WebProNews

Tag: iPhone

  • Gmail App For iPhone: Already Submitted, Looking Fantastic

    Today, you’ll find that a lot of people have iPhones. You’ll also find that a lot of people use Google’s Gmail as their primary email. And a lot of those people with iPhones use Gmail – this writer included. And if you’re one of those people, you know that there is no native Gmail app for iOS.

    Gmail users with iPhones have had to resort to one of two less-than-perfect solutions to this problem. They can either set up their Gmail account through Apple’s native email app (which lacks keys Gmail features) or they can use the Gmail web interface (which is pretty good, if not perfect).

    Until now. MG Siegler is reporting that multiple sources have confirmed the imminent launch of the native Gmail app for iPhone.

    He says that the app has already been submitted to Apple for approval, and it should be approved pretty soon.

    According to his sources that have seen the Gmail app, it’s not going to disappoint.

    The new Gmail app for iPhone will bring the all-important push notifications, a functionality that is a real pain without the native app.

    The new app will also have other important abilities like Priority Inbox and one-click starring of messages. It’s possible that the app could even contain some new Gmail features like contact icons and deep searching. Siegler speculates that it could even include some Google+ integration.

    Considering that the Gmail app for iPhone is a solid app without bugs and design problems (and these sources seem pretty confident of that fact), then this is great news. Users have been waiting years for a native Gmail app for their iOS devices. Hopefully, everything works out and we see it pop up in the app store in the upcoming weeks.

  • Siri on iPhone 4 & An iPad Halloween Costume

    Today’s video round-up has a good mix of Halloween festivities and technology. More people, however, are probably interested in getting Siri on their iPhone 4.

    View more daily video round-ups here.

    iPad 2 Halloween costume:

    Pumpkin explosion:

    Siri hacked onto iPhone 4:

    Google’s Halloween Doodle:

    Apple’s new iPhone 4S/iCloud TV spot:

    Kitchen knife nunchucks:

    The Kinect Effect (note the symphonic version of “Where is My Mind” playing in the background):

    Google Chrome Movember (this is why Matt Cutts is growing a Moustache):

    C3 Technologies (mapping company now owned by Apple):

  • Big Ideas Digital, iOS Game Developer Raises Money To Help Girl Walk

    Grace Windram is a five year old girl in the UK, who has been living with Spastic Dyplegic Cerebral Palsy. It has left her with the inability to walk. However, a surgery which is available in the US will provide her with the ability to walk again. However, it costs £50,000, which includes travel and surgery expenses.

    Grace Windram

    Her parents have been trying to rally support, setting up a page for her on JustGiving.com. Big Ideas Digital, an iOS game developer came to the call for help given by Grace’s parents. Their game, Say What You See, is a brain teaser which is available for the iPhone and iPad.

    Here’s the official description for the game: “Say What You See is a hidden object game in the style of Where’s Waldo?/Where’s Wally? and Dingbats/Whatzit? but with a cryptic twist. Once you’ve scoured each oil painting (or iCanvas) for objects, you’ll have to unravel their meaning too. Each iCanvas is themed around a different subject, from Scary Movies to Books, TV programmes and beyond.

    Say What You See

    The game itself is free, however, they release canvases as separate downloads. Some are free while others are paid. To help raise money for Grace, they released a special canvas themed around her, called “Grace’s Toons”. All proceeds going to help Grace’s parents raise funds. Due to the recent popularity for the game, the developer was able to raise £21,000 towards the fundraiser. This, along with the donations gathered by the parents, is going to be enough to send Grace to the US for her surgery.

    The announcement of the good news was made by Big Ideas. If you’d like to learn more about the game, here’s the official page.

    A feel good story to get the week started off with.

  • Apple: All Your Unlocking Mechanisms Are Belong To Us

    How many of you use a “swipe to unlock” mechanism to gain access to your smartphones? Quite a few I would guess. The finger-dragging-across-the-touch-screen method of unlocking phones is probably most known for being a feature on the iPhone, but tons of other devices use a similar mechanism.

    Today, Apple owns that mechanism, as they were just granted a patent by the United States Patent & Trademark Office. The patent, number 8,046,721, was filed back in December of 2005. Here’s how it is described:

    A device with a touch-sensitive display may be unlocked via gestures performed on the touch-sensitive display. The device is unlocked if contact with the display corresponds to a predefined gesture for unlocking the device. The device displays one or more unlock images with respect to which the predefined gesture is to be performed in order to unlock the device. The performance of the predefined gesture with respect to the unlock image may include moving the unlock image to a predefined location and/or moving the unlock image along a predefined path. The device may also display visual cues of the predefined gesture on the touch screen to remind a user of the gesture.

    Sounds a lot like how many smartphones operate these days, doesn’t it?

    I guess we can add this to the growing list of slightly absurd entries into the patent system. Although most would agree that patenting a motion on a touch screen is a little silly, it doesn’t change the fact that that’s how the patent system currently works. Don’t hate the player, hate the game I guess.

    And it’s kind of funny, but all of those Android devices that users “slide to unlock” are now infringing on patents.

    [Hat tip to 9to5Mac]

  • The Avengers Was Shot, In Part, With An iPhone

    Who’s excited for The Avengers? The hype has kind of flown under my radar, but I must say, that’s a lot of superheroes. And when you think about it, all of these superhero films that have come out recently – Iron Man, Captain America, Thor – can be looked at as hype-machines for the big daddy, set to come out in May of 2012.

    Would it surprise you to learn that parts of the film were shot using an iPhone? And some of those shots are even in the official trailer? That’s what the film’s cinematographer Seamus McGarvey said in a recent interview:

    The beauty of photography or cinema is that you make every choice based on the content at hand. On The Avengers, I did a couple of shots on the iPhone and they are in the movie. In fact, they are in the trailer! I understand that sometimes there is no choice and you have to go for the cheapest option, but if you are limited for choice, you can still make poignant decisions that will effect the look of the film.

    Let’s revisit the trailer. Can you spot the iPhone shots?

    Since the iPhone 4S just dropped last Friday, it would mean that the shots that McGarvey speaks of were shot with an iPhone 4. That device had a 5 MP camera and was capable of 720p video.

    The new iPhone 4S is being praised for its video capabilities. Not only are people impressed with the photos taken by the device, but people are pretty blown away by the quality of the videos it produces. The iPhone 4S can shoot 1080p full HD video.

    When the trailer was released earlier this month, it broke an iTunes record for most downloaded trailer of all time.

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

    [Hat Tip to TiPB]

  • iPhone 5 Rumor: More Speculation It May Be the Final Steve Jobs Release

    We’ll continue to take these stories for what they are: rumors. But they are interesting for a couple of reasons. Despite the recent release of the iPhone 4S and its incredibly good sales, a lot of people were still disappointed in not seeing the release of the iPhone 5.

    Rumors picked up more steam this week when CNET reported on an analyst claiming that the next-generation iPhone “was the last project that Steve Jobs was intimately involved with from concept to final design”.

    Now, PC Magazine is quoting Apple partner Masayoshi Son, CEO of Softbank, as saying, “I visited Apple for the announcement of the iPhone 4S [at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California]. When I was having a meeting with Tim Cook, he said, ‘Oh Masa, sorry I have to quit our meeting.’ I said, ‘Where are you going?’ He said, ‘My boss is calling me.’ That was the day of the announcement of the iPhone 4S. He said that Steve is calling me because he wants to talk about their next product. And the next day, he died.”

    The publication says the speculation that the iPhone 5 will be “Jobs’ final master stroke of product innovation now seems more credible”.

    As I said before, one would think he would’ve been involved with the design of the next-generation iPad (there are already iPad 3 rumors going around as well), since it’s been over 7 months since the unveiling of the iPad 2, but who knows?

    As previously reported, Apple has launched its tribute site for Jobs, which features messages that have been sent to Apple in the time since his passing. The company said it has received over a million of them in that short time.

    During Apple’s earnings call, CEO Tim Cook expressed his gratitude for the outpouring of support.

    Here are a couple of cool, recent tributes to Jobs:

  • C Spire Wireless Nabs iPhone 4S

    Today, C Spire Wireless announced that they will be the first regional carrier to get the iPhone 4S. The obvious reaction here is, what about T-Mobile?

    The launch of the 4S brought a new national carrier to the Apple iProduct party, as Sprint joined AT&T and Verizon as carriers of the iPhone. There was plenty of speculation and rumor that T-Mobile would also be getting the iPhone 4S, but those rumors were dispelled by company management a short time before the phone’s release.

    But back to C Spire.

    C Spire is a regional carrier that used to be called Cellular South (they changed their name in September). They are based in Mississippi and serve parts of Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and of course Mississippi. According to recent figures, they have around 900K customers. C Spire offers unlimited voice and data plans and a 3G network.

    They announced the news on their Facebook page and recently updated their site to show the “coming soon iPhone 4S’ box we’ve seen on other carriers’ websites.

    C Spire WirelessC Spire will launch iPhone 4S, the most amazing iPhone yet, in the US in the coming weeks. For further information or to register interest, please visit http://tlk.tc/NqEB. For more information on iPhone 4S please visit www.apple.com/iphone

    The announcement on Facebook seems to be pretty popular with their customers, as the comments show plenty of excited people. There’s no official word on exactly when the iPhone 4S will arrive on the network – just the vague projection of “the coming weeks.”

    T-Mobile is the only national carrier that doesn’t offer the iPhone, and it looks like Apple has jumped them for regional carriers.

    What do you think about the news? Let us know in the comments.

  • Apple Earnings Call: Tim Cook Expresses Gratitude for Steve Jobs Condolences

    Apple released its Q4 earnings report. While it missed some estimates, it still had a record September quarter and all time record for iPad and Mac sales. Though iPhone sales were down, it was still a record September quarter for iPhone sales.

    CEO Tim Cook opened the earnings conference call by noting that this was the first one since the passing of Steve Jobs. “The world has lost a visionary, a creative genius and an amazing human being,” he said, adding that his “spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple.”

    Cook said he wanted to express gratitude for the condolences and expressions of support following Steve’s passing.

    He then turned the call over to CFO Peter Oppenheimer to go through the financials.

    Apple sold 17.07 million iPhones in the quarter – 21% growth year-over-year. They sold 11.12 million iPads (up 166% year-over-year). They sold 4.89 million Macs (up 26% year-over-year). They sold 6.62 million iPods (down 27% year-over-year).

    Oppenheimer noted that Mac growth has been largely fueled by the Macbook Air and Macbook Pro, with 74% of Mac sales being portable Macs, though they also had record desktop sales. He also noted hat there were over 6 million downloads of Mac OS X Lion during the quarter.

    The company says iPhone sales were better than they expected, as buzz built for the next-generation to come out in the fall. In other words, they expected people to hold off on buying an iPhone until the iPhone 4S came out.

    Well, they may have been right, as the 4S is selling like hotcakes.

    He did note that the Asia Pacific has contributed to strong iPhone sales growth. Sales in that region more than doubled year-over-year.

    On the iPod front, the company says sales were ahead of their expectations, despite being down year-over-year. iPod still controls 70% of the portable digital music player market. iTunes also had record results.

    Apple says it will continue to focus on international expansion of Apple Retail stores.

    They also announced 250 million iOS devices sold.

    During a Q&A session, Cook said he expects to have an all time record iPhone quarter this quarter.

    They will continuously rebroadcast the earnings call here. See the whole earnings report here.

  • Facebook Creepiness, How Google’s Cars Work & iPhone History Animated

    Facebook Creepiness, How Google’s Cars Work & iPhone History Animated

    We’ve got an interesting mix of videos making the rounds today. They range from creepy and weird to just plain cool. I’ll let you decide which ones you think are the coolest (but seriously, how can it not be the quantum levitation?)

    View more daily video round-ups here.

    Take This Lollipop has some creepy Facebook fun. It’s more creepy if you actually allow the app to access your information.

    How Google’s Self-driving car works:

    An animated history of the iPhone:

    CNET UK Presents: History of the iPhone, dedicated to the memory of Steve Jobs from Drew Stearne on Vimeo.

    This is just cool:

    WebProNews interviews VP of Corporate Development at GoAnimate, which makes it easier to make political animations:

    Funny Or Die Bill Clinton and celebrities video:

    Chrome experiment:

    Google video on using Google Analytics to find out where your customers are checking out:

  • Samsung Rips iPhone Screenshot For Galaxy Player Promo

    Did Samsung just use a 3-year-old screenshot from Google maps on iOS on a promotional page for its new Galaxy Player Android-powered media device?

    Daring Fireball got a tip from a reader last night that the official page for the Galaxy Player 5.0 contained a screenshot from iOS, only slightly modified in order to appear to be running on the Samsung device. “Modified” means that it looks like they simply replaced the distinctive Apple status bar with their own status bar (as you can see in the comparison above).

    It turns out, the image that used to appear on the Samsung site is the exact same image from a user named Laura Scott’s Flickr account. The photo in question was taken on December 14th, 2008.

    Here’s a screenshot of how the promo page appeared. This display is no longer there – if you go to the Galaxy Player 5.0 page you are redirected to a page where you can choose your home country.

    Of course, this is all especially funny because of the lengthy battle that Samsung and Apple still find themselves tangled in. The two have hit out at each other, claiming that the other stole their designs and infringed upon their patents.

    Samsung is in the process of seeking injunctions to stop the sale of iPhones and iPads in almost a dozen different countries. Apple successful stopped the sale of Samsung’s Galaxy Tablet in Australia last week.

    Just yesterday, industry rumors said that despite these legal battles, Apple would still use Samsung to make their processors for their devices – most notably the A6 processor that might come inside the next iPhone.

    When everyone is talking about who stole what from whom, it’s amazing to see a possible theft at a level like this.

  • Can Twitter Beat Facebook and Google+?

    Can Twitter Beat Facebook and Google+?

    As you might imagine, there’s been a lot of talk about social networks at the Web 2.0 Summit, and particularly the escalating three-way battle among Facebook, Google and Twitter. While Google and Facebook have had their fair share of announcements recently, Twitter just added some major firepower to its arsenal, courtesy of Apple.

    What do you think? Can Twitter win the social network market share war? Let us know what you think in the comments. Find this topic interesting? Why not share it on StumbleUpon, Facebook, Twitter or Google+?

    One thing does seem clear. Deep Twitter integration with Apple’s iOS is huge for Twitter.

    “The iOS integration is going to be absolutely huge for us, even better than we thought it was,” CEO Dick Costolo is quoted as saying at the Summit. “I didn’t realize how frictionless this would be. It’s so native.”

    As far as Costolo is concerned, it is Twitter’s simplicity that is its biggest weapon against Facebook and Google+ (although I’d say that iOS integration is a pretty helpful weapon). He says part of the reason that Twitter has become so popular is because of its simplicity, and the fact that they’ve refrained from adding too many features, implying that this will continue to separate them from the pack as competitors continue to add more and more features.

    That’s an interesting point, because Facebook and Google are basically in a “feature race” as Google’s Bradley Horowitz recently put it. In fact, Google CEO Larry Page touted the fact in the company’s earnings call last week, that Google+ added 100 features in 90 days.

    Facebook certainly keeps changing things up.

    Costolo’s comments are also interesting considering that this year, Twitter has perhaps added more features than any other time in Twitter’s history (since co-founder Jack Dorsey returned to the company). Dorsey, by the way, has recently even been called “the next Steve Jobs,” and by an early Apple employee. He does also run Square, which many see as a revolutionary product in the payments industry. It can’t hurt Twitter to have this kind of leadership at the core of its product development.

    Perhaps the more important battle, however, is that for identity, rather than features, and that’s another area where that tight iOS integration might come in handy for Twitter. Apple announced that in its first 3 days of availability, it sold 4 million iPhone 4S devices (which run iOS 5). iOS 5 is also available for the iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, iPad, iPad 2, iPod Touch 3rd generation, and iPod Touch 4th generation. Word is that a third of eligible devices have already been updated (which means potentially 2/3 more could still be upgraded), and Costolo says daily iOS Twitter sign-ups have already tripled due to the new iOS integration.

    The description of the Twitter integration from Apple says: “iOS 5 makes it even easier to tweet from your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. Sign in once in Settings, and suddenly you can tweet directly from Safari, Photos, Camera, YouTube, or Maps. Want to mention or @reply to a friend? Contacts applies your friends’ Twitter usernames and profile pictures. So you can start typing a name and iOS 5 does the rest. You can even add a location to any tweet, no matter which app you’re tweeting from.”

    Once iOS 5 was finally released last week, Twitter wrote a blog post about it saying: “Simply enter your Twitter login information into your device settings, and you’ll always be connected to your Twitter account. This means you can tweet directly from Apple apps like Camera, Maps, Photos, Safari and YouTube, along with third party apps, such as Chomp, Flipboard, LivingSocial, Instagram, MadPad, PopSugar, Showyou,SoundTracking and Zynga’s Words with Friends.”

    Twitter on iOS

    And it’s not as if you have to use iOS to use Twitter.

    “We think we can reach every person on the planet, we think the way to do that is to simplify it,” Costolo is quoted as saying. “Over time, Google+ and Facebook will be more and more different than the experience we want to pass onto our users.”

    On that note, the Telegraph has some interesting words from former Facebook President Sean Parker (who is still a shareholder), most notably, “The strategic threat to Facebook is that power users have gone to Twitter or to Google+.”

    That doesn’t mean that all (or even the majority of) power users have abandoned Facebook entirely, but if a lot of them are using these competing services more, that means less time spent somewhere.

    You know who else seems to be using Twitter more and more? The young.

    Back to that topic of identity for a second. There is a lot of controversy about identity and the Internet. Facebook and Google+ both want your real identity as your identity with their respective services. I’m Chris Crum in real life, so they want me to be Chris Crum on Facebook and Google+ (Google is even stingy about what pics it lets authors use on their Google Profiles). On Twitter, however, I’m CCrum237. If I wanted, I could be anyone else I wanted to be (as long as the name wasn’t taken). There are valid points to both sides of the Internet anonymity debate, but the reality is that our online identities are being tied much more to the real world. It’s not just about status updates and picture sharing anymore. It’s about paying for goods at a store (among other things). At least that’s the direction we’re headed in. But that’s a conversation for another article.

    4Chan founder Christopher Poole is quoted as saying at the summit that Facebook and Google approach to identity “degrades humanity,” and that “Facebook and Google do our identity wrong, Twitter does it better.” He’s just one man, but you better believe there are quite a few people who share similar views, and that is one clear differentiator of Twitter compared to its competitors. That’s one thing you can get with Twitter that you can’t get with Facebook or Google+. And that’s just another piece of the puzzle.

    Twitter is currently worth $8 billion according Costolo, who is quoted as saying, “Let’s just call it an even $8 billion.” I have a feeling that number is going to go up substantially.

    According to Costolo, Twitter users are sending out about 250 tweets per day. I’d be surprised if that number hasn’t increased significantly in another month.

    I wouldn’t go so far as to say Twitter will be dethroning Facebook as the most-used social network in the near future, but that doesn’t mean it couldn’t happen one day. Remember when Myspace was on top? Either way, it’s going to be an interesting battle to watch, especially now that Twitter is heavily integrated with the ultra popular iPhones and iPads.

    What do you think? Will Twitter ever be able to surpass Facebook? Share your thoughts in the comments.

  • iPhone 4S Must Be Reserved for Apple Retail Store Purchase

    Apple announced today that iPhone 4S sales topped 4 million in the device’s first 3 days of availability. “iPhone 4S is off to a great start with more than four million sold in its first weekend—the most ever for a phone and more than double the iPhone 4 launch during its first three days,” said Philip Schiller, Apple’s SVP of Worldwide Product Marketing. “iPhone 4S is a hit with customers around the world, and together with iOS 5 and iCloud, is the best iPhone ever.”

    The device is selling so well, that if you want to get it at the Apple Retail Store, you’ll have to reserve one. If you go to Apple’s “how to buy” page for the iPhone 4S, it now presents you with two options (hat tip to MacRumors): “Buy now” at the Apple Online Store or “Reserve” at the Apple Retail Store.

    With the second option, the message says, “iPhone 4S is available in store by reservation only. Reserve your safter 9:00 p.m. tonight for pickup tomorrow. When you come in, you’ll choose a carrier and plan, and we’ll get your iPhone up and running before you leave the store.”

    Once you click on the button to reserve, you are prompted to choose a store to pick up the iPhone. You’re also presented with another message that says, “iPhone 4S is available at the Apple Store by reservation on a first-come, first-served basis.”

    Once you choose a store, you’re presented with 18 options: The 16, 32, and 64GB versions in white or black, for AT&T, Sprint or Verizon. Here, you see that for the store I selected, they’re all marked as “unavailable”:

    iPhone 4S availability  

    Presumably, that will change after 9:00 PM.

  • Steve Jobs Song Created With Only Apple Sounds, Plus More iPhone 4S Siri Fun

    Today’s video round-up is mostly Steve Jobs and Siri-related, but there are also a couple Google-related videos worth watching, and well as one from Sophos on identity theft.

    View more daily video round-ups here.

    A song created as a tribute to Steve Jobs, the creator of which claims to have only used sounds from Apple products and Steve’s voice:

    More Steve Jobs tribute in the form of post-its:

    This guy demos some various Siri tricks:

    Two Siris confuse each other:

    iPhone 4S vs. Samsung Galaxy S II drop test:

    Matt Cutts talks about Google’s approach to customer service:

    Security firm Sophos looks at “how to steal an identity”:

    Google Wallet in action:

  • iPhone 4S Sales Top 4 Million in First 3 Days

    Apple just announced that the iPhone 4S topped 4 million in sales for its first weekend of availability.

    On top of that, over 25 million customers are already using iOS 5 in the first five days of its release. Over 20 million customers have signed up for iCloud.

    “iPhone 4S is off to a great start with more than four million sold in its first weekend—the most ever for a phone and more than double the iPhone 4 launch during its first three days,” said Philip Schiller, Apple’s SVP of Worldwide Product Marketing. “iPhone 4S is a hit with customers around the world, and together with iOS 5 and iCloud, is the best iPhone ever.”

    The new camera and Siri have been big draws for consumers in purchasing the iPhone 4S. It’s hard to deny that Siri is just fun to mess with. I see the appeal. Case in point: iPhone 4S’ Siri: Now with More Easter Eggs.

    Of course the 4S is the first iPhone available for Sprint customers. That has to be huge on its own in terms of boosting sale. The addition of Verizon to the iPhone availability roster was certainly helpful when that first happened.

    The iPhone 4S is currently available in the US, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan and the UK. It will be available in 22 more countries on October 28, and in over 70 countries by the end of the year, the company says.

    View more iPhone 4S coverage here.

  • iPhone 5 Rumor: The Last Steve Jobs Release

    It sounds like consumers will get one last contribution from Steve Jobs in terms of new Apple devices, from the sound of it, and that might very well be the iPhone 5.

    There’s no question that consumers will continue to benefit from the contributions of Jobs for years to come. His influence will be felt probably for generations, but CNET is reporting that an analyst says the next-generation iPhone – the one after the 4S – “was the last project that Steve Jobs was intimately involved with from concept to final design.”

    Of course there’s no telling if the next iPhone will even be called the iPhone 5. As you may recall, it was widely expected that the 4S would be the iPhone 5, but no dice.

    According to the analyst quoted by the report, Ashook Kumar of Rodman & Renshaw, the next iPhone will be slimmer and have a larger screen size, but will have the same dimensions as the recently released iPhone 4S. The analyst also expects it to have 4G.

    The report also indicates that the design will be completely different. If that’s the case, there may be a bigger chance that the device would actually be called the iPhone 5. The 4S looked so much like the 4 that some might argue the “5” name would’ve been unjustified.

    Meanwhile, the rumors about the iPad 3 are already flying around. One would think Jobs would’ve been involved with its design, as it’s been over 7 months since the iPad 2 was revealed, but it’s hard to say. The iPad 3 is expected for early 2012.

  • Siri on iPhone 4, More Siri & A Shampoo Robot

    Who says you have to have an iPhone 4S to use Siri? The first video shows it on an iPhone 4 (which has been reduced in price since the 4S was released). Check out the rest of the vids too.

    View more daily video round-ups here.

    Siri enabled on an iPhone 4:

    Another conversation with Siri:

    A robot uses Android Speedcuber to solve a Rubik’s cube:

    Shampoo Robot:

    Robot ping pong:

    Gary Vaynerchuck and Eric Ries talk “The Lean Startup”:

    Meat Cthulu:

  • iPhone 4S Camera Sample, Talking to Siri & A Broken iPad

    Today’s videos include some discussion about Amazon’s Silk browser, a discussion with Siri, a sample of the new iPhone 4S’s HD video, and plenty other goodies. Don’t miss the Pee-wee Herman PSA.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    The magazine – an iPad that doesn’t work.

    Is Amazon’s Silk awesome or scary?

    Business Insider interviews Siri:

    Mitt Romney talks about how he tried to hire Steve Ballmer:

    A video sample from the new iPhone 4s’s HD camera (via MacRumors):

    Google Wallet in San Francisco and New York:

    An old Pee-Wee Herman PSA:

    Google Gets its Ice Cream Sandwich statue:

  • iOS 5 Released (Officially): 200+ New Features

    Two days before the official launch of the iPhone 4S, Apple has made the brand new iOS 5 available for download. According to Apple, there are over 200 new features in the new OS.

    The feature that seems to be getting the most buzz is the new notification center. This new feature organizes and houses all the notifications from your apps into one neat little menu. When you are using any app, new notifications will no longer pop up in the middle of your screen and disrupt your activities, but will now appear discreetly at the top of your screen.

    You can swipe down on the screen at any time to access the full notification menu and swipe any individual notification inside the menu to immediately go to that particular app. In all, it’s much more seamless than the previous notification style.

    iOS 5 also adds iMessage, the messaging service specifically for iOS 5 users. It will allow you to send unlimited texts to iPhone users via Wi-Fi or 3G.

    Reminders are now integrated into the notifications and are location-based. That means you could get a reminder that says “Don’t forget to buy milk” as soon as you pull into the grocery.

    Like promised, iOS 5 feature full Twitter integration that allow your to tweet directly from other apps like maps, photos, YouTube or Safari. No need to open up the Twitter application.

    Photos now work in the iCloud, allowing seamless sharing to all your other iOS devices. Photo editing tools have been upgraded to allow for cropping and rotating as well as auto-enhancing and red-eye removal.

    The iCloud, which was opened up this morning prior to the iOS launch, allows for you to back up and restore your device without needing your home computer. You can also activate your device and download free iOS updates to your device without needing that pesky USB cord.

    Here’s a video about many of the changes in iOS 5 –

    You can currently download iOS 5 via iTunes.

  • iPhone 4S Siri Demo, Wolfram, Schmidt & A Scary Phone Ad

    People are still waiting to get their hands on the new iPhone, but you can still see some hands-on demos. Also, check out the ad that’s apparently scaring children in the UK, and may get banned for violating ad standards. Pretty lame if you ask me.

    For more daily video round-ups, go here.

    MacRumors points to a pair of iPhone 4S hands on (and Siri) demos from YouTube:

    The ad for this phone is apparently in danger of being banned in the UK for being too scary:

    Eric Schmidt speaks at the Kenexa World Conference:

    Stephen Wolfram talks about the background and vision of Mathematica:

    John Carpenter’s The Thing: The Musical:

    Sneak peek of Photoshop image debarring from Adobe MAX:

  • Westboro Baptist Church Continues Their Assault on Steve Jobs

    If you aren’t familiar with Westboro Baptist Church, they are a fringe organization from Topeka, Kansas that travel around the country protesting high profile funerals of fallen American soldiers and celebrities.

    The membership is small – 71 members as reported in 2007 – but they are widely known due to their unorthodox and outspoken positions on homosexuality and calls for God to destroy America.

    You might know them as the “God Hates Fags” people (that’s the title of their official website), and you might have seen them at funerals and other events holding signs that read, “You’re Going to Hell,” “God Hates America,” “America is Doomed,” and “Thank God For Fallen Soldiers.” I don’t really want to try to summarize their beliefs in a succinct statement, but if I had to, I would say that they espouse that our culture is wicked, and God hates it, and that his punishment for homosexuality and other “Godlessness” is Hell.

    Members of the group have even said that their goal with all the protests is to spread “God’s hate.”

    Lovely. I’m sure you can see why they are quite the controversial group.

    In 2009, they protested the funeral of Michael Jackson. In 2010, they picketed the funeral of Ronnie James Dio. By their count, they have conducted over 30,000 pickets all across the country.

    Right after Jobs’ death on Wednesday evening, Westboro top member Margie Phelps tweeted the fact that they planned on protesting his funeral. Here’s what that tweet looked like:

    If you look carefully, you’ll see that the tweet to announce Jobs’ funeral protest was sent via iPhone. Of course, this is some pretty incredible irony and quite a healthy dose of hypocrisy thrown in the mix.

    When the fact that Phelps had tweeted her anti-Jobs tweet via iPhone spread around the internet, Phelps addressed it on Twitter:

    http://t.co/4Khk7ygv via @manstuffjoe
    Rebels mad cuz I used iPhone to tell you Steve Jobs is in hell.God created iPhone for that purpose! 🙂 1 day ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    After you read that, once the stupid stops burning, check out how other members of Westboro have been addressing the Steve Jobs thing over the past couple of days:

    #SteveJobs was an idolatrous fool and he split hell wide open! You got an app for that? Westboro Baptist Church will picket his funeral. 5 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Via @FieldRR@WBCPhotos you going to take photos at Steve Jobs funeral protest? Then upload pics & tweet from your Mac?” That’s the plan! 18 hours ago via Tweetbot for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Westboro Baptist Church thanks God for the cancer that ate Steve Jobs like a moth! “For the moth shall eat them up like a garment” (Isa51:8) 1 day ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Before you ask, yes, those were all tweeted from an iPhone.

    When we first told you about the Margie Phelps tweet via iPhone story, we received a great amount of comments expressing not only disapproval of Westboro, but disbelief at how they would be allowed to do this. The answer is pretty simple – the Supreme Court of the United States has upheld their right to protest. An 8-1 decision in a case involving Westboro and the picketing of a military funeral said that their speech was protected under the First Amendment. They can’t be denied that right because their speech is unpopular and outrageous.

    Dissenters of that opinion said that the families of the fallen soldiers in these cases are being attacked by Westboro, verbally, in order to draw attention. They claim that free speech rights are not a license for vicious verbal attacks.

    What do you think? Does Westboro have the right to stage their protest, even though they are beyond unsavory? Or is it hate speech that needs to be limited? Let us know in the comments.

    On their blog, Westboro has a post saying “Thank GOD! Steve Jobs is Dead.” They then modify a biblical passage to suit their needs and proclaim that Jobs played a part in gay marriage, which will bring civilization down –

    Genesis 6:4 There were giants (in business/industry) in the earth in those days…the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.

    Those captains of business/industry in Noah’s day did what Jobs and his cohorts do TODAY: turn the country over to the fags!

    Fag marriage will bring your destruction! Jobs is responsible!

    Of course this is nonsensical bullshit. Most of us can agree on that. And yes, some say that talking about Westboro only legitimizes their ridiculous message.

    While it’s true that “media whores” isn’t a strong enough description of WBC, and they feast on the attention, they obviously have an impact on the national dialogue. Just look at all the internet chatter concerning their Steve Jobs statements over the last 2 days.

    For such a small group, they have been able to affect the lives of many military families and draw the attention of millions of people. Should their ability to picket the funerals of fallen soldiers and celebs like Steve Jobs be limited? Can free speech go too far, and if so, does their speech apply? Or is there something quintessentially American in the fact that they are allowed to demonstrate, no matter how vile the material happens to be? Let us know what you think.

    To see some decidedly more positive comments on the late Steve Jobs, check out this compilation of 100 tributes to Steve Jobs from all across the spectrum.

  • The Steve Jobs Backlash Rears Its Head

    The Steve Jobs Backlash Rears Its Head

    Not everyone jumped on the “Godspeed, Steve Jobs” bandwagon when his death was announced. While the majority of the responses were of the “thank you” and “we’ll miss you” variety, not everyone broke out with a candlelight vigil to remember the fallen tech maven. In fact, some wondered why Jobs was being, well, deified to begin with. At first, the grumblings of backlash were hinted at, but now, a couple of days after the initial shock wore off, there are some very vocal counterpoints out there, ones that scoff at the idea of all the Jobs love that came forth.

    It should be noted that this writer is not an Apple or Jobs hater. That being said, I’m not an Apple fanboy, either. I acknowledge the company made nice, but very expensive home computers, and you’d have to be a fool to disregard the impact the iPhone had on society, whether or not it was merely an “overpriced trinket,” or a crucial step in technology and communication evolution. For better or worse, people love their iDevices, be it the Phone, Pad, Pod, or Touch. With all of that in mind, however, not everyone has been praising Steve Jobs in light of his passing.

    In fact, there’s a very real backlash going on, and, truth be told, some of it offers some very valid counterpoints to the “visionary” love Jobs has largely received since. The first place I noticed the backlash taking form as Internet content was from the “scumbag” meme that owes its origin to 4chan and Reddit users.

    While it aimed at the #Occupy supporters, there’s also a little jab at Jobs as well:

    Steve Jobs Troll

    There’s also some poking towards the Apple fanboys as well, thanks to the following captured comment:

    Comments

    While these two instances could be considered mild, there were a couple of publications that skirted actual criticism,starting with a post over at Gawker.com, with the title, “What Everyone Is Too Polite to Say About Steve Jobs.” By and large, the post keeps a respectful approach, opting for a “he wasn’t perfect” reaction.

    Examples:

    One thing he wasn’t, though, was perfect. Indeed there were things Jobs did while at Apple that were deeply disturbing. Rude, dismissive, hostile, spiteful: Apple employees—the ones not bound by confidentiality agreements—have had a different story to tell over the years about Jobs and the bullying, manipulation and fear that followed him around Apple. Jobs contributed to global problems, too. Apple’s success has been built literally on the backs of Chinese workers, many of them children and all of them enduring long shifts and the specter of brutal penalties for mistakes.

    And:

    But then Jobs never seemed comfortable with the idea of fully empowered workers or a truly free press. Inside Apple, there is a culture of fear and control around communication; Apple’s “Worldwide Loyalty Team” specializes in hunting down leakers, confiscating mobile phones and searching computers.

    It’s an interesting piece by a publication that opts for the “despite all this, Jobs made neat gadgets” conclusion, which is understandable. A company like Gawker can only feel indebted to the fact Apple gave Gizmodo, a Gawker property, so much content to work with.

    There is, however, another degree of the Jobs backlash, and it’s safe to say the author of upcoming piece won’t be ending his thoughts with a “well, he made cool devices” caveat. No, it’s safe to say the author at Slated.org was not a Jobs fan. If the title — Good Riddance Steve Jobs — doesn’t clue you in, nothing will. Some examples of the writer’s beef:

    According to the CIA World Factbook, 160,521 people die every day. Steve Jobs was just one, and from what I can see he must have been very, very far from the best of them. I bet very few of the other 160,520 people who died that day ever made sinister threats to ‘go after’ an altruistic software project like Theora, or ran around suing everyone for making ‘rounded rectangles’ and ‘green phone icons’.

    The assault continues:

    Or how about the time Jobs bribed the police to act like they were his private security agency, to kick down the front door to a journalist’s home, seize his property and interrogate him like a criminal, just because of some crap iGadget accidentally lost by an Apple employee, after that journalist had already voluntarily contacted Apple and returned it to them? Or how about the daughter Jobs abandoned, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, and her mother, Chris-Ann Brennan, whom he also abandoned and left to bring up their daughter on welfare, and lied in court about being ‘sterile’ in the process?

    There’s more:

    So given the sort of monster Steve Jobs was, witnessing the spectacle of everyone from Joe Blogs to El Presidente gushing over him, like a bunch of schoolgirls at a rock concert, is absolutely sickening… As for being a ‘visionary’ … the only ‘vision’ Jobs ever had was the one he nicked from Xerox PARC.

    Stay for the strong finish:

    Yet this is the guy everyone is now fawning over?

    Oh, but I forgot … he made lots of money. Lots and lots and lots.

    So did Al Capone.

    Ah yes, American capitalism at its finest, folks.

    While that’s the end of the article, the author doesn’t stop there, defending all of his points in the subsequent comments section, and he does so deftly. You may not agree with the sentiment, but you have to admire how the author stuck to his guns and didn’t back down. Clearly, these positions are not the most popular, but there is validity to them. None of the examples given in these criticisms are factually inaccurate. In fact, the authors went out of their respective ways to document and provide links throughout their pieces.

    The question is, are these “too soon” moments, or are they valid positions to take in the light of Jobs’ death? Let us know what you think.