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Tag: iPhone

  • iPad 3 Gets New Smart Case, iPhone Keeps Glass Back

    One of the more unique aspects of the iPad 2 last year was the device’s Smart Cover. The cover attached to the side of the iPad with magnets. Another set attached to the right side of the tablet’s front panel to keep it closed. The Smart Cover is one of those interesting design choices that Apple is known for.

    The Smart Cover has been largely ignored in the run-up to the iPad 3. Now, though, it looks like Apple has been working on a redesign for it, too. According to Jeremy Horwitz of iLounge, the iPad 3 will be getting a new Smart Case. Unlike the Smart Cover, the Smart Case will cover the back of the iPhone as well. The Smart Case is said to retain the magnets in the front cover, with a rear panel made of leather-covered fiberglass. The case is inspired by InCase’s Magazine Jacket for the iPad 2 (just as the Smart Cover was apparently inspired by the original Convertible Magazine Jacket for the iPad).

    InCase Magazine Jacket

    Horwitz also says, citing “a repeatedly reliable source” at Apple, that rumors of an aluminum rear panel on the next iPhone are false. Apple is apparently only looking at glass or ceramic rear panels for the iPhone. He also said, however, that the next iPhone will likely be thinner than the iPhone 4S, thanks to Corning’s new Gorilla Glass 2 and size reductions of several internal components (including the current 30-pin dock connector).

    What do you think? Do you like the Smart Cover idea? Should Apple stick stick with a glass rear panel on the iPhone? Sound off in the comments.

  • USA Today Releases New iPhone App

    USA Today Releases New iPhone App

    USA Today has released new app for iPhone and iPod touch. The new USA Today App includes a new user experience including simplified navigation with easier and faster access to readers’ favorite features.

    The USA Today App now features new photo galleries, larger photos, more video in articles and optimized sports scores with more game results and schedules for each league. The app also has performance improvements, pinch and zoom weather mapping and a detailed forecast page with support for up to ten locations. For the visually impaired, there is now support throughout the app for VoiceOver, an accessibility feature on iPhones.

    “The USA Today mobile team developed and designed this new app to provide our customers with optimal connectivity and news reading throughout the day. Our customers use the USA Today App on iPhone and iPod touch to provide a bridge between work, home and travel. We listen to what our customers want and we’re committed to developing the best news and information apps on the market,” said Dave Hunke, president and publisher of USA Today.

  • iOS Beats Android In HTML5 Performance

    While much of the discussion over which mobile platform is better – Apple’s iOS or Google’s Android – is subjective, we occasionally run across some hard data that may push conclusions in one direction or the other. A recent study by Spaceport.io, dubbed the PerfMarks Report, provides one such piece of data.

    The report compares Android’s and iOS’s performance in HTML5. According to the study, the iPhone and iPad were often as much as three times faster than the next best Android competitor, the Samsung Galaxy Nexus. What makes the results especially interesting is the fact that HTML5 is often seen as something of a threat to Apple. The HTML5 web standard allows developers to create completely platform-agnostic apps. These web apps will run on any browser capable of handlilng HTML5, whether smartphone, tablet, or laptop/desktop computer. As such, web apps aren’t subject to the “walled garden” of the iOS App Store.

    Yet, as Spaceport’s data shows, the iPhone and iPad are significantly better at handling HTML5 than anything Android has on offer. The Samsung Galaxy Nexus is the first Android phone to run Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich out of the box, and is widely regarded as among the best Android phone available.

    Spaceport.io is a company that specializes in development tools for games on various platforms, including iOS, Android, and others. The report was designed to measure the current state of the implementation of HTML5 on mobile devices.

  • iPhone, Android Apps Secretly Access User Photos Stored On Phones

    iPhone, Android Apps Secretly Access User Photos Stored On Phones

    People were rightfully outraged when news broke last month that some apps for the iPhone were covertly storing the entire contents of contact lists from their phones. It quickly caught the attention of the United States government, which prompted Apple to address the issue and tell app developers that they must acquire “explicit user approval” before the apps can access the contact lists.

    Well, guess what – that’s hardly the worst of it because apparently apps are also helping themselves to the photos stored on iPhones. Mindful not to omit anybody from this round of privacy non-protection, though, it turns out Android phones also have apps that include a similar photo-accessibility flaw.

    It so happens that when iPhone’d people were granting permission for apps to use their current location, some apps conveniently inferred those location details to also include photos. The New York Times ran their own test of the privacy issue by enlisting a developer to create an app that requests permission to use the phone’s current location and thereby also gain access to the phone’s pictures.

    When the test app, PhotoSpy, was opened, it asked for access to location data. Once this was granted, it began siphoning photos and their location data to a remote server. (The app was not submitted to the App Store.)

    “It’s very strange, because Apple is asking for location permission, but really what it is doing is accessing your entire photo library,” said John Casasanta, owner of the successful iPhone app development studio Tap Tap Tap, which created the Camera+ app. “The message the user is being presented with is very, very unclear.”

    Apple didn’t respond to a comment request from the Times, but David Jacobs, a fellow at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, chastised Apple for its failure to yet again ensure iPhone users’ privacy. “Apple has a tremendous responsibility as the gatekeeper to the App Store and the apps people put on their phone to police the apps,” he said.

    Jacobs added, “It is pretty obvious that they aren’t doing a good enough job of that.”

    Once the Times discovered that Android was also guilty of the photo privacy flaw, they conducted a similar test with an Android developer to see if an app could swipe photos from a phone without the awareness of users. Surprise, surprise – the Times‘ test worked and the decoy app gained access to the phone’s pictures. However, this security breach was more devious because, unlike Apple apps, the Android app didn’t require permission to use the geo-location service in order to access the photos. Instead, as long as the app “has the right to go to the Internet, it can copy those photos to a remote server without any notice.”

    A Google spokesperson responded to a request from the Times‘ to explain the security deficiency. Google, as is their wont, responded in typical cagey fashion.

    In response to questions, Google acknowledged this and said it would consider changing its approach.

    A Google spokesman said that the lack of restrictions on photo access was a design choice related to the way early Android phones stored data. The first Android smartphones could put photos on a removable memory card, which complicated the issue of photo access, he said. For example, a user might grant an app permission to retrieve photos from one card but not want the app to use photos on a card that was in place on another day.

    “We originally designed the Android photos file system similar to those of other computing platforms like Windows and Mac OS,” the spokesman said in an e-mail message. “At the time, images were stored on a SD card, making it easy for someone to remove the SD card from a phone and put it in a computer to view or transfer those images. As phones and tablets have evolved to rely more on built-in, nonremovable memory, we’re taking another look at this and considering adding a permission for apps to access images. We’ve always had policies in place to remove any apps on Android Market that improperly access your data.”

    Google is “considering adding a permission for apps to access images”? Wow, Google, don’t go breaking your back over making sure that users of your smartphones stay informed over how their information is accessed by the apps they use.

    But thanks for keeping us in mind. Really, you’re too generous.

  • China Has 15 Million iPhone Users

    China Mobile has announced that there are now 15 million iPhone users in that country, up 5 million since last October, according to Sina Tech. That is roughly 35,000 new iPhones being activated per day – which is interesting because the state-owned China Mobile doesn’t yet support a 3G mobile network that supports iPhone, and doesn’t even sell the device. All of the 15 million iPhone users so far have been on China Mobile’s 2G network, as Apple has not yet been able to work around the existing 3G network in the region. China Mobile claims this will be fixed when it completes LTE networking testing in June.

    iphone in china

    With 665 million customers, China Mobile is the largest telecommunications company in the world, and with its 2G service to offer to iPhone users, it still dominates in the 1 billion plus member mobile market. Apple has had an exclusive deal to sell the iPhone through China Unicom, but this ends Friday, when the iPhone 4s will commence being sold through China Telecom. Morgan Stanley predicted last year that China Telecom might sell 2-4 million iPhones in 2012, and puts Unicom at 15 million – if China Mobile were to get its network in order, it could sell 24 million devices.

    As of now, with most iPhone users in China settling for a 2G network, revenues from apps that can’t be had sans 3G have also been affected. And the fact that iPhone users are willing to go 2G just to stay with China Mobile shows the extent of the company’s popularity in that country.

    In related news, a counterfeiter was recently stabbed in China for selling a fake iPhone.

  • SXSW 2012: Instagram May Finally Be Coming To Android

    It looks like a day Android users have been waiting a long time for may finally be arriving at this year’s South By Southwest (SXSW) conference. Kevin Systrom, CEO of Instagram, is on the schedule to speak at the conference, which begins on Friday. It looks like there’s a chance he’ll announce the long-awaited launch of Instagram for Android.

    Instagram is a hugely popular app for Apple’s iPhone. Chances are you’ve seen some of the photos it produces in your Facebook or Twitter feeds. The app lets users apply filters and borders to their photos. Sometimes the results are pretty amazing. Android users, though, have always been left out in the cold with Instagram. Though many Android users have expressed a desire to have he app on their devices, the app has remained iOS-exclusive since its launch. According to a recent report by GottaBeMobile, Android users’ wait may finally be over. They point out that Systrom’s keynote, scheduled for Sunday morning, March 11th, was originally titled “Your Phone’s Camera is Changing the World.” What’s significant there, they suggest, is that the title was “Your Phone’s Camer” and not “Your iPhone’s Camera.”

    Of course, there’s no hard evidence that Systrom will announce Instagram for Android. Given the popularity of SXSW for product launches, though, Systrom’s talk would be a great platform for such an announcement. Instagram is massively popular on the iPhone, but the simple fact of the matter is that Android enjoys a significant lead over iOS in market share. So whether Instagram is coming to Android this weekend or not, don’t expect it to stay an iPhone-exclusive for much longer.

  • Chinese Man Buys A Fake iPhone, Stabs A Counterfeiter To Death

    What’s the angriest you’ve ever been after a purchase? What about that time your friend sold you that used video game that “worked like new” but when you opened it you found it covered with scratches and unplayable? How about that signed baseball card with the signature that rubbed off the second you got it home?

    Most everyone has been duped before, but did it make you feel homicidal?

    In Zhengzhou city, China(the location of one of Foxconn’s biggest Apple factories), one jilted market shopper got a little stabby when he discovered that the iPhone he had just purchased was not really an iPhone, but a counterfeit device constructed only well enough assuage any suspicions at the moment of sale.

    The suspect, identified by ChinaHush as a Mr. Feng, was arrested last week after assaulting multiple people in a market plaza inside Zhengzhou. According to the reports, Feng was there looking for the particular guy who sold him his fake iPhone, but settled for some individuals that looked to be associated with the counterfeit trade.

    After getting home with his fake iPhone a realizing he’d been had, Feng apparently went back to the market plaza only to discover that the seller was long gone. Feng then continued to visit the plaza every day looking for the culprit – one day bringing a kitchen knife along.

    On that day, Feng happened upon another transaction in the same area. He saw what looked like a similar transaction to the one that fooled him, with the fake iPhone appearing to resemble the one sold to him. “Very upset after being cheated,” Feng attacked the sellers with the knife – killing one.

    The reports indicate that the victim died of blood loss after having a major artery in his leg severed.

    Although it’s unclear why Feng expected anything other than a fake iPhone while making purchases on the street, one thing is clear: When you truly want an iPhone – there is no substitute.

  • Apple App Store Hits 25 Billion Downloads

    Apple App Store Hits 25 Billion Downloads

    The Apple App Store has hit 25 billion downloads. Apple.com is currently displaying the following message:

    http://cdn.ientry.com/sites/webpronews/pictures/app-store-25billion.jpg

    The 25 Billion Apps Countdown Promotion allowed one winner to receive a $10,000 gift card for the App Store.

    In its rules for the promotion, Apple said:

    The Promotion shall begin on or about February 13, 2012 and ends with the downloading of the 25 billionth app (“Promotion Period”). For purposes of the Promotion, the downloading of the 25 billionth app is considered to be either the downloading of the 25 billionth app from the App Store or the receipt of the non-purchase entry after the download of the 24,999,999,999th app, whichever comes first. Only entries submitted in this time period will be accepted. Sponsor’s computer is the official time keeping device for this promotion.

    So, as the message on Apple.com says, the promotion is over. This means Apple hit the 25 billion mark (in case the “a billion times over” message wasn’t clear enough).

  • iPad 3, iOS 6 Showing Up In Server Logs

    iPad 3, iOS 6 Showing Up In Server Logs

    With the launch of the iPad 3 (iPad HD?) just days away, it stands to reason that there are a few prototypes floating around Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, California. Maybe they’re using them for last minute testing. Maybe getting one early is one of the perks of working at Apple.

    Whatever the reason, references to the iPad 3 are starting to show up in the server logs of websites. Ars Technica reported today that they had logged visits from 365 devices with a screen resolution of 2048×1536 – dimensions that are apparently pretty rare, but which match the iPad 3’s retina display exactly.

    Retina Display iPad 3 Traffic

    So far, no big surprise. As noted above, we shouldn’t be surprised to learn that there are iPad 3s already being used. The interesting part is what happened when Ars Technica started looking a little more closely at the iPads that had been visiting the site from Apple’s block of IPs in Cupertino. They found iPads running iOS 5.0.1, the current version of the software, as well as iOS 5.1, which is in beta and will likely launch next week with the iPad 3. Even more interestingly, though, they found some iPads running iOS 6. That means that the next major iteration is already far enough into development that they’re testing it on iPads.

    iOS 6 on the iPad

    Of course, the only thing that really tells us about iOS 6 is that it exists. Nevertheless it’s definitely interesting to see confirmation that Apple already has it in the works. While iOS 5.1 will likely release with the iPad, the major iOS updates usually launch with the new iPhone. There’s little real information yet on when Apple will launch their sixth iPhone (often called the iPhone 5). One recent rumor put the iPhone’s launch in September or October. Another report, only slightly less recent, suggested it would happen in June at WWDC. The September-October date would maintain the one-year gap between iPhone releases (the iPhone 4S launched last October). The June WWDC date would fit the pattern that Apple has followed with every other version of the iPhone.

    At any rate, there are very few solid details about the iPhone 5 (6?), or about iOS 6. Expect the rumor mill to start ramping up in the next few months, once the dust from the iPad 3’s launch settles down. In the meantime, you can check out all our coverage of the iPhone 5 here, and our coverage of the iPad 3 here.

  • Firefox Remains Android-Only, No Plans For iOS

    Even though Google’s focus, in relation to smartphone web browsing anyway, is firmly on Google Chrome for the Android, that doesn’t mean Mozilla has any plans of branching out to other mobile phone platforms.

    Thanks to a report at Pocket-lint, Mozilla’s goals for Firefox Mobile have been solidified, saying the Android platform is where the Firefox browser will remain for the time being:

    “We haven’t seen any change there,” [Jay Sullivan, Mozilla’s VP of Products] said at a MWC briefing in Barcelona referring to Mozilla’s relationships with Apple and RIM. “There are no plans for PlayBook or iOS… Right now, aside from Boot to Gecko, we’re really focused on Android,” he said. “It’s really got the market share, it’s where people are and we’re off to a good start.

    “We’ve shipped something like a little over 8 million downloads of the Firefox browser for Android and we have a new update that’s coming up with some massive performance increases including Flash click to play.” [Emphasis added]

    While the Android OS does indeed have the higher market share in relation to smartphone operating systems, the iPhone is still the most popular mobile device. Granted, Mozilla is targeting software as opposed to the hardware that runs these mobile operating systems.

    Because iOS is only available on Apple devices, Mozilla clearly feels its browser will be better suited for the mobile OS that fits multiple devices. As for the potential Android Chrome confliction, Sullivan’s feels there’s room for both browsing platforms:

    “I don’t see that happening. We like to see a competitive browser market and I think Google does too. There are several browsers for Android and Chrome only runs with Ice Cream Sandwich.”

    Sullivan goes on to say that there have been over 8 million downloads of the browser since it became available to Android users, and that an update is soon expected. Apparently, one of the new features includes the ability to play Flash-based multimedia files, which could help explain, in part, anyway, Mozilla’s resistance to the iOS environment.

  • Complaint About Siri In Britain Rejected

    Complaint About Siri In Britain Rejected

    Britain’s Advertising Standards Agency (ASA) has struck down a complaint about Siri, the personal assistant software on the iPhone 4S. The frustrated iPhone owner complained that Siri was not able to direct him to businesses in his area, despite advertising that, he said, suggested it would.

    The ad in question was for Britain’s Vodafone mobile carrier, and focused on some of Siri’s unique capabilities. Here’s the text of the ad:

    Simply ask Siri to help you send messages, set reminders or search for information. It understands not only what you say but also what you mean, so you can speak naturally. It can even use information from your iPhone – such as your location, contacts, and contact relationships – to provide intelligent, personal assistance.

    A disclaimer on the ad emphasized that “Siri may not be available in all languages or in all areas, and features may vary by area.”

    The complainant felt that this ad was misleading, as it failed to make Siri’s limitations in the UK sufficiently clear. Since the actual ad copy came from Apple, not Vodafone, the carrier deferred their defense to Apple. Apple insisted that the ad was not misleading and that Siri does use certain location services in Britain, but that the ad does not say or imply that users in the UK can use Siri to look up business. Apple also said that they had carefully avoided using map images in their British advertising for Siri, in light of the fact that Siri does not have access to map data in the UK.

    The ASA agreed with Apple that the ad did not suggest that Siri could do things it couldn’t in the UK. The ASA ruled that it was neither Apple’s nor Vodafone’s fault if British iPhone users construed advertising in the UK based on their knowledge of what Siri can do in the U.S.

    Siri’s capabilities – or lack thereof – has caused frustration for iPhone users. While the implementation of Siri on U.S. iPhones is generally quite good, the personal assistant software is notoriously bad with accents. Speaking U.S. English with a foreign accent (or U.K English with a Scottish accent) causes all sorts of problems ranging from the hilarious to the infuriating.

    Is the ad misleading? Is Apple (or the carrier) responsible for making it clear just what Siri can and can’t do in a given country? Let us know what you think in the comments.

  • ATF To Switch From BlackBerry To iPhone

    ATF To Switch From BlackBerry To iPhone

    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives has become the most recent organization to abandon Research In Motion’s BlackBerry platform in favor of Apple’s iPhone. According to a recent interview, the agency is planning to “delete the BlackBerry from the mix” of devices they officially support.

    According to the interview, which was published in Politico, the replacement of the agency’s 3,800 BlackBerry devices should be complete within the year. About 60% of the BlackBerry devices will be replaced with iPhones. The transition is apparently set to begin this month.

    To say that things have not been going well for BlackBerry platform lately would be a bit of an understatement. Despite the generally well-received recent update to their PlayBook operating system, and the largely positive buzz about the forthcoming BlackBerry OS 10, they continue to suffer significant losses in market share to the Android and iOS platforms in both the consumer and business markets. At the same time, recent research has shown that over a quarter of corporate IT professionals are making plans to replace their organizations’ BlackBerry devices, while another study showed that Apple’s iOS platform was seen as superior to both BlackBerry and Android by nearly a third of IT professionals.

    Nor is the ATF the first organization to make news by abandoning RIM’s troubled ship. At the beginning of February there were reports that Halliburton was making plans to replace its BlackBerry devices with iOS devices. Just a few days later, an internal memo from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration revealed plans to replace its BlackBerrys with iPhones and iPads.

    What do you think? Is BlackBerry on the way out? Does your business still use BlackBerry devices? Let us know in the comments.

  • AT&T Ending Unlimited Data Plans

    AT&T Ending Unlimited Data Plans

    A report from the Wall Street Journal says that AT&T had decided to eliminate unlimited data plans, saying that it will no longer let customers use more than a set amount of data per month without penalty.

    Under a new policy, AT&T will slow download speeds for unlimited 3G and 4G smartphone customers who exceed 3 gigs and 4G LTE users who exceed 5 gigs of data in a month. AT&T had previously been slowing speeds, or throttling, customers who were in the top 5% of data users in their respective market, sometimes without even notifying them.

    We had hoped that the throttling conversation had ended once AT&T unveiled their tier pricing structure. But here we are again.

    AT&T is having a very hard time managing the capacity on its network in the face of heavy data consumption by iPhone users and a limited supply of wireless spectrum. The carrier is spending billions to build out a new 4G network that can handle more data traffic. AT&T, and other carriers, has been pushing Congress and the FCC to release more licenses for spectrum. Spectrum from old analog television broadcasting signals is the main need that a lot of the main carriers are looking to when talking about expanding.

    In 2008 during a wireless spectrum auction, AT&T bought 227 licenses totaling $6.6 billion in the 12 MHz bandwidth rang. In February, congress approved a bill to auction off more spectrum.

  • New MLB App launches Today Featuring Subscription Plan

    New MLB App launches Today Featuring Subscription Plan

    Major League Baseball has thrown its fans a curveball. Starting today the new MLB.TV app is going to be available on the App Store and Android Marketplace. This time there is a twist. The basic app is completely free to download, where in the past it was $14.99 to download. MLB now offeres a subscription service. You can pay a 1 time fee of $14.99 and get live gameday audio of every team, pitch tracking, and play-by-play updates, plus a free live video stream of one game per day, as selected by MLB. Or you can pay a monthly subscription of $2.99 a month on a month to month basis and get all the stuff that is offered in the one time payment version. Here is the kicker. In the past you had to pay $14.99 each for the phone app and the tablet app. Now the $14.99 fee is on your account. Pay it once and it is good across all platforms. Pay $129.99 for MLB.TV Premium and get the $14.99 option for free. If you are a huge baseball fan like I am, then you will agree that this new payment plan is a great way to save a potential $30 a year.

    Also launching this season is a separate location-based app. You can check in for rewards and team offers, get parking information and concourse maps, and have access to mobile food ordering in any ballparks that offer such features. Other features include closed captioning, the ability to send a text message to security officials, and social sharing to your networks like Facebook and Twitter.

    We’re having an event tonight in NYC to unveil 2012 @MLBTV + @MLB.com At Bat. Should be great. Or not. We’ll see. 21 hours ago via Social Marketing Hub ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

  • Mercedes Bringing Siri To Its A Class

    Mercedes Benz has always been at the fore front of automobile technology. 4 wheel independent suspension in 1931, crash test program in 1958, antilock brakes in 1978. Some of these were pioneered by Mercedes, most were standard in the S-Class years before they were standard on any other manufactures cars.

    Now we get the great announcement that Mercedes is bring Siri to it’s economical A-Class. This is part of Mercedes and their smart car initiative introduced at CES. Siri will easily be accessed through the “Digital DriveStyle App.” With this app you will easily be able to control your phone with the push of a button on the steering wheel. Things like Texts, weather, and music will be able to be controlled with Siri.

    The technology to seamlessly integrate the iPhone into the A-Class was a joint venture between Mercedes-Benz and Apple to develop the Drive Kit Plus for the Apple iPhone. With this new kit drivers can now access all the key content of their Apple iPhone through the in-vehicle touch screen display or you can use it via the controller on the center armrest.

    Now if they could get Siri to drive your car for you, then we could go from New York to San Fransisco in …… Sorry, I don’t understand New York to San Fransisco, do a web search?

    As of the press release there is no current release date for the A-Class in the United States.

  • New iPhone App Sends 30 Photos At Once

    New iPhone App Sends 30 Photos At Once

    A new iPhone app has been released that lets users snd large images and videos, even up to 30 images at a time.

    Kicksend for the iPhone lets consumers send original high quality photos directly from their iPhone to anyones email address or desktop privately. As Kodak shutters their camera and video manufacturing business, mobile sharing is on the rise.

    The eyes may be the windows to the soul but increasingly mobile devices are the eyes of our world as smartphones replace cameras and video cameras as the go-to photo and video device for casual users. In fact, according to the NPD Group, photos taken with a smartphone rose 10 percent in 2012 while the share of photos taken on any camera decreased by 8 percent.

    “We are excited to bring our intuitive and extremely useful file-sending technology to mobile users where it is sorely needed,” said Brendan Lim, Co-Founder and CPO. “The user experience is at the core of everything we do and we are proud to provide an easy, reliable way for iPhone users to send a large number of full quality photos and videos from their iPhone to anyone.”

    “Kicksend is the missing file sending utility for iOS. It’s an essential app that lets you handle any document, file, or photos and video,” said Garry Tan, Venture Partner, Y Combinator.

    Kicksend for iPhone can be downloaded from the app store. The app allows iPhone users to send large batches of photos at one time. Images are not compressed and the original quality of all photos is preserved. Users can also send videos and documents from within other apps. Kicksend is completely secure and private, providing users with complete control over who sees their photos and videos.

    Key features of Kicksend for iPhone include the following:

    * Share large batches of photos. With Kicksend for iPhone you can select up to 30 photos at a time and send to any email address, friend, or even a list of thousands of people.

    * Send in high resolution. Kicksend for iPhone lets you send photos in the same high quality that they were shot in no need to compromise.

    * Sharing made easy. With Kicksend for iPhone, you can send files that are too big to send via email. You can also select files from other iPhone applications and send them through Kicksend.

    * From iPhone to hard drive. Send photos to Kicksend desktop app users. Any files you send are delivered automatically to their hard drives. Whether you are in Boise or Antarctica, you can give send photos instantly, effortlessly and privately to friends and family.

    * Giving and Receiving. Files sent to Kicksend users show up instantly on all of their connected devices. You can stand next to your friend who’s using the Kicksend iPhone app, send him a photo or video, and watch it appear on his screen instantly.

  • Domino’s Pizza Now Covers More Than 80% Of Smartphone Pie With New Android App

    Imagine this fast food miracle: You can now order a pepperoni pizza from the palm of your hand from nearly any Domino’s Pizza in America. Listen, you don’t get to be the recognized world leader in pizza delivery without thinking big. Domino’s Pizza announced today, the launch of its new Android smartphone ordering app. Combined with its existing iPhone app (which launched last June), Domino’s can now offer mobile ordering to more than 80 percent of customers with smartphones.

    The app, compatible with Android version 2.1 and higher, offers customers many of the same convenient features from Domino’s online ordering platform. Hungry customers with the application will be able to search for coupons, order from a full national menu, locate a store with a GPS store locator and even follow their order with Domino’s Tracker. In addition, Domino’s will also offering free Android smartphones to customers who sign up for a new two-year service plan plus data (or extend their current plan which includes data, pending eligibility).

    Russell Weiner, Chief Marketing Officer for Domino’s Pizza said, “We are excited to now connect Domino’s with Android users through this new app. And what better way to celebrate Domino’s new Android app than by offering free Android phones.”

    This new app for Android joins forces with a mobile and online ordering platform that has already had massive success. Domino’s app for iPhone and iPod touch helped Domino’s reach $1 million in total sales in only 28 days. Incredibly, only three months after its release, the application achieved over $1 million in sales for the Pizza giant in a single week. Along with traditional online ordering, mobile ordering makes up 30 percent of Domino’s sales.

    @jsandford Glad you like our iPhone app! I’ll share your suggestion with our development team. 5 days ago via Radian6  ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    @newlywife I love #pizzatracker love!! What’s your favorite theme? 8 days ago via Radian6  ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

  • iPhone Sales Hurt By Lack Of Carrier Subsidies

    iPhone Sales Hurt By Lack Of Carrier Subsidies

    Anyone who has ever tried to buy a contract-free iPhone has first-hand experience with how heavily Apple relies on carrier subsidies to sell its phones. The price difference, usually in the neighborhood of several hundred dollars, is made up for by the contract users purchase with their phones.

    For customers in the United States, this process brings the iPhone into a much more accessible price range. Many overseas carriers, however, do not subsidize phones – particularly smartphones – in the same way. This means that an iPhone in much of Europe costs far more. This, in turn, drives many users to more affordable phones. Many Android-based smartphones, for example, are far cheaper than iPhones even without carrier subsidies.

    This explains some of the recent data we have been seeing concerning the iPhone’s market share in non-U.S. countries. While the iPhone still enjoys a strong user base in many countries, Android has been growing at a much greater rate. For example, one recent report shows that in Britain in the past year Android has surged past the iPhone in both installed base (i.e., the number of overall smartphone users who have Android phones) and in market share (i.e., the number of new phone sales). Meanwhile, the iPhone has also lost market share in China in the last year, dropping to fifth place behind Samsung, Nokia, Huawei Technologies, and ZTE Corporation. While Apple’s recent deal with a second Chinese carrier, China Telecom, may help boost market share somewhat, the iPhone’s price is seen as a major factor in its slip to fifth place.

    Meanwhile, though the iPhone enjoys a substantial chunk of the U.S. market, there is evidence that carriers may be getting the short end of the stick where the iPhone is concerned. The iPhone definitely draws customers to those carriers who have it. T-Mobile, the only major U.S. carrier without the iPhone, lost 800,000 customers in the fourth quarter of 2011 due to its lack of the iPhone. Yet the subsidies on which iPhone sales rely so heavily are apparently not good for carriers. While iPhone sales have done wonders for Apple’s revenue, the subsidies have taken a significant bite out of carrier profits.

    AT&T and Sprint suffer most from the iPhone. AT&T sells more of them than any other carrier, which means that the iPhone takes a bigger chunk of the company’s profits. Sprint, meanwhile, is the smallest carrier with the iPhone, and operates on far smaller margins than AT&T or Verizon. Subsidies for the iPhone take so much out of Sprint’s profits that the company will not even be making money on the device for about three more years. Though the iPhone definitely brings a major boost to carriers in terms of customers, one wonders whether they will be willing to endure the damage to their bottom line forever.

    What do you think? Would you still buy an iPhone without carrier subsidies, or would it be too expensive? Let us know in the comments.

  • Apple Preparing To Adopt A Smaller Dock Connector?

    Apple may be preparing to abandon the current dock connector model found in their iOS and iPad devices, according recent rumors. The shift would be simply a matter of real estate. A smaller connector would allow more room inside the device case for a range of upgraded internal components.

    While such a move may be an inconvenience in the short term for those owning multiple generations of iDevices and won’t be able to use the same cable across devices, the move makes a great deal of sense for Apple. As smartphones become more feature-rich, their components become larger, more power-hungry, or both. In order to get these components into a device that is a size, shape, and weight that users will accept – and that fits Apple’s particular philosophy of how big a phone should be – something has to give. By switching to a smaller dock connector, Apple gains more internal space for either new components or a larger battery, enabling them to maintain the device’s size without sacrificing functionality.

    The move is hardly unprecedented. This same sort of thinking drove Apple to switch from SIM cards to micro SIM cards in the iPhone and 3G-capable iPad. It was also part of the decision to give the iPhone 4 an external antenna. That decision, however, didn’t work out so well for Apple, as the placement of the antenna as a metal band around the outside of the device created reception problems for many users. In fact, the so-called “Antennagate” scandal prompted a class action lawsuit that was recently settled by Apple. As part of the settlement every iPhone 4 owner gets either $15 or a free bumper case.

    [Hat Tip, iMore]

  • Tim Cook Hints At Amazing Apple Products To Come

    Apple CEO Tim Cook addressed a meeting of Apple’s shareholders yesterday, and some of what he had to say offers some interesting hints of things to come. Cook began by noting that this was the first shareholder meeting since the death of Steve Jobs, and used part of the time to pay homage to Jobs and the way his death had impacted Apple as a company.

    Journalists from several news outlets were allowed to view the meeting (though not to sit in), and have published some of Cook’s remarks. Though he naturally did not go into specifics, Cook said that Apple is “working as hard as ever this year,” and that the coming year would see Apple release “some products that will blow your mind.” When one shareholder asked if he should return his recently-bought LG TV within the 60-day return window, Cook declined to comment. Apple has long been thought to be working on an iTV, and rumors of the device have grown stronger in recent months.

    When asked whether Facebook was “friend or foe,” Cook replied that the social networking giant was a friend. He noted that a huge number Apple’s users are also Facebook users, and suggested that “the two companies could do more together,” noting that Twitter integration in iOS and the forthcoming OS X Mountain Lion had been “great for Twitter,” as well as Apple’s users. Two years ago, when Apple was preparing to launch iOS 4 along with the iPhone 4, the company was rumored to be in talks with Facebook to add OS-level Facebook integration to the iPhone. Those talks apparently fell through, leading Apple to integrate Twitter instead. In January iOS developers found references to Facebook in the beta version of iOS 5.1, leading many to believe that iOS 5.1, likely to launch with the iPad 3 in March, will include Facebook integration. Cook’s comments don’t quite confirm that Apple is working toward Facebook integration, but the do strongly imply it.

    Cook was also asked what Apple intended to do with it’s $100 billion cash stockpile. Without going into specifics, he said that the company has been “thinking about cash very deeply,” and wanted to take care in making decisions as to what to do with it, so as to best serve Apple’s shareholders. When asked whether Apple had considered using the money to buy a content-generation company – a music label or a movie studio – Cook noted that Apple hadn’t needed its own music label for its accomplishments in the music industry, and that Apple’s focus would continue to be on devices and content delivery (i.e., the iTunes store), rather than on content generation.

    Finally, Cook was enthusiastic about Apple’s recent forays into education with the launch of iBooks 2 and the company’s e-textbook initiative. He noted that Apple has given nearly a billion dollars – either in discounts or equipment – in 2011.

  • Chinese Officials Raid “Apple China” Warehouse, Seize iPhone Gas Stove

    Most everybody knows that when you go to China, you have to be careful of the products you buy. While many of the products you can buy in China are, of course, genuine, there are also a lot of knock-offs. If you find a deal on a Rolex watch, for example, that’s too good to be true, you can bet that it’s probably a fake. There have even been examples of a variety of fake electronics – from gaming consoles to tablets and smartphones – reported in the country.

    Now it looks like one Chinese company has decided to try and cash in on the popularity of Apple’s iPhone in a way that’s a little… novel. According to the Chinese blog Sina (Google Translation), a company calling ltself “Apple China” was caught selling an iPhone gas stove. From the pictures Sina posted (including the one above) it looks like they stuck an Apple logo and the word “iphone” on a perfectly ordinary stove. Law enforcement officials in Wuhan, China raided a warehouse and seized boxes full of the stoves. In addition to the image above, Sina posted two other images of a Chinese officer holding the stove. In the background you can see the boxes of stoves. Check them out below, then tell us what you think in the comments.

    iPhone Gas Stove

    iPhone Gas Stove