Posted on 7:04 AM

Top 8 Must Have Jailbreak Tweaks and Apps For Your iPhone

Most of the tweaks we covered are not specific to iPhone 4S. You can also apply it on 3GS or iPhone 4 but make sure your device is running on iOS 5.0 or up.

SBSettings: which is one of the best jailbreak tweaks. Once the device is jail broken this allows the device to turn on/off 3G, Bluetooth, WI-Fi and works on some other helpful functions as notifications.




































iFile: makes the folders on your iPhone visible. You can use it for several functions. You can see all your folders, compressed files, bookmark folders and more, which allows you not to scroll to find any particular thing.


Celeste: this is one of the best tweaks as it allows you to transfer all the files from an iPhone via Bluetooth. Celeste has brought this function for only $9.99 from Cydia Store; this would allow transferring files with all other devices than Apple like Nokia, Samsung and even various laptops.
Celeste Bluetooth Tweak for iPhoneCeleste Bluetooth Tweak 2
Springtomize 2: allows customizing almost every aspect of your IOS device. This gets the most for an IOS 5.0.1 for only $2.99; Springtomize 2 saves almost $20 for different tweaks available on Cydia.
springtomize 2 for ios 5
IntelliScreenX: a tweak developed by IntelliBorn team, allows your iPhone to show all the notifications on the home screen even if the phone is locked. It allows you to have very easy access to all the settings, including brightness, call list, etc.
Intelliscreen X Sample 1Intelliscreen X Sample 2
CallBar: A tweak developed by Limneos adds a funky look to your phone and allows you to improve the way you receive phone calls. CallBar modernizes the incoming phone and video call interface, which allows you to use your device while it’s ringing and even during the call. It makes your call a notification beeping in the top of the screen and costs only $3.99.
CallBar 1CallBar 2
Winterboard and Dreamboard: two tweaks that allow an iPhone to customize its interface. Winterboard allows including themes that can be easily found on Cydia, whereas Dreamboard allows finding some unique themes, including the blackberry theme as well.
Dreamboard Theme - Windows PhoneDreamboard Theme - Boxor HD
InfiniDock: allows adding multiple icons to one’s dock and will let you scroll through them, whereas the overflow gives it an ultimate style to your dock.
infinidock
There you go, the top tweaks for your newly jailbroken iPhone. If you haven’t jailbroken yet, follow this guide to jailbreak iPhone 4S using Greenpois0n Absinthe or this guide to jailbreak iPhone 4/3GS using redsn0w. Read More

Posted on 6:19 AM

Apple Reinvents Textbooks with iBooks 2 for iPad

January 19, 2012 will actually be remembered as a BIG-BIG day for Global Education – a day when textbooks were reinvented. Apple Inc. known for their path-breaking contribution to the overall transformation of social fragment of society in the greater sense has opened up the path to interactive education at the very basic level in educational institutions – The Textbooks in the form of iBooks 2 for iPad.

Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing in his own words quotes the spirit of the announcement:
“Education is deep in Apple’s DNA and iPad may be our most exciting education product yet. With 1.5 million iPads already in use in education institutions, including over 1,000 one-to-one deployments, iPad is rapidly being adopted by schools across the US and around the world. Now with iBooks 2 for iPad, students have a more dynamic, engaging and truly interactive way to read and learn, using the device they already love.”
Learning is always believed to be a continuous process and imbibing knowledge is meant to be an experience rather than an exercise.Learning is meant to be enjoyed and knowledge explored; however, many a times the fun of learning gets lost under the weight and monotony of the Textbooks. It can be expected that Apple’s iBooks 2 for iPad will usher a new beginning to the way education – learning and knowledge-sharing shall be perceived in days to come.
iBooks 2 for iPad features iBooks textbooks that are dynamic, interactive and highly engaging – loaded with elegant, full-screen textbooks with interactive animations, diagrams, photos, videos, unrivaled navigation and much more. Moreover, iBooks textbooks can be constantly updated with the latest research and statistics; and most importantly it will do away with Textbooks weighing down a backpack.
Terry McGraw, Chairman and CEO of McGraw Hill sums up the significance of Apple’s education announcement as a glorious part of history in the making. He says, “Digitization of education is going to be the opportunity of the century”. While Pearsons agree that iBooks 2 for iPad replacing Textbooks will “make students much more interested and if it stimulates curiosity, you got the spark for learning”.
Interestingly, leading education services companies including Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, McGraw-Hill and Pearson will work towards compiling and delivering educational titles on the iBookstore with most priced at $14.99 or less. Besides that, an innovative free authoring tool – iBooks Author has been made available today. So, if you own a Mac, you too can create stunning iBooks textbooks. Isn’t it exciting?
The new iBooks 2 app is available today as a free download from the App Store. Apple Inc. and the publishers along with educators, who have contributed to the creation of this highly innovative new iBooks 2 app, will make way for students to learn, explore and experience their curriculum in more efficient and effective ways than ever before.

- Fast, fluid navigation, easy highlighting and note-taking, searching and definitions, plus lesson reviews and study cards.
- iBooks Author is also available today as a free download from the Mac App Store and lets anyone with a Mac create stunning iBooks textbooks, cookbooks, history books, picture books and more, and publish them to Apple’s iBookstore.
- Authors and publishers of any size can start creating with Apple-designed templates that feature a wide variety of page layouts.
- iBooks Author lets you add your own text and images by simply dragging and dropping, and with the Multi-Touch widgets you can easily add interactive photo galleries, movies, Keynote presentations and 3D objects.
- Students using iBooks 2 for iPad will have access to the world’s largest catalog of free educational content.
- Access to over 20,000 education apps at their fingertips and hundreds of thousands of books in the iBookstore – that can be used in their school curriculum, including Social Studies, Science, Mathematics or novels for English.

How do you think iBooks 2 for iPad will help evolve a new educational renaissance in the work? How do you perceive the success of interactive textbooks to ‘conventional hardback Textbooks’? Please do share with us your thoughts and views. We’d like Apple to hear you! Read More

Posted on 3:36 AM

Final Cut Pro X updated to turn your multi-cam iPhone videos into masterpieces

Apple has just released an update to Final Cut Pro X, their executive video editing software suite, which adds multi-camera syncing and broadcast monitoring suport. Final Cut Pro X 10.0.3 also includes enhanced XML, so it can talk with third-party plug-ins more easily. As always, there’s a bunch of great audio, animation, and color correction tools in there which professionals have come to rely on.
So, okay, okay, maybe Final Cut Pro X is a little overkill for something shot on your iPhone 4S, especially with iMovie available right on the device, but if you’re knee-deep in the Apple lifestyle, maybe you like adding an extra layer of polish to your mobile videos. Or if you just shot your new music video with a four iPhone setup and need that new multi-cam sync. (Hey, it happens!)
Even though Final Cut Pro X is clearly built for, well, pros, it’s still interesting to see some people kit out their iPhones with all manner of video-enhancing accessories. While I can’t speak much to the quality of those videos versus something done with a “real” camera, I still admire folks who try to close the gap. A full-blown version of Final Cut Pro X on iPad — even the iPad 3 is still the stuff of legend, but I’d love to see a bunch of mobile companion apps to enhance desktop publishing. Adobe’s done a lot of stuff like this, and I think a similar strategy for Apple would be a great way to keep an iPad in the workflow. Even if Apple doesn’t take up the call, maybe the enhanced XML support will enable third parties to make some cool iPad companion apps for Final Cut Pro X. There are just so many separate panes and menus to keep in order when editing video, that it would be nice to shunt a few of the less vital ones to a separate display. Full press release after the jump.
CUPERTINO, California—January 31, 2012—Apple® today released Final Cut Pro® X v10.0.3, a significant update to its revolutionary professional video editing application, which introduces multicam editing that automatically syncs up to 64 angles of video and photos; advanced chroma keying for handling complex adjustments right in the app; and enhanced XML for a richer interchange with third party apps and plug-ins that support the fast growing Final Cut Pro X ecosystem. Available today as a free update from the Mac® App Store™, Final Cut Pro X v10.0.3 also includes a beta of broadcast monitoring that supports Thunderbolt devices as well as PCIe cards.
Final Cut Pro X v10.0.3 includes a collection of groundbreaking new tools for editing multicam projects. Final Cut Pro X automatically syncs clips from your shoot using audio waveforms, time and date, or timecode to create a Multicam Clip with up to 64 angles of video, which can include mixed formats, frame sizes and frame rates. The powerful Angle Editor allows you to dive into your Multicam Clip to make precise adjustments, and the Angle Viewer lets you play back multiple angles at the same time and seamlessly cut between them.
Final Cut Pro X builds upon its robust, one-step chroma key with the addition of advanced controls including color sampling, edge adjustment and light wrap. You can tackle complex keying challenges right in Final Cut Pro X, without having to export to a motion graphics application, and view your results instantly with realtime playback.
In the seven months since launch, the third party ecosystem around Final Cut Pro X has expanded dramatically. XML-compatible software like DaVinci Resolve and CatDV provide tight integration for tasks such as color correction and media management. The new 7toX app from Intelligent Assistance uses XML to import Final Cut Pro 7 projects into Final Cut Pro X. In addition, some of the industry’s largest visual effects developers, including GenArts and Red Giant, have developed motion graphics plug-ins that take advantage of the speed and real-time preview capabilities of Final Cut Pro X.
Broadcast monitoring in Final Cut Pro X is currently in beta and allows you to connect to waveform displays, vectorscopes, and calibrated, high-quality monitors to ensure that your project meets broadcast specifications. Final Cut Pro X supports monitoring of video and audio through Thunderbolt I/O devices, as well as through third party PCIe cards.
Pricing & Availability Final Cut Pro X v10.0.3 is available from the Mac App Store for $299.99 (US) to new users, or as a free update for existing Final Cut Pro X customers. A 30-day free trial of Final Cut Pro X is available at www.apple.com/finalcutpro/trial. Full system requirements and more information on Final Cut Pro X can be found at www.apple.com/finalcutpro.
Read More

Posted on 12:48 AM

Top free iPhone app devs paying $1.81 in marketing per loyal user

Fiksu, a mobile marketing firm, released some interesting data on how much money top iPhone app developers are spending on promoting their creations. After looking at the top 200 free iPhone App Store for December, the average cost to get someone to run an app more than three times is $1.81. This is up significantly from $1.41 in November. Fiksu also determined that the App Store saw a little over  6 million daily downloads in December, helped in no small part by the oodles of Christmas sales. In fact,m the last week of December saw advertising budgets (and traffic) double. Fiksu gathered up this information through their marketing platform, which spans over 200 million downloads, and 11 billion in-app actions. App Store rankings freeze between December 25 and 28, which creates a rush to get top position beforehand, so you hold that visibility while folks start downloading apps on their new iPhones. Fiksu CEO Micah Adler said:
“For so many app brands, December is a strategically critical month for app discovery. What we witnessed during the month was a ‘land rush’ in which advertisers earnestly spent marketing dollars in order to achieve ranking before the traditional App Store freeze which then would generate substantial organic downloads through increased visibility.”
It paints a harsh picture of the app development world when you have to pay nearly two bucks just to get someone to run your app a couple of times, nevermind spend any money on in-app purchases, or click on any ads. With iPhone app download volume climbing, and showing no signs of letting up, it’s bound to put a lot of pressure on developers to compete. Considering all the noise, discoverability is huge, and it’s not entirely surprising to see publishers willing to pay so much to get it.
Of course, if developers just wrote good apps and dropped us a line, maybe they’d get some free advertising by way of our Daily Apps series. Jussayin’. Read More

Posted on 9:56 PM

Sneak preview of Color Splash Studio for iPhone

AppId is over the quota
MacPhun, the makers of FX Photo Studio, are working on a selective-coloring photography for iPhone called Color Splash Studio. Unlike similar apps already available in the App Store, FX Photo Studio comes with a slew of tools that allows you to further customize your photos including contrast, brightness, saturation, and hue. You can focus these edits to just the background or just the colored portion of your photo. You can also apply various filters (like sepia) to your background, making it more interesting than the traditional black and white backgrounds.
FX Photo Studio is already available in the Mac App Store [$2.99 - Mac App Store link] and will be available on the iPhone in mid-February.
We got a sneak peak of Color Splash Studio for iPhone while at Macworld 2012. Read More

Posted on 7:31 PM

Apple updates Airport Utility for OS X Lion, makes it look just like iPhone, iPad version

Apple has updated the Airport Utility for Mac OS X Lion to version 6.0, and once again went back to the Mac by making it look just like the iPhone and iPad version released earlier this year. Used to manage everything from the Airport Express and Airport Extreme Wi-Fi base station routers, to the Time Capsule router + hard drive Time Machine backup companion, here’s what Apple has to say about Airport Utility 6.0 for OS X Lion.
Use AirPort Utility to set up and manage your Wi-Fi network and AirPort base stations, including AirPort Express, AirPort Extreme, and Time Capsule. See a graphical overview of your Wi-Fi network and devices. Change base station and network settings, or manage advanced features such as security modes, wireless channels, and more.
iOS for iPad and iPhone has taken huge strides in making all kinds of computing tasks easier and more accessible to mainstream users, and the Airport app for iPhone and iPad is no exception. OS X Lion, however, hasn’t always successfully transitioned that accessibility to the older Mac platform, with some re-interpretations working magnificently and others feeling like they need a few more revisions worth of polish (or even a solid Snow Leopard-ing)
The Airport Utility for OS X Lion, however, looks solid and should make something as potentially intimidating as managing and Airport Extreme or Time Capsule
Source: Apple.com via MacStories Read More

Posted on 5:29 PM

Hands on with the Crimson cases, sticker skins, and edgings for iPhone

Crimson makes some colorful, sparkly cases, skins, and edgings for the iPhone, and I know this because while at Macworld 2012, I noticed a couple people sporting them around the antennas of their iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S’s. This is what drew me towards Crimson’s booth.
Crimson offers many options for adding personality and protection to your iPhone. Currently available is the Aluminum Frame Case and six different types of screen protectors. In the near future, Crimson will be offering skins for the backs and antennas of the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S. Most of these skins are colorful and sparkly, but there will also be options that are more subtle and “manly”.
While visiting their booth, I picked up a purple skin for the back of my iPhone 4S and a purple Aluminum Frame case. I may be enjoying my sparkly skin, but I’ll admit to not being a huge fan of the case. The nubby corners are a turn off and add quite a bit of bulk to the overall size of my iPhone. If the corners were small and rounded, I may actually consider using it regularly. Read More

Posted on 2:46 PM

Daily deal: Ballistic Shell Gel (SG) Series Case for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 only $18.95

Today only, the TiPb Store has the Ballistic Shell Gel (SG) Series Case for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 on sale for only $18.95!. Get them before they’re gone!
Get the Ballistic Shell Gel (SG) Series Case for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 now!
The Ballistic SG Series case for the iPhone 4S, AT&T iPhone 4, or Verizon iPhone 4 offers three layers of protection.
The first and outermost layer is made of soft TPU which will help absorb the shock of a drop. In addition, this first layer is co-molded onto layer number two, which is made of a tough impact resistant polycarbonate.
Last but not least, the third layer, which is the inner-most layer, is made of a soft silicone. This layer also includes Ballistic corners, which means all four corner have extra shock absorption where you need it the most.
Features:
3-layers of protectionSoft TPU skinImpact resistant polycarbonateBallistic corners for ultimate drop protection
Read More

Posted on 11:57 AM

Case-Mate POP! Case with Stand for iPad 2 review [Giveaway]

The Case-Mate Pop! Case with Stand for the iPad 2 brings the same blend of protection and kickstand-enabled performance to the iPad 2 as it’s younger, smaller sibling does for the iPhone 4S. And like with the iPhone version, that’s a very good thing.
Available in two-tone black or white, the Case-Mate Pop! Case with Stand for the iPhone 2 is composed of hard, protective rubber shell and soft, easy-to-grip rubberized sides. The shell feels strong and can handle any minor impact that might otherwise scratch or dent your precious iPad. The sides are what make the difference for me, however, as they really let you grab a hold, and keep a hold, on what’s sometimes a slippery device.
nlike it's smaller iPhone sibling, the Case-Mate Pop! Case for iPad 2 is either open or closed -- there are no gradations.
The stand folds out from the back and does a great job either staying open or being closed. However, unlike the iPhone version, there’s no ability to set an angle in between. You either have to keep it closed, set it open, or watch it flap about. Awkward.
When open, the stand is a winner. It keeps your iPad 2 up and at attention in either landscape or portrait mode
The Case-Mate Pop! Case for iPad 2 does a great job protecting the back but the sides feel a little loose at times. I’ve seen this on numerous iPad cases and while it might just be that these materials don’t hold up well over long surfaces like the edges around the iPad’s 9.7-inch screen, I still wish they’d figure that out.
The front looks good, protects well, and yet I can't stop wishing the side were just a little less loose.
But this case is really about the kick stand, and how it lets you put your iPad 2 down yet keep watching your movies, following your recipes, reading your books, typing your notes, or any other of a dozen activities.
Offers good protection for the back and sidesMaterial provides for excellent gripStand works in either portrait or landscape modeRubberized edge keep the stand in placeEdges could be slightly more form-fittingNo angle adjustments options for stand
If you want your iPad 2 to finally be able to stand up on its own, then the Case-Mate Pop! Case is for you. Wonderfully grippy, nicely protective, the Case-Mate Pop! Case for iPad 2 is everything you could want in a movie-watching, note-typing, kickstand-packing accessory.
Simply leave a comment below telling us how the Case-Mate Pop! Case for iPad 2 could make your life easier and you’re entered to win one of your very own! Giveaway starts now and ends Sunday, February 5 at midnight PT. U.S. shipping address required for delivery. Read More

Posted on 9:11 AM

Manage your Sprint account on your iPhone with Sprint Mobile Zone

Sprint has released an iPhone app for their customers called Sprint Mobile Zone. With this app, users can access their Sprint accounts, check out promotions, and read Sprint news. Non-account holders may also use the app to check your power consumption and running resources and find Apple and Sprint stores.
Sprint Zone offers Sprint customers immediate access to their account online, Sprint News and promotions and in addition, it offers the following for both Sprint and non-Sprint customers:
Simple device management (power controls, resources etc.)Apple and Sprint store Locator*Help functions, including access to a care representative
Sprint Mobile Zone is available on the iPhone for free.
Have an app you’d love to see featured on iMore? Email us at iosapps@imore.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look. Read More

Posted on 7:11 AM

Hot apps: Call of Cthulhu: The Wasted Land, Meeting Mapper, Tiny Review, Ringtones & Alert Tones Maker, The Very Cranky Bear

Every day the iPhone and iPad App Stores get flooded with new and updated apps and games, and every day we sort through them all to bring you the very best. Today’s hottest apps and updates include an RPG from the slimiest pits of the Old Ones, a cool and clever way to map your meetings, the shortest review app on the planet, a new ringtone creation app vying for the crown, and a much-loved children’s book comes to iPhone and iPad.

A turn-based strategy/role-playing game based on Call of Cthulhu RPG. Set in the midst of World War One, the game pits your team of investigators and soldiers against an ancient enemy, one older than humanity itself… Can your team of investigators keep their grip on sanity long enough to stop these diabolical plans? The fate of humanity is in your hands…

Documents all the important information in meetings and display a graphical depiction of your meetings. The information can be exported as a PDF and emailed and uploaded into your CRM application, SharePoint or just save it on your computer.

Review stuff with just one photo and three lines of texts. Seriously, if they read how much we just wrote about them, they’d be pissed. (But now you can login with Twitter or email!)

Personalize your iPhone by creating your own ringtones, text tones and other alert tones with Ringtones & Alert Tones Maker. Choose the song you want to use as your ringtone, specify the type of your alert, then choose the required segment from the audio track.

The award winning and much loved children’s book, The Very Cranky Bear* is now an animated, interactive app! Join Moose, Zebra, Lion and Sheep as they try to hide from the rain in a cave, but accidentally disturb a very cranky bear…
Any other big app or game releases or updates today?
Have an app you’d love to see featured on iMore? Email us at iosapps@imore.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.
More of: App Store Apps, Daily Apps, Featured, Games
More on: apps, Call of Cthulhu: The Wasted Land, daily apps, Games, ipad, ipad apps, ipad games, iPhone, iphone apps, iphone games, Meeting Mapper, Ringtones & Alert Tones Maker, The Very Cranky Bear, Tiny Review Read More

Posted on 4:24 AM

Angry Birds boss doesn’t see app piracy as a problem

In a recent interview, Rovio CEO Mikael Hed said that app piracy isn’t a huge threat to their signature title, Angry Birds. In fact, it may help increase their popularity. Hed draws a lot of parallels to the music industry, and sees suing your fanbase as fundamentally “futile”.
“We took something from the music industry, which was to stop treating the customers as users, and start treating them as fans. We do that today: we talk about how many fans we have. If we lose that fanbase, our business is done, but if we can grow that fanbase, our business will grow. … Piracy may not be a bad thing: it can get us more business at the end of the day.”
This is pretty smart on Rovio’s part, since they don’t just have a little slingshot game now — they have a brand. That brand is proving to be way more valuable for cartoons, merchandise, and cross-licensing (like the case with Rio) than as an iPhone app. It’s on these fronts that Rovio is staying agressive.
“We have some issues with piracy, not only in apps, but also especially in the consumer products. There is tons and tons of merchandise out there, especially in Asia, which is not officially licensed products.”
While Angry Birds might be the exception rather than the rule when it comes to app store success stories, Hed’s mindset here should show that publishers should always be thinking beyond the app. There’s a big world outside of mobile apps, and the more of it developers can latch hooks into, the more relevant their software becomes.
Of course, smaller developers might think that’s easy for Hed and his massive pork-and-poultry-fed bank account to say. With thinner margins for their apps, and nowhere near the same popularity with which they could viably sell shirts, plushies, or other branded goods, no doubt they’re hit much harder by app piracy than Rovio.
Source: The Guardian Read More

Posted on 1:52 AM

China Telecom aiming to launch iPhone 4S in February

Beijing Telecom, a subsidiary of China Telecom, has announced that they’re aiming to release the iPhone 4S by the beginning of March, and that the final regulatory certifications just made it through on Monday. As you might guess,  iPhone launches in the area can get a little crazy, but with wider carrier availability, maybe the congestion and panic will let up a bit. Currently, the iPhone 4S is only available on China Unicom, though there have been hints that China Mobile will enjoy the next-gen iPhone.
It’s interesting to hear more about the retail side of the iPhone in China, since the vast majority of news from that corner of the world revolves around Apple’s manufacturing partner, Foxconn.  I’m sure by this point, Apple’s retail presence isn’t sullied by knock-off stores anymore, even though there’s still plenty of copycat devices floating around.
There’s no pricing information available for the CDMA-based iPhone 4S on China Telecom, but something tells me a steep pricetag won’t deter the locals from snatching ‘em up.
Source: China Daily Read More

Posted on 11:09 PM

Could Apple release a separate 4G LTE iPad 3 and Phone 5 in select markets?

We’ll likely get a new iPad 3 sometime this March and an iPhone 5 later this summer or fall, but will either or both of them run on the new, ultra-fast 4G LTE (Long Term Evolution) networks? And if they do, will LTE be built into every device, or will there be special models made for just those networks that support it?
Right now there’s only one iPhone 4S and it runs on both GSM/HSPA+ and CDMA/EVDO Rev. A, on every carrier that offers it. That’s a change from the iPhone 4 that debuted as GSM/AT&T only and later had a different model, with a different antenna, released for Verizon. Likewise, the iPad 2 still doesn’t come in a unified model, having on version for AT&T/GSM and one for Verizon alone.
So, while Apple has moved to unify their manufacturing for iPhone 4S, they have in the past, and still to this day, made separate models of iPhone and iPad to handle different network technologies.
And they could do it again for LTE.
iPhone 4S, iPhone 4, or iPhone 3GS: Which should you get?
Previous generation LTE chipsets were deemed unusable by Apple due to their size and battery-draining power demands. Early Android LTE handsets like the HTC Thunderbolt bled power at an almost comical level. Early devices were also chunky, but soon thinned out again and grew in length and width instead of depth, like the Nokia Lumia 900, letting larger screens take advantage of that extra space.
While rumors persist of a 4-inch iPhone 5, it’s hard to imagine that Apple would let the iPhone 5 casing grow very much if at all just to accommodate an LTE radio and its battery. And they wouldn’t put one in the iPad 3 now if they weren’t planning on putting one in the iPhone 5 later. The phone is still the flagship, for now.
Qualcomm is releasing new chips, however, and it’s possible they’ll have one ready in time for the iPhone 5 that’s small and power efficient enough to meet even Apple’s demands. Let’s grant for a moment that that proves true. There’s still a much bigger problem when it comes to LTE.
How to sell your old iPhone before upgrading to the iPhone 4S
Verizon has a decent U.S. LTE roll out, claiming coverage in 190 markets of varying size. AT&T claims 26 markets with large scale deployment not complete until the end of 2013. Sprint will have 4 markets on LTE by mid 2011, but it will likewise take years to roll out nationally.
Internationally things get worse. Both Rogers and Bell have a handful of LTE cities each. In Europe and Asia there are a smattering of cities, but many huge markets are still years way.
LTE simply isn’t very common yet, and Apple is the company that didn’t even add 3G to the iPhone until the second generation version launched in 2008.
Black or white: Which iPhone 4S color should you choose?
Would adding the expense — both component and engineering — of an LTE radio, along with any remaining size and power demands, make sense to Apple if there are so few markets able to make use of it? Apple sold the one-iPhone 4S-model-to-rule-them-all faster and further than any other handset in the history of the business, getting it into more countries, on more carriers, for more users than ever before. Would that be possible if the iPad 3 or iPhone 5 similarly included LTE all in one model?
Instead, what if Apple kept the current radio stack in place for the iPad 3 and iPhone 5 and but also launched separate models for LTE in the markets where they make sense, like the U.S., Canada, and those European and Asian countries that support it.
Not all LTE operates on the same frequencies, so engineering even an international LTE radio wouldn’t be dead simple, let alone a GSM/CDMA/LTE across all bands. Letting HSPA and CDMA continue to do what they do now, in markets that don’t have other options, isn’t a bad idea.
But if complexity and scarcity are still the case, why worry about LTE at all in 2012? Why not just wait until 2013?
Verizon and Sprint iPhone 4S and the limitations of CDMA
The current iPad and iPhone run at up to 14.4mbps on AT&T and GSM carriers. They run at 2-3mbps on Verizon’s CDMA network. Apple went out of their way to avoid calling the HSPA+ iPhone 4S a “4G” phone last year, knowing if AT&T and others claimed it as such, Verizon’s version would be made to look less-than by comparison.
That hasn’t hurt Verizon’s sales yet — iPhone 4S set records on every carrier including Verizon, eclipsing devices with bigger screens and LTE radios on the same shelves — but it likely hurts Verizon pride. With the best LTE deployment in the U.S. and a desire to use it that’s so strong Verizon reportedly won’t let Windows Phone and BlackBerrys on their network without LTE anymore, how happy would they be to sit on CDMA for another year, to again have to market an EVDO Rev. A iPad 3 and iPhone 5?
Apple could pull the trigger on LTE in 2012. In most markets they don’t need to, but in the U.S. in general and Verizon in specific, there’s reason to consider it. Doing two models — HSPA+/CDMA for most of the world and LTE for Verizon and the other carriers that support it — wouldn’t be unprecedented for Apple, and could indeed be the best of both worlds. Read More

Posted on 8:51 PM

Foxconn plans to build five additional iPad production plants in Brazil

Apple’s largest production partner, Foxconn, has plans to build five new production plants in Brazil to help support the growing demand for the iPad tablet.
Officials from Foxconn and the Brazilian government will reportedly meet following the Chinese New Year to decide on where the factories will be built, but São Paulo is said to be pushing heavily for the investment. [...] In addition to helping supply Apple with iPads, the factories will be tooled for notebook and general electronics production. [...] A Foxconn representative declined to confirm its Brazilian expansion plans to Economia, calling the report “pure speculation.”
This news comes shortly after iPad production in Brazil got a generous tax break from local government following Foxconn reportedly investing up to $300 million in a São Paulo factory. The new production facilities could house up to 1,000 employees each, with officials from Foxconn and the Brazilian government said to be meeting after the Chinese New Year in order to make a final decision on the desired location.
With Apple selling through over 15 million iPads during Q1 2012, increasing production to help meet future demand is a no-brainer. And although Brazilian-made iPads may be a little behind schedule, adding more facilities to the mix can only help the situation in terms of availability.
Source: Folha via AppleInsider Read More

Posted on 6:34 PM

What’s Bluetooth? [iOS A-Z)

If you’re new to iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad and are wondering just what exactly Bluetooth is and what it means to you, worry not — iMore has you covered. Bluetooth is an open standard wireless communications protocol, which just means that it’s a commonly available way for devices to talk to each other, and to other electronics, without having to be plugged in together. The most common things iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad users do with Bluetooth include connecting to headsets and speakers.
Bluetooth works over short-wave radio (between 2400 and 2480 MHz if you’re techie) and has a range of about 30 feet. If you move further away than that, say leave your iPhone in your car and go into a store, you’ll lose connection.
There are several different Bluetooth profiles, each of which enables its own type of functionality. iOS doesn’t support all Bluetooth profiles, but it does support several important ones.
HFP 1.5, the hands-free profile for connecting to hands-free headsets and speakerphonesPBAP, the phone book access profile to allow for car kits to download contacts or display caller information (iPhone only).A2DP, the advanced audio distribution profile, which enables higher-quality audio, including stereo audio, to be sent to remote speakersAVRCP, the audio/video remote control profile, that lets pause, play, stop, next track, and previous track commands to be sent to headsets and speakersHID, the human interface device profile, or the protocol that connects to a wireless keyboard.PAN, the personal area network profile, which lets you tether to a computer and share your cellular internet connection. (Part of the Personal Hotspot system.)
Most previous iOS devices, including iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch support up to Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR (enhanced data rate). EDR allows for faster data transfers, meaning smoother, better sound support and internet speeds (between 2 and 3mbps).
Bluetooth 4.0, a newer specification is supported by the iPhone 4S and will presumably be supported by future devices like the iPad 3. Bluetooth 4.0 allows for BHS (Bluetooth high speed) and BLE (Bluetooth low energy), which aim to provide better, faster data with lower battery drain.
There are very few Bluetooth 4.0 accessories available yet, for example the Find My Car Smarter. However, Bluetooth 4.0 offers the potential for more ubiquitous, persistent, and useful peripherals than ever before. Read More

Posted on 3:59 PM

SB XLVI Guide is your personal Super Bowl guide in your pocket

If you’re heading to the Super Bowl this weekend, SB XLVI Guide will be your companion in your pocket. It’s your guide to official Super Bowl events, a map of Indianapolis, a 3D map and seating chart to the Lucas Oil Stadium, and a reference for local restaurants and nightlife.

Whether you’ll be in Indy or not, the Super Bowl XLVI Guide is your must-have companion to Super Bowl Week!
A detailed guide to local restaurants, nightlife, and official Super Bowl eventsA 3D map of Indianapolis and an interactive 3D map of Lucas Oil Stadium for gamedayYou can follow all of the social media buzz with NFL HuddlePin your parking spot and find your seating section in the stadiumAnd much more!
SB XLVI Guide is available on the iPhone for free. Read More

Posted on 1:27 PM

First BlackBerry 10 superphone pictures leak. Or, RIM’s homage to Android’s homage of iPhone

New images have leaked showing what may be code-name London, or the first of the next-generation BlackBerry 10 superphones expected to ship from RIM at the end of 2012 and… they look like Android phones that look like iPhones. Kevin Michaluk from CrackBerry.com pitches them a phone-sized PlayBooks but after being teased with the far more original looking, Porsche Design-style concepts we saw a few weeks back, I can’t help but be a little disappointed.
Sure, Apple didn’t invent the black slab form factor, but in an era that was then dominated by front-facing QWERTY devices, including the Treo, Windows Mobile Standard, Nokia communicators, and, yes, BlackBerrys, Apple inarguably popularized them. They popularized them to such an extent that Google smartly, swiftly switched gears from making Android BlackBerry-like to iPhone-inspired. RIM dabbled in that form factor as well, with the near disastrous Storm line, and now the expanded Torch line.
But to lead with it into the new generation of BlackBerrys, and now, some 5 years later? (And yes, once again, I informed you thusly.)
A big part of me hopes not. I’m tired of iPhone clones. Sure, Samsung has proven that the closer you are to copying Apple without being Apple, the more money you make in the not-Apple market (just look at Motorola and HTC profits by way of comparison), but Apple didn’t get to where they are — sitting on one of the largest bankrolls in history — by copying the BlackBerry or Treo back in 2007.
They looked at the market. They saw a problem with existing offerings. They tried to solve it with something new. RIM has had 5 years since then — 5 years to study Apple, look for the iPhone’s weaknesses, and figure out how to take then next great leap forward. To figure out how to do to Apple what Apple did to Palm and RIM.
They wasted a lot of that on the Storm and Torch and PlayBook. Hopefully they’re not wasting one precious moment of it now.
I want BlackBerry back. I want them putting pressure on Google and Apple. I want more great phones to choose from. I don’t want Jonathan Ive to be the lead designer-by-proxy of yet another me-too phone line.
Delight me RIM. Surprise me. You’ve got a new CEO. He has great contacts. I’m holding out hope for you.
Source: CrackBerry.com Read More

Posted on 10:44 AM

Are handset makers delaying launches because of iPhone 4S demand?

I think it’s safe to say that the iPhone 4S was anything but the disappointment some bloggers and analysts originally expected. There’s endless articles on how much of a success Apple’s latest smartphone has been and demand has been so strong, in fact, rumors are now spouting that other handset manufacturers are pushing their phone launches until at least the Q2 2012.


For their sake, hopefully the iPhone hype will cool down a bit by then. According to a report from DigiTimes, vendors from around the globe including Samsung, HTC, Nokia, and LG have pushed their finest new devices further into the year to avoid being slammed with the iPhone effect — that is, millions of people buying Apple handsets while other phone makers struggle to gain any spotlight and therefore any sales.


These four manufacturers all plan to unveil their new devices for 2012 at this year’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, taking place February 27th to March 1st. Though that is within the first quarter, the companies aren’t expected to start shipping any new devices until later in the year.


I wouldn’t doubt that popular Android and Windows Phone vendors are scared of Apple — they should be. Apple reported it sold 37 million iPhones last quarter and brought in $46 billion in revenue. There’s plenty of reasons to fear a company that sells 37 million of any gadget within three months.

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Posted on 8:27 AM

Apple dating site Cupidtino releases iPhone app

Cupidtino, a dating service made for Apple fanboys and fangirls, launched its own iPhone and iPod touch app. Now the hot singles that Mac nerds tend to be can keep in touch with their potential matches on the go.
The app includes most of the features of the website. Members can browse through fanboy and fangirl profiles and send a flirtatious “heartbeat” to people that catch your eye. New users can create or edit a profile and see a list of people who are checking it out, while experienced users can send messages to other members, even that special one they consider to be the Apple of their i - get it?
Though the main features of the app are free, members can subscribe to premium features like unlimited messaging for $4.99 per month via Apple’s in-app subscription model.
Cupidtino rose to fame in 2010 for obvious reasons. The dating website specifically tailored for lovers of the Cupertino-based technology giant is the first of its kind. Anyone that wants to register must do so on an Apple device. It seems like only Apple would be able to accomplish this type of loyalty, though I’d be interested to see if any future dating site could prove my theory wrong. DroidLove perhaps?
The Cupidtino app is available now for - you guessed it - iOS only. Read More

Posted on 5:52 AM

RAGE HD receives iOS 5 support, new episodes, and melee in latest update

Even though the console version of id Software’s RAGE left much to be desired, that doesn’t mean RAGE HD for iOS isn’t a terrific game. In fact, the company just released an update that puts more goodness into an already impressive package.


The latest update for RAGE HD brings a slew of enhancements such as iOS 5 support, the ability to melee your enemies, and two new episodes called Kraken and Aqueduct which can be purchased for only $.99 via in-app purchase. And just to clarify, that’s $.99 for both episodes.


Rage HD version 2.0 also supports HDMI-out, which could be used to easily trick your friends your playing the console version of your game through your iOS device. We all know what a little trickster you can be.


RAGE HD ($1.99)


RAGE ($.99)


 


 


 

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Posted on 3:20 AM

Apple’s earnings break records: 37 million iPhones, $46 billion revenue

Apple just announced its 2012 earnings with big numbers and big profits. The company made a record $46.33 billion in revenue and a record net profit of $13.06 billion - in a single quarter. The introduction of the iPhone 4S and the continued success of the iPad 2 really helped to boost its numbers into the near-absurd category.


Gross margin was up to 44.7 percent this quarter as compared to 38.5 percent in Q1 2011, but don’t be fooled: gigantic sales numbers played an even more important role in the company’s best quarter yet. Apple sold 37.04 million iPhones, 15.43 million iPads, a very close 15.4 million iPods, and 5.2 million Macs. These are up 128 percent, 111 percent, 26 percent, and down 21 percent from the comparable quarter in 2011, respectively.


“We’re thrilled with our outstanding results and record-breaking sales of iPhones, iPads and Macs,” said Apple CEO Tim Cook. CFO Peter Oppenheimer, also enthusiastic, focused on the enormous profits in his statement and made a prediction for Q2. “We are very happy to have generated over $17.5 billion in cash flow from operations during the December quarter. Looking ahead to the second fiscal quarter of 2012, which will span 13 weeks, we expect revenue of about $32.5 billion and we expect diluted earnings per share of about $8.50.”


Its iPhones are clearly the big winner here, while the iPod market continues its gradual decline as more people buy smartphones with built-in music players. Last quarter, Apple sold 17.1 million iPhones and 11.1 million iPads.

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Posted on 12:37 AM

Apple: iPhone 4S had ‘breath-taking customer reception’

Apple had even more to say about its record-breaking Q1 2012 earnings in its quarterly earnings call. Apple CEO Tim Cook  attributes the all-time high of 37 million iPhones sold last quarter to “breath-taking customer reception” of the new iPhone 4S, which was introduced in October of 2011.


It would seem “breath-taking customer reception” just about hits the nail on the head. Matt Richman made a very interesting point about iPhone sales year after year thus far:



“In 2009, Apple sold more iPhones than it did in 2007 and 2008 combined. In 2010, Apple sold more iPhones than it did in 2007, 2008, and 2009 combined. Last year, Apple sold 93.1 million iPhones, slightly more than it did in in 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010 combined.”


Apple also announced some other interesting statistics that weren’t mentioned in the press release. The company sold a total of 62 million iOS devices in Q1 2012 and 315 million total for 2011. 85 million of those iOS device owners are now actively using iCloud. Over one million iPads were used for education and that was before Apple’s textbook announcement.


In profit-related news, Apple made $1.7 billion from iTunes (music, apps, etc.) alone. Also a fun statistic to throw out there: Apple’s total profits in Q1 2012 of $13.06 billion were more than Google’s total revenue of $10.58 billion.


In his answer to a question about whether lower-priced tablets such as the Kindle Fire harmed iPad sales, Tim Cook made perhaps one of his most notable quotes yet. He did dodge the question overall, but ended with a strong point: ”Last year was supposed to be the year of the tablet, but I think most people would agree it was the year of the iPad for the second year in a row.

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