Apple already locking down dates for iPhone announcement at WWDC 2010?

Shocking news, people: Apple might hold WWDC at Moscone West in June, as it has for the past several years. That’s at least the word according to AppleInsider, which just noticed that Moscone West is mysteriously booked from June 28 to July 2 by “Corporate Event,” which has signified upcoming Apple events in the past. If you’ll recall, the original iPhone was released in June of 2007, followed by the iPhone 3G at WWDC 2008 and the iPhone 3GS at WWDC 2009, so the smart money is on another refresh this year — and you can’t have whispers of an iPhone refresh without rumors about it coming to Verizon, so there’s tons of chatter in the air. We’re staying out of that for now, since we haven’t heard anything new or particularly interesting, but we’d like to point out that we’re also due an iPhone SDK event in March on Apple’s campus if Steve holds to pattern — anyone care speculate on what iPhone OS 4.0 might bring to the table?

Apple already locking down dates for iPhone announcement at WWDC 2010? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Dec 2009 09:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon begins internal webOS training

We always knew Palm would be bringing the Pre to Verizon sometime in early 2010, and it looks like preparations are underway: check out this leaked internal training slide, which describes a 20-minute Palm / webOS training that runs until January 4th. Interestingly, that’s the day before CES, so we’re guessing we’ll be hearing something about all this during Palm’s CES event — and if we had to guess, we’d wager that that updated Pixi with WiFi will somehow figure into the mix as well.

Verizon begins internal webOS training originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 16:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google files for Nexus One trademark

The mystery of the Nexus One continues to grow ever deeper, but we can pretty much confirm Google’s planning to sell something under that name: the search giant filed an intent-to-use trademark application for “Nexus One” on December 10th, and in order to be granted the trademark registration it’ll have to use the mark in commerce at some point in the future. Now, don’t get too carried away — sure, that could mean free unlocked GSM Android sets for all, but it could also just mean Google’s planning to sell the Nexus One as its next-gen Android Developer Phone. Considering everything we’ve heard points to the device being limited to T-Mobile 3G, we’d say the developer phone theory is still the most likely, but it’s all up in the air until Google provides a sample of the Nexus One mark being used in commerce to the USPTO — or, better yet, announces something official.

Update:
Ruh roh. As we’re sure you’re aware, the “Nexus” name is a riff on Philip K. Dick’s Nexus-6 replicants in Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? and ultimately in Blade Runner — and his estate is none too pleased that Google’s using it without permission. According to the New York Times, Dick’s daughter — who is in charge of licensing his work — was never told of Google’s plans, and she’s contacted the lawyers now that she’s found out. We’re guessing Google can still make nice though: she says she would have been open to an agreement had contact been made earlier. So… let’s get on that, guys.

[Thanks, Amit]

Google files for Nexus One trademark originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 17:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Is Apple Taking the Internet Seriously Now?

Apple’s always been a particular kind of company, obsessed with experiences, controlling them, end to end. But those they’ve always been centered around the traditional desktop. Until Apple bought Lala. Is Apple taking the internet seriously now?

By “taking the internet seriously,” we mean, in one sense, getting more serious about “the cloud,” which is a digital yuppy euphemism for “stuff stored on honking servers out there somewhere that you access over the internet.” A few things—a few acquisitions, really—make us think Apple is eyeballing the internet in a new way as means of service. And we don’t mean in the sorta kinda way they run MobileMe, which has been, at first, a flop and now, decent if it were free like all the Google stuff is and not $100 a year.

• The biggest piece is Lala. It remains to be seen how radically Apple uses it to transform iTunes, but the potential for a complete upheaval of the current iTunes model is enormous. Right now, you buy stuff on iTunes, download it to your hard drive, and sync it to your iThing through a rubbery white cable. A LalaTunes would be re-oriented around the web: You buy and manage songs over the web, and could stream your library anywhere, like to other computers, to your phone, directly. You can buy the streaming rights to a song forever, for 10 cents, rather than download it. And if this new, de-centralized iTunes is indeed embedded all over the web, it would become the de facto way to listen to music on internet, the same way Google is just how you search.

• Apple tried to buy AdMob, before Google did. AdMob is a mobile advertising company, formerly, one of the biggest. They sell ads, on the internet, for mobile phones. Apple might’ve wanted it as a defensive move to keep it away from Google, but just as likely, Apple wanted a slice of the mobile advertising revenue that’s simply going to explode over the next couple of years, much of which is being sold for the iPhone.

• A somewhat shakier rumor is that Apple’s is thinking about buying iCall, not just for the fitting name, but because they’re a VoIP company. If Apple’s really diving into the internet stuff, an internet calling service makes some sense. Also, though unrelated, it’s interesting that after Apple blocked the app Podcaster for being iTunesy, it later released the functionality it provided, and Apple’s complaint about Google Voice and other GV apps, were that they “duplicated” functionality.

Apple’s dabbled in internet services for a long time—you know, .Mac and MobileMe, with its storage and syncing and photo services—but in the future, you’ll probably mark the iPhone as when the internet really started to matter—despite the fact that Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer wasn’t horribly off-base when he said “the internet is not designed for iPhone.” The phone is evolving to rise to the challenge, from both inside out and outside in. Remember how limited the iPhone felt before apps? Before it became a real internet thing?

The defining conflict of personal computing for the last two decades has been Apple vs. Microsoft, Mac vs. PC. Today, it’s a three-way battle: Apple vs. Microsoft vs. Google. Steve Ballmer’s been mocked for years over his obsession with Google, manifested through Microsoft’s blind pursuit of search marketshare, but his single-mindedness looks far less loony today. It’s funny, actually, that Microsoft has been entirely absent from Apple’s recent collisions, which have all been with Google: Maps, voice, mobile advertising, music, executives, phones, etc. Microsoft doesn’t even enter the picture here, at least from Apple’s perspective. And these fights are all about the internet or mobile services.

Which is illuminating. Microsoft has had their lunch chewed, swallowed and spit back into their faces on mobile, on digital music and on, um, the internet. They let all of those things, which they were in a serious position to dominate, pass them by. Windows Mobile is hosed. Zune HD is amazing, but far too late. Google owns over 70 percent of the search market, and people are still abandoning Internet Explorer in droves after Microsoft let it rot for years. Microsoft, with its OS on 90 percent of the world’s computers, obviously has much more to lose than Apple if the OS becomes truly irrelevant.

Apple probably doesn’t want to be Microsoft. Complacency breeds extinction. And it’s clear that things are continually shifting away from the traditional desktop (or laptop), to the internet. I’m not saying Apple’s abandoning OS X and MacBooks and we’re going to all wake up in the puffy cloud tomorrow, but anybody who thinks things aren’t going in this new terminal-client direction, where OSes and hardware don’t matter is blind or stupid or in denial. I mean, it’s already here in some ways. (Uh, just look at Google.) A model that stays tethered to the traditional desktop is like tying a weight around your ankle and trying to fly by flapping your arms.

An Apple that’s seriously focused on the internet could be a curious thing. Apple’s all about ecosystems that flow and work together. Would it be a walled garden in the clouds? Or would it be open, you know like people seem to think the internet should be? (I think of how Nintendo transitioned Mario from 2D to 3D with Super Mario 64. It was totally Mario, but something completely new.)

Whatever the case, it’s hard to imagine Apple not taking the internet and internet-based services more seriously than ever—butting heads again and again with Google, the new Microsoft (of the internet) shows at least that much. We’ll have to wait and see what that really means, though.

The Real Google Phone: Everything Is Different Now

It wasn’t supposed to exist. “The” Google Phone. Then we (and others) heard otherwise. And now, Google isn’t just handing this “sexy beast” out to employees, they’re going to sell it directly. Everything has changed. Here’s what we know.

• The Wall Street Journal says it’s made by HTC and called the Nexus One. It’ll be sold online, directly by Google. You’ll have to get your own cell service (which suggests it’s an unlocked device). Curiously, the WSJ says, “unlike the more than half-dozen Android phones made by phone manufacturers today, Google designed virtually the entire software experience behind the phone.” Sounds weird, since they designed the look and feel of the software on the Droid and G1 too, except that our source had told us before that the current Android we know isn’t the “real” Android. Also odd sounding: that name, Nexus One. But maybe not that odd.

• Google confirmed they handed out “a device that combines innovative hardware from a partner with software that runs on Android to experiment with new mobile features and capabilities and we shared this device with Google employees across the globe.”

• A bunch of Google employees tweeted stuff like the phone is “like an iPhone on beautifying steroids.”

• It probably looks like this:

• It’s supposedly an unlocked GSM phone running Android 2.1, powered by the crazyfast Snapdragon processor, with an OLED touchscreen (no keyboard), dual mics (for killing background noise), and enhanced voice-to-text powers. It’s gonna be alllll Google branding. And it’s probably coming out in January. Which jives with what our source saw a couple weeks ago, a huge screen running a brand new version of Android unlike anything out there.

• We heard it was referred to, at least in some capacity in the staff meeting where they were handed out, as the “Passion.”

If Google really is going to push this as The Google Phone (and it’s not just a dev phone), it’s hard to overstate just how radically this changes the landscape not just for Android, but what it means for Google and their relationship to the cellphone industry. The Google Phone would be a radically different model, a shift from the Microsoft one—make the software, let somebody else deal with the hardware—to the Apple and BlackBerry one—make the software and the hardware, tightly integrated. And Google’s even taking a step further, by selling it directly, bypassing the carriers, at least initially. (Google would not be the first to sell a high-powered unlocked phone—see Sony Ericsson and Nokia—but neither them are, um, Google, and their well-known failures with that approach makes it even ballsier.)

It’s a powerful message: to the companies making phones running Android, to the carriers, to developers, to consumers. Google is in this, to win. Everything has changed. You know, unless it hasn’t.

Who Will Buy the Apple Tablet? Steve Woz


Staying loyal to his roots, Apple’s co-founder Steve Wozniak said he would purchase an Apple tablet next year, assuming it ever ships.

Wozniak, who is now a chief scientist of storage company Fusion-io, said during a conference he’d buy an Apple tablet no matter what.

“If there is such a thing,” he said of the rumored Apple tablet. “I buy everything Apple comes out with.”

Attention, Segway: Here’s a prime opportunity for you to get started on a remote control app for the Segway. Charge $1,000 for it, and Woz will probably buy a copy for himself and each member of his Segway polo team.

Via The Wall Street Journal

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Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com


Major media giants to form joint venture for digital future, says WSJ

News Corp, Time Inc., Condé Nast Publications Inc., Hearst Corp., and Meredith Corp. If this Wall Street Journal report is to be believed here, these five major media firms are preparing to announce a new joint venture tomorrow to “prepare print publications for a new generation of electronic readers and other digital devices.” Details are a bit sketchy here, and what makes it more interesting / confounding is that many of these companies already have or have showcased separate initiatives, such as Hearst’s Skiff and tablet demos from both Time and Condé Nast. We’ll be eager to find out if there are any devices the group rallies behind (or even produces itself), but one thing’s for sure: good old Rupert Murdoch will have something fun to say on the matter.

Major media giants to form joint venture for digital future, says WSJ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 22:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Apple in Talks to Buy Streaming Music Service Lala

lala
Apple could be knocking on the door of Lala, an online music service, with plans to buy out the Palo Alto-based startup.

Two anonymous sources told Bloomberg they could not be identified because talks are still in progress. The terms of the deal are unknown. However, if the rumor is true, it suggests Apple is thinking about its next competitive move in digital music, with the emergence of cloud-based audio services such as Pandora and Last.fm.

Lala allows customers to listen to songs on their site once for free. Then, customers have two options: to pay 10 cents to listen to songs from Lala’s online servers, or to pay 79 cents to download a song onto their computer hard drive.

On a similar subject, Cult of Mac in August reported that Apple was building a 500,000-square-foot data center in North Carolina. Rich Miller, editor of Data Center Knowledge, speculates that given its enormity, Apple’s data center would most likely focus on cloud computing — hosting services or data over the web. If the acquisition pans out, perhaps Lala’s service would be integrated into this new data center to support Apple’s gigantic iTunes customer base.

Wired.com’s Eliot Van Buskirk speculates a Lala acquisition could lead to deep discounts for iTunes customers. See his report at Wired.com’s Epicenter.

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Photo: Manny Hernandez/Flickr


Apple looking to buy Lala, get into streaming music? (Update: sale confirmed)

There’s no deal yet, but Bloomberg and All Things Digital are reporting “confirmed” buyouts talks between Apple and music-streaming service Lala. If it goes down, the deal would potentially bring free music streaming to Apple’s iTunes empire, but we’re assuming Steve’s less interested in integrating Lala’s current service than he is in its talent, back-end technology, and content licensing deals. We’ll see where this all goes — or if it even happens.

Update: The New York Times and Wall Street Journal are now saying this is a done deal.

Apple looking to buy Lala, get into streaming music? (Update: sale confirmed) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 17:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New iPhone in the Wild — Perhaps With Revamped Maps?

You’ve gotta love analytics. A developer has spotted a new iPhone model identifier in usage records of its iPhone app, which indicates Apple has begun field-testing prototypes of its next-generation handset.

IPhone developer Pandav told MacRumors that usage logs revealed “iPhone3,1″ — a device identifier that does not match up with any shipping iPhones. Apple’s current iPhone 3GS is distinguished by the identifier “iPhone2,1,” an internal device-identification number assigned by Apple.

Pandav’s analytics report was provided by PinchMedia, which in the past noted the device identifier for the iPhone 3GS prior to its release. PinchMedia in October 2008 spotted an unfamiliar device ID labeled “iPhone 2,1,” which turned out to be the string representing the iPhone 3GS that launched in June.

While it’s dead obvious that Apple is planning to release upgrades for its products, the timing offers insight into Apple’s workflow. If “iPhone3,1″ is indeed the next iPhone, the time between field testing and release is consistent with the iPhone 3GS (aka “iPhone2,1″)  — about eight months.

MacRumors also discovered over the weekend a new Apple job listing that hints at Apple’s plans to deliver a major upgrade to its Maps app for the iPhone. The job listing seeks an iPhone Software Engineer to help take the iPhone’s built-in Maps App to “the next level”:

We want to take Maps to the next level, rethink how users use Maps and change the way people find things. We want to do this in a seamless, highly interactive and enjoyable way. We’ve only just started.

With that listing it becomes crystal clear why Apple purchased the mapping company Placebase earlier this year.

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Photo: SteveGarfield/Flickr