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Tag: iPhone

  • iPhone Robbers: We Don’t Want Your Droids, BlackBerries

    Apparently, we have some elitist muggers roaming around Columbia University.

    A pair of robbers are targeting students in Upper Manhattan, and they are taking the worst thing imaginable – their iPhones. I’m not using “iPhone” and a generic term for “smartphone” like saying “Kleenex” for “tissue.” I mean they are taking iPhones – and only iPhones.

    If the students don’t happen to have the popular Apple device, these guys refuse to take anything else as a substitute. Android? No Thanks. Blackberry? Get real.

    From NBCNewYork:

    Twice at 526 114th St., and once at 556 114th St., the suspects demanded the victims hand over their iPhones, police said.

    The first victim complied, but the second only had a Droid, according to police. The thieves apparently didn’t want a Droid — so they took cash instead.

    One student was quoted as saying, “It’s insulting they don’t want my Blackberry.” Columbia Campus police suggest that it might be the high resale value of the iPhone that’s making these robbers so picky. I’d like to believe that they just can’t bear the thought of losing the silky smooth vocal stylings of Siri.

    Whatever the case may be, Apple could definitely spin this into a new ad campaign. “The iPhone 4S: Because when you want an iPhone, nothing else will do. Just ask these robbers.”

    Check out the video below for some surveillance footage of the incidents. Maybe that guy’s right. Maybe Columbia students just need to carry old Blackberries and offer them up the next time they are accosted by our iPhone-only thieves.

  • Apple Brings Chip Manufacturing Closer to Home

    Apple’s A5 processor, the chip that lies at the heart of all the company’s latest iOS devices, has historically been made where nearly all of Apple’s components are made: Asia. Apple contracts with several Asian companies for many of the components for its products. Chinese company Foxconn, for example, is responsible for assembling most of Apple’s gadgets. Several Japanese companies are responsible for other parts as well. In fact, there has been much speculation that the delay in the release of this year’s iPhone 4S was due in large part to the tsunami’s influence on production from Japanese plants.

    For its processors, Apple has long contracted with Korean-based Samsung. Historically, Samsung has manufactured its components overseas, mainly in Korea. Recently, however, the company that manufactures the chips has invested in a multi-billion dollar facility in Austin, Texas and have moved production of the component there.

    In the peculiar way that large companies have of working together, Apple has remained one of the electronics giant’s biggest customers, despite the ongoing legal feud between the two over Samsung’s Galaxy Tab and Galaxy phones. Samsung has supplied Apple with the A5 chip since the launch of the iPad 2, the first device to carry it, earlier this year. At the same time, Samsung has been in fierce competition with Apple. Its Android-based Galaxy devices – especially the Galaxy Tab 10.1 and the just-launched Galaxy Nexus, are widely regarded as some of the strongest competition for Apple’s iPhone and iPad devices.

    The facility, which cost roughly $3.6 billion and is expected to reach full production soon, is devoted almost entirely to the manufacture of Apple’s A5 chips, which are currently to be found in the iPad 2 and iPhone 4S. The chip, which has double the speed of its predecessor, the A4, was designed in-house by Apple.

    [Source: Reuters]

  • iPhone: iOS 5.0.1 Clears Path for Siri on Older Phones

    Late yesterday Apple released a very minor update to it’s iPhone operating system, iOS 5. Shortly after the phone’s release a few months ago, Apple released a build of iOS 5.0.1. Yesterday’s update is, confusingly, also iOS 5.0.1, but it is a slightly newer build of the software. The change is decidedly odd, as Apple usually does not release new builds of the same versions of its software, except in beta testing. The update seems even stranger, however, when you consider that iOS 5.1 is likely to drop fairly soon.

    Initial reports were that it was unclear what exactly Apple had changed with the new build. That changed after a fairly well-known figure in the iOS jailbreak community, MuscleNerd, reported that the change had left the iPhone’s file system unencrypted.

    Huh…today’s 4S 5.0.1 bump (9A406) has wide open main fs http://t.co/HVv6usxi 19 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    What that means is that the files responsible for Siri, the iPhone 4S’s vaunted voice assistant feature, are now unencrypted and accessible to programmers. With access to those files, jailbreakers could port Siri to older devices without breaking Apple’s encryption, and therefore without violating Apple’s copyright. Apple has claimed that Siri would not work properly on older phones because they lack the processing power of the iPhone 4S. The app on which Siri is built, Siri Assistant, which was acquired by Apple last year, ran on the iPhone 4, as well as the iPhone 3GS.

    Why Apple would have decrypted the file system is anyone’s guess. The likeliest explanation is that it was a mistake, and that either the update got published accidentally, or it was a rush job. If so, then we can expect it to be re-encrypted with iOS 5.1, if not sooner. In the meantime, however, we can probably expect ports of Siri to start showing up in the jailbreak community fairly soon.

    [Hat Tip: Cult of Mac]

  • iPhones In Higher Demand Than Expected

    CNN Money reported this morning that demand for Apple’s iPhone has been higher than expected. According to proprietary survey data gathered by Alphawise and published by Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty in a note to clients.

    Various models for predicting iPhone sales predicted that Apple would sell anywhere from 28-30 million iPhones in the fourth quarter of 2011, while the Alphawise survey suggests that the number will actually be somewhere between 31 and 36 million. The same survey predicts sales of 190 million iPhones and 81 million iPads, significantly higher than predictions by Morgan Stanley (134 million iPhones and 52 million iPads) and Wall Street (127 million iPhones and 54 million iPads).

    Alphawise Survey Data

    Meanwhile, the survey also found that the demand for tablets would likely increase. While only 8% of respondents to the survey owned tablets, 27% said they were planning to buy them.

    [Source: CNN Money]

  • Exclusive: iOS Will Get Facebook Timeline In Upcoming Update

    Facebook made the timeline feature available to all today. It even launched on mobile for Android devices and for the mobile web at m.facebook.com.

    Interestingly, it did not immediately launch for iOS, which as I pointed out in previous coverage, usually gets special treatment over Android. For instance, the mobile app refresh just came to Android over the past week. It came to iPhone some time ago.

    Well, iOS users, don’t fret, because the Timelines feature is on the way to your app too. A Facebook representative tells WebProNews:

    Timeline on iPhone will be available in an upcoming update of the Facebook for iOS app. You can access Timeline on the iPhone by visiting m.facebook.com.

    Here’s what the timeline looks like on mobile, if you haven’t already seen it.

    Note: The iPhone Facebook app has 99,000,000 monthly active users, according to its app page (pictured above). It is the top free app in the App Store.

  • Grand Theft Auto III Comes to iOS and Android

    Ten years ago Grand Theft Auto III hit the video game world with a major splash. The controversial but critically acclaimed game allowed users to commit a wide array of petty crimes in an amazingly open environment. Users could travel all through the game’s Liberty City setting – every street, alley, and sidewalk was open to users. Though the game, which was available on the PlayStation 2, the Microsoft Xbox, and Windows PCs, had a story line with tasks for the player to complete, they could just as easily ignore the missions, wandering through the city and causing mayhem at will. Though wildly popular, the game caused quite a stir with some of the things it allowed players to do – including killing prostitutes and taking their money – and prompted Walmart and some other retailers to institute stricter rules governing to whom they sold M-rated games.

    The game’s maker, Rockstar Games, announced earlier this month that they would be bringing the controversial classic to Apple’s App Store and the Android App Market. The app, which launched around midnight, is $4.99. The iOS version is a universal app, playable on both the iPhone and the iPad [iTunes Link]. A gameplay video is embedded below.

    Twitter reactions to the release of the game display little of the controversy of a decade ago. Most users seem excited about the release, though one expresses doubts about the viability of a console port doing well on mobile devices.

    Can’t wait to get GTA III for my iPad tonight. I lost a girlfriend to the PS2 version and regret nothing. 7 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    GTA 3 on iPhone is amazing. http://t.co/us60eejZ 19 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Console ports on smartphones have novelty value but tend to be wildly overpraised because of it. “Tee hee! GTA III on my iPhone! 10/10!” 5 hours ago via Silver Bird · powered by @socialditto

    In the ten years since GTA III released, the Grand Theft Auto franchise has gone on to spawn a further nine games, with a tenth (the fifteenth game in the series overall) in the works. Rockstar announced Grand Theft Auto V (not all the games in the series get numbers) via Twitter in October and debuted a trailer on their homepage in November. The game is scheduled for a 2012 release.

    What do you think of GTA III going mobile? Have you played it? Will you? Sound off in the comments.

  • Bill Gates Talks About Returning To Microsoft & Steve Jobs

    Although he’s technically on vacation with his family in Australia, Bill Gates took some time to sit down for an interview today with Tim Lester of Fairfax Media to discuss a few topics that have been swirling around the Microsoft founder.

    Earlier this month rumors began to circulate that Gates was considering returning to the helm of Microsoft, but Gates was quick to dismiss any speculation on the subject. He denied the rumors and restated his devotion to work with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation “full-time.” He said that, although he does still maintain contacts within Microsoft, he considered his involvement to be limited to giving advice as the “foundation requires all of [his] energy.” He went on to share his enthusiasm about working alongside scientists and other experts and being able to appreciate the impact that the Foundation has had. But alas, he is not “keen on going back to the old job.”

    A certain Boo Berry out there probably cackled with delight at that news. And speaking of Steve Jobs, Lester brought up some barbed criticisms that the late Apple boss had made about Gates. He took Jobs’ pugnacious words in stride, though, and said that Jobs was probably tough on Microsoft because they consistently outsold Apple machines. Gates remained diplomatic with his comments on Jobs – the guy just died and people still revere him as if he hung the moon, so can you blame Gates for treading carefully through this thicket? The slightest cross word about Jobs would probably result in Gates being iTar-and-feathered – and acknowledged that Jobs was a “brilliant person” who he enjoyed both working with and competing against.

    In what was probably one of the more enjoyably awkward moments of the interview, Lester asked Gates if he used any of the Apple products such as the iPhone. Gates was steadfast with his allegiance to Microsoft and assured Lester that “there are fantastic Windows phones” and that he is “the most avid Microsoft user you’ll meet.” Lester joked that he was going to ask Gates to get out his phone to prove he wasn’t an iPhone user, but Gates waved it off.

    The article component to this interview revisits the clash of the computer titans. Gates and Jobs have gone back and forth at each other over the years, so this rehash of their rivalry isn’t really anything new (and nothing new was really said here). The full interview, however, will be published tomorrow in the Sydney Morning Herald.

  • Intel Jumps On The NFC Bandwagon With New Deal

    INSIDE Secure, a company that specializes in near-field communication technology, announced today that it had entered into a partnership with Intel to provide the company with NFC techology to include in its chipsets. The agreement grants Intel full access to a range of INSIDE’s NFC products, including hardware, software, and firmware.

    Near-field communication (NFC) technology has been drawing quite a bit of attention lately. The technology has been making its way into a variety of devices, including MasterCard’s PayPass system, and several recent models of Android-based smartphone. There are a number of applications that use the technology for a variety of tasks, including exchanging files and and contact information. There are also a number of systems either in the works or already available that allow smartphone owners to use their phone’s NFC capabilities to as a mobile wallet, much like MasterCard’s aforementioned PayPass system. Mobile carriers Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile are cooperating to bring a mobile payment system called ISIS online, while Google recently released their own Google Wallet mobile payment solution (though not without difficulties).

    Rumors circulated widely at the beginning of this year that the iPhone 5 (eventually released as the iPhone 4S) would include NFC technology, however that turned out not to be the case. The iPhone rumor mill is unusually quiet for this time of year – owing, no doubt, to the later-than-normal release of the current iPhone model. When it grinds back into action, however, we can probably expect NFC to pop up again.

    There is no information on what exactly Intel intends to do with the technology to which it gains access as part of this deal, however the potential applications are legion. Intel makes chips that go in an array of devices ranging from computers to smartphones and tablets to televisions to in-car infotainment systems. There are a myriad of potential uses for NFC in any of these devices.

  • Microsoft Rolls Out SkyDrive App for Windows Phone, iPhone

    Microsoft debuted their SkyDrive app yesterday for iPhone and Windows Phone. For those not yet familiar with it, SkyDrive is Microsoft’s cloud service you can use to access your documents, notes, photos, etc. from any computer. SkyDrive is already integrated into the Windows Phone OS but this app simplifies the process of uploading and sharing documents for people who rely pretty heavily on the service. As with most cloud services, SkyDrive is a great way to avoid using up your phone’s hard drive space with superfluous files. It’s an easy service to use when you need to share files with someone and now Microsoft has improved the accessibility of SkyDrive for many smartphone users.

    Aside from the general UI difference inherent to the phones, the app works very similarly on iPhones and Windows Phones. As of right now, the SkyDrive app is available everywhere that Microsoft offers the Windows Phone though they hope to make it available in more regions. No word yet if Android devices will be getting any SkyDrive app love, but that remains to be seen.

    The SkyDrive team have provided some walk-through tutorial videos for both of the Windows Phone and iPhone.

    At first glance, the SkyDrive app appears to be a suitable and competitive alternative to Apple’s iCloud as well as with third party apps like Evernote. Among the many file sharing cloud services out there, how many of you already do or are planning to make use of Microsoft’s SkyDrive app?

  • You Can Now Brew Coffee With Your iPhone, iPad

    In what can only be described as the apotheosis of living in the most industrialized and pampered era that has ever existed, now there is this: gourmet coffee shop-style beverages that you brew from a control panel on your iOS device. Like so:

    Yes. If grinding beans or measuring out coffee grounds or inserting a filter inside of your Mr. Coffee brewer has become far too arduous of a task within your morning routine, you can now invest your coffee enjoyment into a new machine called TopBrewer. Manufactured by Denmark-based company Scanomat, the suped-up coffee brewer can be easily controlled from your iPhone or iPad. All you have to do is put in your order using the app (yes, you must treat this coffee-making machine like it’s your personal barista and “put in an order”). The app gives you a pretty staggering array of control over what kind of drink you want, ranging from what temperature you want your drink to selecting which type of espresso drink you’d like to have.

    For a full scope of what the TopBrewer can do, engorge your eyes in the espresso-porn video provided by Scanomat:

    The app is alleged to be available already in Apple’s iTunes Store but I couldn’t find it. Luckily, an iOS device isn’t explicitly required since you can still control TopBrewer through the archaic method of pressing buttons on the actual device. Despite my previous ravings above about the TopBrewer, it is a very pretty piece of equipment and actually does you one better by cleaning itself (the world’s first house-broken coffee brewer!). Scanomatic also boasts that the TopBrewer contains “the smallest milk foamer in the world,” which they patented, and can be built to fit into any countertop.

    In addition to the sleek, IKEA showroom-ready design and completely silent brewing process, it also claims to filter brew a cup of coffee in ridiculously fast 15 seconds. In a mere 25 seconds, you can have a cup of “perfectly brewed” espresso. I don’t even get out of bed that quickly in the morning, but at least the coffee would be ready for me by the time I peeled myself out of grogginess.

    Scanomat’s website doesn’t even list a price for the TopBrewer, which only leads me to assume that the cost of this device would probably be enough to pay off my student loans (and my student loans are steep). Still. This is Future Coffee with brand new Future Taste; like something George Jetson would have designed except for the fact that TopBrewer actually functions correctly. So supposing that the money you’d put into this device wasn’t also enough to offset the national debt, would you ever consider getting one of these machines? Please comment below if you would (or why you wouldn’t). I’m really curious what people think about this.

  • Microsoft Releases Kinectimals for iOS

    Microsoft Releases Kinectimals for iOS

    Microsoft software on Apple devices is hardly anything new. Office for Mac is one of the best-selling Apple software packages available. Neither is Microsoft software in the Apple App Store anything particularly new. The company has a number of apps in its rival’s store, including the recently released My Xbox Live app. One thing, however, Microsoft has never done: put a game in the App Store. That changed today with the release of Kinectimals [iTunes link].

    The $2.99 app is a companion to the title of the same name on the company’s Xbox 360 console. In fact, those who already own Kinectimals for their Xbox can use the new app to unlock five new cubs to play with on the console version.

    The news was broken this morning by Larry Hryb (@majornelson) on Twitter:

    Kinectimals is now available for your iOS device http://t.co/jSSMvg4U 6 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Reactions on Twitter tended toward the sardonic:

    Seriously, Kinectimals for iOS today, Sonic CD for iOS tomorrow… What’s coming out on Thursday, New Super Mario Bros iPad? 43 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Microsoft Cranks Out Two More iPhone Apps: Kinectimals and SkyDrive. Redmond is quite the iOS developer these days http://t.co/AAmgzhnx 1 hour ago via Tweet Button · powered by @socialditto

    Here are some screen shots from the app:

    Kinectimals

    Kinectimals

    What do you think of Microsoft developing games for the Apple App Store? Let us know in the comments.

  • Nokia: Kids Don’t Want iPhone or Android Anymore

    If I’m reading this correctly, at least one person at Nokia believes that the Windows Phone platform is perfect for Hipsters and technologically impaired ducks.

    In an interview with Pocket-lint, Nokia’s Director of Portfolio, Product Management & Sales Niels Munksgaard laid out his beliefs on why the Windows phone is better than its competitors:

    “What we see is that youth are pretty much fed up with iPhones. Everyone has the iPhone,” he said. “Also, many are not happy with the complexity of Android and the lack of security. So we do increasing see that the youth that wants to be on the cutting edge and try something new are turning to the Windows phone platform.”

    Basically, the “anti-another brick in the wall” advertising strategy, coupled with the “that’s too hard” advertising strategy.

    He goes on to (presumably) refer to iPhones as “black mono-boxes” in a “sea of sameness”:

    “The marketplace is extremely crowded. I refer to it as the sea of sameness. When you walk up to a retail shelf at Phones4U and see the number of black mono-blocks sitting on the shelf, it is very confusing to the consumer. We want to deliver services and phones that are different.”

    His solution to this is in part, the Nokia Lumia 800. Now, I haven’t had the chance for a hands on with that device, but it has been getting pretty solid reviews around the web. It’s no dig at the Windows-powered Nokia Lumia 800 when I say that this argument is hilarious.

    To say that the “youth” (whatever broad range that informs) is fed up with the iPhone is kind of a stretch. Not only do recent reports earlier this year suggest that teens love their iPhones, but your average, everyday, unscientific sniff test tells you that the iPhone is still mighty popular with the kids.

    I don’t know where to begin on the “complexity of Android” argument.

    All I know is that it doesn’t look great when a company selling an OS that is desperately trying to compete with giants starts saying that nobody likes said giants anymore. In September, HTC’s president Martin Fitcher said that iPhones weren’t cool anymore, and kids don’t want them because their dad’s have them.

    My head hurts…

  • Man Shot By Mother-In-Law, Records It All On His iPhone

    It’s unfortunate for wonderful, loving, sane mothers-in-law that some off-balanced nutjobs have to go any perpetuate the whole “crazy mother-in-law” joke. Truly, a shame.

    What’s not a shame for 39-year-old Salvatore Miglino of Boca Raton is that his iPhone might just be the key witness in a crime reportedly borne of familial bickering.

    According to the Broward County Sheriff’s Office, Miglino went to the home of his estranged mother-in-law, 66-year-old Cheryl Hepner, to pick up his 3-year-old kid for his court-mandated visitation. Apparently, Miglino and Hepner’s daughter are in the midst of a divorce.

    After a brief discussion, Hepner allegedly pulled out a .22 caliber Beretta and shot Miglino twice – in the shoulder and the rib cage.

    Luckily for Miglino, he had expected some sort of confrontation (although by the sound of his voice, obviously not any involving firearms), so he hit the record button on his iPhone before getting out of his car. The 90-seconds of footage has just been released by investigators and is making the rounds on the internet.

    In the video, we don’t get much in the way of visuals. But the audio paints a pretty vivid picture of what happens:

    According to the CBS local affiliate in Miami, operators received two distinct 911 calls – one from Hepner and one from Miglino. As you would expect, one doesn’t exactly corroborate the other:

    Hepner: I tried to grab the gun and shoot. I don’t know.
    911: Did you guys scuffle for the gun?
    Hepner: Yes he had me down on the floor on the ground outside.
    911: Did he pull the gun on you or did you pull it on him?
    Hepner: No he pulled the gun on me and he’s got it and he drove away.

    ///

    Miglino: Oh my God. I’m shot.
    911: Ok
    MIglino: I took the gun away from her. I have it.
    911: Where are you shot?
    Miglino: On my shoulder and on my side. I can’t believe she shot me!

    The Broward Sheriff’s Office says that the gun jammed, and that’s probably the only reason that Miglino is alive. Hepner has been charged with attempted first-degree murder.

    “The victim knew that something wasn’t right,” a BSO spokesman said. “He knew that there would possibly be a confrontation, he had the foresight to hit record on his iPhone. Thank goodness he did.”

    [Via The Smoking Gun]
    [Image Courtesy]

  • BBC iPlayer Comes to iPhone, But Not America

    The BBC has announced that their popular iPlayer app has come to the iPhone today. The free app allows access to live streaming of the BBC’s television and radio programming, as well as a significant archive of BBC’s older content, in some cases going back to the 1960s. Users can stream content to their phones whether they are on a wifi network or their carrier’s 3G data network, and the app is designed to adjust picture quality automatically depending on the user’s 3G signal strength.

    BBC iPlayer for iPhone

    Along with the release of the iPhone app, the iPad version receives an update today allowing it to stream over 3G data networks as well. An update for the Android app is also in the works, though the new version will continue to only stream over wifi.

    The original app debuted in Britain in February, followed in July by the launch of a global version of the app in eleven countries, including France, Germany, Italy, and Ireland, with promises that Australia, Canada, and the US would follow by the end of the year. The app became available in Australia in September and Canada last week, but has still not come to America.

    The iPlayer service launched several years ago and has become immensely popular in Britain, where iPlayer viewership has come to represent a significant percentage of total viewers, particularly of the network’s more popular shows like Doctor Who and Top Gear. The global app allows users access to all the same content as the British version, but for a fee. While British users’ viewing is covered by their country’s television license fee, users in other countries are required to pay a fee, either monthly or annually, to access the content.

  • Zite Makes the Jump to iPhone

    In a week that has seen news of Flipboard and Google Currents both coming to the iPhone, popular news personalization app Zite (iTunes link) completes the trifecta today by releasing its own iPhone version.

    Zite debuted in March with an iPad app that delivered personalized news. The app allowed users to input their preferences, as well as their Twitter, Google Reader, and Read It Later accounts, then used that data to craft a news homepage tailored to their interests. The app delivers users a collection of news stories it thinks they will like and, in Pandora-like fashion, gives them the option to like or dislike stories. It incorporates users’ preferences and learns from them, in order to bring users more of the kinds of stories they want to see, and fewer of those they don’t. It also provides users a variety of sharing options, so they can post stories to Twitter, Facebook, and more.

    Zite's Top Stories

    Zite's Story Display

    Zite's Sharing Options

    The app is universal, which means it will run on both iPhone and iPad without the need to download separate apps. More importantly, it allows users to set up a profile, so that those who have been using the iPad app since March can transfer their preferences to the iPhone version without having to re-train the app.

    The company took to Twitter and its blog to announce the release today.

    Zite puts the power of personalization on your iPhone, available today: http://t.co/qdufTDbQ 1 hour ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    The release of the iPhone app comes on the same day as the news that Zite for iPad was selected as a top news app in the Apple Rewind 2011 roundup, which listed of the top music, movies, and apps in the iTunes store for 2011.

    Zite is honored to be selected as one of the Apple Rewind 2011 top News Apps – http://t.co/zQsHWayW http://t.co/g9mfesO9 2 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    CNN announced in August that it was acquiring Zite for an undisclosed amount, but that it intended to leave the 8-person startup to run itself as a standalone company.

    What do you think of Zite? Let us know in the comments.

  • New iPhone/iPod Dock Promises Concert Quality Sound, for a Price

    Audio equipment company Behringer announced today that it will be introducing the iNuke Boom (yes, that really is its name) at next year’s Consumer Electronics Show.

    The company, which makes high-quality and affordable electronic equipment for professional musicians, said in its press release that it was trying to make the biggest, loudest iPhone and iPod dock ever. The dock, which at 8 feet wide and 4 feet tall is a foot longer and nearly twice as tall as most caskets, weighs 700 pounds, puts out 10,000 Watts of power and comes with a MSRP of $29,999.

    The iNuke is the first product in Behringer’s new Eurosound line of products, which is intended to bring European design sensibilities to the company’s products. The Eurosound line will be broken into four categories, with products for home use, mobile use, live performance, and music creation.

    The one existing iNuke prototype will be on display at the company’s booth at CES 2012 in January. The announcement caused some buzz on Twitter, where most were astounded at the size of the device.

    You will need a pick up truck to transport this iPhone speaker dock. http://t.co/eeG1nC1M 2 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Based on the size of this thing I think iNuke is the appropriate term. http://t.co/3ue0DBHg 1 hour ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    What do you think? Is this overkill? A grab for attention? Let us know in the comments.

  • Instagram Finally Coming To Android

    Everyone’s favorite iPhone photography app, Instagram, is finally coming to Android devices.

    We have two people working on Android now,” Kevin Systrom, CEO of Instagram said at the LeWeb conference in Paris. “I’m excited to be able to see our numbers today nearly double.”

    Instagram, which allows users to apply multiple effects to their photos, via filters, has a staggering userbase of 50 million on iOS devices, according to CNET. Those are some huge numbers when you consider they’re competeing daily with the likes of Facebook and Apple.

    No additional Instagram for Android details, or timeline, were announced at Leweb.

    Will Instagram be a success on Android devices? Tell us your thoughts below.

  • Amazon’s New App To Swipe Sales From Brick & Mortar Stores

    In what looks like an attempt to capitalize on shoppers’ use of their smartphones when buying Christmas gifts this season, the Grinch Amazon has introduced a free new app that will give consumers a 5% discount (but only up to $5) on certain electronics, toys, sports, music, and DVDs – in other words, some of the coolest, most popular gifts. All you have to do is go to a “brick and mortar” store, browse around until you find an item you’d like to purchase, and then enter its barcode into the app via scan, photo, text, or speech. Once the price is entered, you’ll receive the discount on the item when you buy it from Amazon.

    Did you see what Amazon just did there?

    When you see something you want in a store and instead of buying it in the store you are already in, Amazon wants you to use their app and buy it from them and, as a reward, Amazon will give you a discount. Understandably, the Retail Industry Leaders Association, an advocacy organization that watches out some of the top retailers in the U.S., is calling shenanigans on Amazon’s latest attempt to snatch up business from brick-and-mortar retailers with a press release they issued this afternoon:

    Arlington, VA –The Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) reacted to a new smartphone App from Amazon.com that encourages holiday shoppers to use brick and mortar stores as showrooms to then purchase merchandise online from inside the store.   Central to this tactic is Amazon’s continued practice of using a pre-internet loophole to avoid state sales tax collection, a move that gives them an unfair competitive advantage over Main Street retailers.

    “Retailers compete on price 365 days a year, and at no time is that competition hotter than during the make-or-break holiday shopping season.  However, by continuing to evade collecting state sales taxes, Amazon’s exploitation of a pre-Internet tax loophole is resulting in a 6-10 percent perceived price advantage over their competitors on Main Street,” said Katherine Lugar, executive vice president of public affairs.

    “Amazon’s aggressive promotion of its Price Check App shows the lengths they are willing to go to exploit this tax loophole, and is a stark reminder of why Congress needs to act to protect retailers on Main Street.  A failure to act is an implicit endorsement of a subsidy of Amazon, a subsidy that distorts the free market and puts jobs on Main Street at risk,” said Lugar.

    RILA supports bipartisan legislation introduced in the House and in the Senate that would level the playing field and force all retailers to compete under the same rules. In a hearing last week before the House Judiciary Committee, Congressman Mike Pence (R-IN) summed up the need for Congressional action by saying:

    “I don’t think Congress should be in the business of picking winners and losers. Inaction by Congress today results in a system today that does pick winners and losers.”

    Gruenwald, Juliana, “Congress Urged to Close Online Sales-Tax Loophole,” National Journal, 11/30/11

    “Main Street retailers have been forced to compete on an uneven playing field for too long. Retailers cannot afford another holiday season where they are forced to compete on an uneven playing field,” added Lugar.
     

    Even if Amazon’s underhanded scheme should have some appeal with consumers, luckily for brick-and-mortar retailers the discount-offering app is only good from 9PM December 9th to 11:59PM December 10th and customers can only use the app up to three times. Still, it’s hard not to agree with the accusations RILA has stamped onto Amazon.

    Do you think the RILA’s on the right track here? Or should Amazon be permitted to do this? Chime in below with your comments.

  • Flipboard Launches iPhone App

    Flipboard Launches iPhone App

    Flipboard, a popular newsreader app for the iPad, is finally making its way to the iPhone today. The app has been completely reengineered for the iPhone’s smaller screen, yet still maintains the high-quality magazine-like format people have came to love.

    With the iPhone we redesigned Flipboard for a new use case, where people want to find the things they care about even faster and multiple times every day,” said Mike McCue, CEO of Flipboard.

    Introducing Flipboard for iPhone: http://t.co/J3Ko83yB 9 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    The iPhone app includes a new feature called Cover Stories, which highlights social media posts that are most likely to interest the user. Cover Stories work much like the News Feed in Facebook, but it combines posts from Instagram, Tumblr, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google Reader, and numerous others. This allows users to catch up with their social profiles quicker and from one location. At the moment Cover Story is only available for the iPhone version of Flipboard, but McCue said the feature is coming to the iPad in the coming months.

    To further promote the new iPhone app, Flipboard has released the following video entitled: Precious moments on Flipboard for iPhone.

    Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide marketing, Phil Schiller, seems to be a fan of the Flipboard iPhone app, as he tweeted the following:

    New Flipboard app for iPhone is very nice. @flipboard 5 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Have you downloaded the Flipboard iPhone app? If so, tell us what you think below.

  • Holiday Hazards, Geeks, and iPhone Evolution

    Today’s infographic round-up looks at holiday hazards, current states of wealth, the iPhone evolution and the evolution of the geek. Enjoy.

    View more daily infographic round-ups here.

    Holiday Hazards

    via

    The Current States of Wealth

    The Evolution of the Geek

    by Flowtown via

    The iPhone Evolution

  • Apple Fails to Get Samsung Injunction in US

    The ongoing battle between Samsung and Apple has another chapter. A US federal judge declined Apple’s request for an injunction to block sales of Samsung’s Galaxy line of smartphones and tablets. The ruling, released late on Friday by US District Judge Lucy Koh, refused to grant the injuction that would have prevented sales of the devices in the US.

    Friday’s ruling came closely on the heels of an opposite ruling in Australia, where an injunction that had been overturned was extended by one more week, in order to give Apple time to have its appeal heard.

    The cases in the US and Australia are two of over 20 cases being heard in ten countries. Apple filed the suits against Samsung in April, alleging that the Samsung devices were, in effect, ripoffs of Apple’s iPhone and iPad devices. Apple argues that the design of the Galaxy phones and Tabs copied the style, user interface, and packaging of Apple’s products. While Apple’s original suit was filed only in the United States, Samsung responded by filing counter suits in the US (which it later dropped), South Korea (where Samsung is based), Germany, France, and Japan. Apple fired back, filing suits or counter suits in Australia, Japan, Germany, and South Korea. Samsung accuses Apple of violating a number of patents related to the basic function of mobile phones. Both companies have sought injunctions against the import and sale of each others’ devices.

    Digital Trends has a thorough (though slightly outdated) breakdown of the ongoing conflict between the two companies, which may be found here.