgment on News Corp’s daring venture into tablet-only newspapers, The Daily, but at least we now have an idea of how much it costs to get a project like this off the ground. Having spent $30 million developing the concept before launch, the company’s latest quarterly reports indicate another $10 million loss was incurred on the early operations of The Daily. That’s resulted in 800,000 total downloads of the iPad-only app, though a breakdown of how many of those were just trying out the free trial and how many have stuck around for the paid version hasn’t been forthcoming. News Corp stresses that The Daily is still a work in progress, one that we’ve heard may also be making its way onto Android tablets, and looks very much committed to seeing its plan through to the end. So if this digital-only, subscription-paid news idea fails, it won’t be for lack of trying.

The Daily generated 800,000 downloads, $10 million loss in first quarter of operation originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 May 2011 04:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Electronista  |  sourcepaidContent.org  | Email this | Comments

iOS 5 updates expected to be carried over-the-air, at least for the Verizon iPhone

Having spent a good part of our day yesterday negotiating with iTunes and downloading a whopping 666.2MB file to update our iPhone to version 4.3.3 — a version, we might add, whose sole claim to fame is the removal of things — we know well the pains of updating Apple’s mobile software. Those aches, however, may soon be coming to an end. 9to5Mac has multiple sources informing it that Apple and Verizon are scheming to start delivering iOS updates over the air from this fall, or just as soon as iOS 5 is made available. Untethered OS updates are a familiar feature to users of other smartphone operating systems and even the iOS-infused Apple TV, but getting Apple’s mobile devices up to date has so far always required going through the company’s own cable and software.

There’s no reason to believe this wireless update feature will be limited to Verizon, mind you — that’s just where the informants are coming from in this instance — though Apple will almost certainly have to alter the file sizes of its updates. We can’t think of many carriers who’ll be happy to push more than half a gigabyte of data per user per update. Additionally, since iTunes currently acts as the major backup hub, 9to5Mac speculates Cupertino must be working on a cloud backup service as well, which would seem a very sensible idea. Of course, that doesn’t paint a very happy or busy future for iTunes, but so what?

iOS 5 updates expected to be carried over-the-air, at least for the Verizon iPhone originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 May 2011 04:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  source9to5Mac  | Email this | Comments

Hearst Corp. signs on to sell its magazines through iTunes, bringing more O to the iPad

Hearst Corp signs on to sell magazine subscriptions through iTunes, bringing more O to the iPad

Esquire, Popular Mechanics, and O are not just for your local bookstore’s magazine rack any more — assuming you still have a local bookstore and that it is still large enough to own a rack. Hearst Corporation, the force behind those printed ‘zines, has become the first major publisher to terms with Apple, so those very publications will soon be on iTunes. Starting with their July editions you can subscribe for a seemingly quite reasonable $1.99 monthly, though the annual option of $19.99 seems like less of a bargain. (You can get a year of Popular Mechanics on pulp for $12.) This is just a small sampling from Heart’s back catalog, but the company is promising more are coming soon, leaving us wondering just how we’re supposed to fill out our Cosmo quizzes without a pen.

Hearst Corp. signs on to sell its magazines through iTunes, bringing more O to the iPad originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 May 2011 17:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Wall Street Journal  | Email this | Comments

Shocker! College kids like having iPads in the classroom

E-readers may not be good enough for Princeton’s hallowed halls, but students and professors at Oklahoma State University seem to have fallen head over heels for their iPads. Last fall, the school introduced the tablets in a handful of lecture halls and classrooms, as part of its iPad Pilot Program. Teachers involved in the study said they benefited from all the educational software available on Apple’s App Store, while students appreciated not having to spend their life savings on traditional textbooks. At the end of the pilot program, a full 75-percent of collegians said the iPad “greatly enhanced” their classroom experience, though we’re guessing that much of that enhancement came from their newfound ability to check TweetDeck between lecture notes. Opinion was noticeably more divided, however, on the device’s value as an e-reader. Some enjoyed having all their books in one place, whereas others were a bit disappointed with the experience, saying they didn’t use it to read as often as they expected to. Our former undergrad-slacker selves can totally relate. Video and PR await you, after the break.

Continue reading Shocker! College kids like having iPads in the classroom

Shocker! College kids like having iPads in the classroom originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 May 2011 14:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink MacNews  |  sourceBusinessWire  | Email this | Comments

iPhone Software Update Squashes Location-Data ‘Bugs’

In the iPhone's settings menu, Location Services can be flipped off to disable location-data collection. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Apple on Wednesday morning released a software update for iPhones, iPads and iPod Touch devices, fixing a flawed location-storage method that raised privacy concerns last month.

The update, iOS version 4.3.3, reduces the size of the file that stores geodata on iOS devices — meaning it will no longer contain a history of location data going back as far as one year ago.

Additionally, with the update installed, iTunes won’t back up the iOS device’s location database file, meaning the geodata will no longer be stored on your computer.

Last, when customers disable the Location Services setting on their iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch, it deletes all the information stored in the location file, according to Apple.

The software update comes in response to a security issue illuminated by two data scientists, who discovered that an unprotected file inside Apple’s iOS software stores a log of geodata accompanied with time stamps, creating a digital trail of a customer’s general moves for the past year.

The Wall Street Journal later reported that even when location services were turned off on the iPhone, the device was still collecting geodata.

Apple eventually explained that iOS devices are not actually tracking a customer’s precise movements, but rather, iOS devices are collecting information about nearby cell towers and Wi-Fi access points, which helps speed up location services.

The company added that “bugs” caused iOS devices to continue storing location data even when location services were turned off. Apple also said it made a mistake by making the location database file too large.

The iOS 4.3.3 update is a free download available through iTunes. The download is 666 megabytes large.

See Also:


iOS 4.3.3 is out, location tracking ‘fix’ in tow

Apple’s promised update to iOS to rectify what it perceived as a set of bugs in the system — namely, an excessively large cache of location information that was backed up to iTunes and hung around even after you switched Location Services off — is now being distributed to iPhones, iPads and iPod touches out in the wild. To exterminate those problematic aspects of your OS, you know what to do — hook up to iTunes and get downloading. And yes, it’s the full 666.2MB file as usual.

P.S. – iOS 4.2.8 looks to be out for Verizon iPhones as well, though we haven’t verified this for ourselves yet. Still, it’s the same set of changes and the same method to obtain the latest firmware.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

iOS 4.3.3 is out, location tracking ‘fix’ in tow originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 May 2011 13:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

American Airlines Streams In-Flight Movies to iPads

An example of American Airlines’ current in-flight entertainment. Photo Charlie Sorrel

American Airlines is set to stream in-flight entertainment direct to your iPad via Wi-Fi. Passengers will be able to buy and stream movies and TV shows to any Wi-Fi-capable device.

This is in some ways a fantastic idea. The current offering of a crappy screen with even crappier audio pales next to the experience of watching video on your own device, especially if it’s something airline-seat friendly like an iPad or a netbook. Why not let passengers choose to use their own screen?

But those customers are the same ones that are likely to have brought along their own content, not just endless re-runs of How I Met Your Mother (not that there’s anything wrong with How I Met Your Mother. Barney is awesome). Plus, if the planes offer in-flight Wi-Fi then you have access to the whole internet, which is likely to be more compelling than in-flight movies.

At least American is committed to connecting its planes. The company is “expanding inflight Wi-Fi to virtually our entire domestic narrow body fleet with additional MD80 aircraft and domestic Boeing 757-200 aircraft,” says the press release. It is also working to put power outlets in all planes, eventually equipping the fleet with standard AC sockets so no adapters will be required.

This is fantastic news, and I look forward to viewing pornography and making loud, unnecessary calls on Skype during my next American flight.

In Aircell-powered in-flight movie streaming will begin trials this Summer.

American Airlines to test streaming video inflight [American Airlines via Slashgear and ZDNET]

See Also:


Chef Sleeves: Disposable iPad Prophylactics

Clearly the chef cooking here is too stupid to be allowed into the kitchen, let alone given an iPad

Why spend 90 cents on a tough, reusable Ziploc bag when you could spend $20 on a pack of 25 disposable plastic film envelopes? That’s the great, great deal offered to you by the folks at Chef Sleeve, who will sell you thin, waterproof pouches for your iPad at “just” 80 cents apiece.

The Chef Sleeve is — as the name suggests — designed to protect your iPad from spills while cooking. Sized perfectly for the tablet, the bag seals the iPad in with a re-closeable sticky strip and lets the magic meat power of your fingers through to operate the touch screen. It’s also good for any other hostile environment, like the beach (as if you could read the screen anyway) or the bathroom.

It looks like a fine product, and the packaging even doubles as wobbly-looking iPad dock. But it is disposable, and this is not only environmentally hostile but bad for your budget. Yes, the sleeves are recyclable, but that still takes a lot of energy to do.

A Ziploc might be a little bulkier, but it will last forever in this task. And if you head to the FedEx store, you could pick up a zip-locking invoice sleeve. There’s one that seems perfectly sized for the iPad, and it’s probably free. It even comes with a sticky back for permanent refrigerator mounting.

Chef Sleeve product page [Chef Sleeve. Thanks, Michael!]

See Also:


ColorWare takes the green from your wallet and puts it on your iPad 2 (video)


Yup, it’s here — the moment all (eight) of you have been waiting for. The Apple iPad 2 finally hit the ColorWare config tool, so you can play around with that palette and make something just as hideous as we have here. And, if you feel so inclined, you can even add the thing to your cart, hand over $910 (for the base 16GB WiFi config) and wait “about 4 weeks” for your creation to arrive in the mail. While you’re at it, pick up a pair of limited edition chrome Beats. We’re shocked to see that they’re still in stock, given that modest $1,000 price tag.

Continue reading ColorWare takes the green from your wallet and puts it on your iPad 2 (video)

ColorWare takes the green from your wallet and puts it on your iPad 2 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 May 2011 17:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CrunchGear  |  sourceColorWare  | Email this | Comments

How to Convert Video to Work With iPad iMovie

Finally, you can add video from external sources to iMovie on the iPad

The iPad edition of iMovie is a slick, easy-to-use, inexpensive video editing tool. But it’s designed only to edit video shot with the iPad 2, iPhone or iPod Touch.

If you have video shot with another device, like a camera, you need to do a little work to get it working with iMovie on the iPad.

This appears to be because the hardware video chips inside these devices are tuned to very specific file types. This is why iMovie on the iPad can process video faster than a Mac. It is also why iMovie is so fickle about the video formats it will accept.

Even if video can be played back on the iPad, and shows up fine either in the Camera Roll or the native Videos app, iMove likely can’t see it. To fix this, you need first to convert the footage into the right format, and then introduce it gently to iMovie in just the right way.

There are two ways to do this: On a Mac, using a couple of applications and then syncing the converted file back to your iPad; or right on the iPad itself, using certain iOS apps.

Converting Video With a Mac

I have spent the last month, on and off, trying to get video shot with my Panasonic GF1 to show up in iMovie on the iPad. I gave up with the iPad 1, thanks to iMovie not working so great on the older iPad, but with a brand new iPad 2 in the Gadget Lab Spain offices, I finally cracked the code.

My examples use MTS files from the GF1, but should work with anything.

The trick is to turn the file into a specifically crafted MP4 with the H.264 codec. Most cameras already shooting something like this anyway. If so, proceed to step 2.

Step 1: Convert to MP4. The MTS from the Panasonic is an AVCHD file. This is just a container, which has an H.264 file within. This can be extracted without transcoding, which means it’s fast and — more importantly — there is no loss of quality. For this stage I use an app called ClipWrap. You just drop the files onto the app and then press go. It re-wraps the video into a nice MP4. At this stage, you may well be able to view the result on the iPad, but it still won’t work with iMovie.

ClipWrap converts AVCHD and DV files in seconds

ClipWrap costs $50. There is a trial which will work only the first minute of each clip. Unless you’re Alfred Hitchcock, you shouldn’t need much more. There are also free (and often clunkier) alternatives.

Step 2: Convert to “iMovie format.” For this you need a free app called MPEG Streamclip. There may be others, but this one works for me. Drop your freshly-minted MP4 file onto the app and then dial in the settings.

These settings are where the magic lies. I found them in a YouTube video how-to from user MyGreatiPhone, a young man from England (near Bristol, judging by his accent). First, go the menu bar and select File > Export to Other Formats:

The magic begins…

You will then see this monstrosity:

Make sure yours looks just like this

Change the format to MPEG-4, and then press the “Options” button to the side. You’ll see this:

This one might be even uglier than the last one

Here, the file format should read simply MP4 (not MP4 (ISMA)). You should also make sure your image size is 1280 x 720 HD and that the frame rate is 30. Don’t touch anything else. You can see the output details in the block of text at the bottom of this window.

Click OK in both windows and choose a file name. Make sure you have the MP4 extension and don’t make the name too long, or put any weird characters in there, as they may upset poor Princess iMovie.

That’s it. Now You need to get the file onto the iPad.

Step 3: Transfer to iPad. You may think that you could just drop the file iMovie’s file-transfer area in iTunes, but that would be too easy. That appears to be meant only for getting iMovie project out of the iPad to work on in desktop iMovie.

What you need is iPhoto.

Add the movie to iPhoto, preferably putting it into a special folder. Then flip back to iTunes and plug in your iPad. In the “Photos” section of the iPad sync screen, make sure “Include videos” is checked, and make sure that your folder is either checked to be synced, or you have chosen to sync everything from iPhoto. Hit sync.

Make sure you sync movies, too

Now, the moment of truth. Open up a project in iMovie on the iPad and your clip should be there. As I said, I have tried this with files from a Panasonic GF1 and found it to work. Let us know the make and model of you camera if you are successful, or if you fail.

Written here it seems like a long process, but in practice it is pretty fast. Both ClipWrap and MPEG Streamclip can batch-convert files, and you can save your Streamclip settings as a preset. Also, the iTunes step will be automatic now it’s set up.

Still, it would be nice if you could do these conversions on the iPad itself, right? Well, it turns out you can. I shall now permit myself an exclamation mark: !

Converting Video With the iPad

As we know, the iOS app for playing videos is a lot less finicky than iMovie, as all it has to do is play back video. Third-party apps, too, can read any movie file stored in your camera roll. And here’s the trick: Many of these apps will edit video or add special effects and then spit out the results in an iMovie-compatible format.

That’s right: If you’re prepared for a small loss in quality, you can convert video right there on the iPad.

ReelDirector ($2) is a venerable app that arrived on the iPad before iMovie. It’s clunky, slow and doesn’t even allow you to view your edits before rendering them. But it will take a clip and crunch it into a format iMove can understand.

Shoot a clip, put the SD card into your camera connection kit and transfer the movie right to your iPad (Motion JPG, AVI, MOV and MP4 should all come across fine). Then open up ReelDirector, make a new project, switch off all the options in the pop-up and hit the plus button to add a clip. It will compress the video. Then go back to the “My Projects” tab, hit render and wait. You’re done. Your clip will now show up in iMovie. Pretty rad, right?

But wait. If you’re going to degrade the quality then you may as well have some fun. Luckily, there are plenty of iPhone apps that Lomo-ize your footage. And they will pretty much all spit out iMovie-friendly files. I used the $2 iSupr8 (which is also made for iPad), but there are plenty of iPhone apps that can be used in pixel-doubled mode.

And that’s it, apart from one question that has been nagging at me. I swear that I once imported a movie clip direct to my iPad, and then was able to edit it right there in the Photos app. Somehow, I selected the clip and it was highlighted with a yellow outline. I could then trim the clip and save it as a new file. This new file was recognized in iMovie.

However, I can’t repeat it. I have a feeling that the file was from a Canon G9, but I tried it again today on an iPad 2 with the latest iOS, and an iPad 1 with an older version of iOS4, and it didn’t work.

Any ideas? Answers, along with questions and reports of success, can go in the comments.