The iPhone Blog |
- Macmillan Books to Return to Amazon, Prices to Rise to iPad iBooks Level, Consumers to Vote with their Wallets
- UPDATED: Apple Store Down — No iPad Pre-Orders, Could be Nothing…
- Will Apple’s iPad Get Jailbreak and How Long Will it Take?
- CEOh-Snap iPad Attack Edition — Google, Nokia, Microsoft, and Nintendo on Apple’s Tablet
- Forget Flash, iPhone, iPad Don’t Support ActiveX!
- CEOh-Snap: Steve Jobs Says Adobe Lazy, Flash Buggy, Google Wants to Kill iPhone, Not “Not Evil”, Next iPhone A+ Update?
Posted: 31 Jan 2010 04:09 PM PST Both Mcmillan and Amazon have issued statements about the story linked to previously, wherein they stopped selling Macmillan e-books after the publisher wanted to raise the price for best-sellers to an agency model $12.99 to $14.99 — which Apple had already agreed to for iBooks on the iPad. Mcmillan’s CEO, John Sargent’s comments ran as a paid advertisement in the Sunday edition of PublishersLunch and read in part:
Amazon’s response can be found in full on Engadget, but contains:
So what do you think? Will the publishers be able to raise prices or will the market — or lack thereof for higher priced e-books — force them back down again? [PublishersLunch via BoingBoing via Engadget] This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. |
UPDATED: Apple Store Down — No iPad Pre-Orders, Could be Nothing… Posted: 31 Jan 2010 02:08 PM PST UDPATE: Nothing. Behind-the-scenes maintenance or prep-work for some later update. Seriously. Can’t find a difference… ORIGINAL: Yes, the Apple Store is down. We have no idea if this is for iPad pre-order setup, for some other product update/refresh, or for behind-the-scenes maintenance. If you have any ideas, let us know in the comments and we’ll update as soon as it’s back! [Thanks to Andy for the tip!] This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. |
Will Apple’s iPad Get Jailbreak and How Long Will it Take? Posted: 31 Jan 2010 12:17 PM PST When Apple announced the iPad last week, TiPb’s email quickly filled up with readers and forum members who wondered if it would be possible to jailbreak it and, if so, how long it would take? First, it’s important to remember that, while we’re all excited, the iPad doesn’t even ship until March at the earliest, so it is pure speculation at this point. We do hope the likes of the iPhone Dev-Team and/or Geohot will try their hardest to get it accomplished and that it will only be a matter of time. The good news is, unlike the iPhone, Apple is selling the iPad 3G carrier-unlocked, so there’ll be no need for redsn0w or blacksn0w. Just pop in a Micro-SIM and you can use it on any network you want. The bad news is, Apple has really stepped up to the plate when it comes to combating the jailbreak. With their new iPhone Platform Security Manager and hardware changes and the patching of software exploits like the 24kpwn, which no longer works on the latest iPhone 3GS and iPod touch G3 models, there is no doubt in our minds it will take a good while. So, to anyone looking to pick up a iPad and jailbreak it when it is released, we hope you have a good amount of patience. We’d also like to know — presuming the iPad is jailbroken, which Jailbreak Apps do you most want to see ported over? This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. |
CEOh-Snap iPad Attack Edition — Google, Nokia, Microsoft, and Nintendo on Apple’s Tablet Posted: 31 Jan 2010 07:27 AM PST Prior to Steve Jobs laying into Google and Adobe, Google, Nokia, Microsoft, and Nintendo got their shots in on Apple and the iPad, and here’s what they had to say:
Someone might want to tell him people are making Android tablets, or is he still using BlackBerry?
Fair enough, considering there are lies, damn lies, and statistics, but the title of the post… really?
Cue Windows Mobile millionaire dev and their 140,000 runtimes in 5… 4… 3… 2…
Never mind his own company just released a bigger version of their own, the Nintendo DSi LL… He’s missing the same point many others are likewise missing. The iPad isn’t just a big iPod touch. The iPad is a big iPod touch. That’s its killer feature. And yes, we’ll be saving all these comments, and any others we come across, and looking back at them one year post-iPad launch to see if it works out any better for the competition than it did when the iPhone was mocked in 2007… [Thanks to everyone who sent these in!] This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. |
Forget Flash, iPhone, iPad Don’t Support ActiveX! Posted: 31 Jan 2010 06:39 AM PST I’ve mentioned a couple times already, given the recent flare-up in the discussion about iPad and iPhone not supporting Flash, that not so long ago you had a hard time using any browser other than IE6 because of another proprietary plugin — Microsoft’s ActiveX. Times change, though, and these days Firefox, Safari, and Chrome users seldom if ever come across the big red X. It’s possible Flash and its blue lego block will soon be likewise optional on major sites. Scobleizer draws the same analogy:
I work in web development and just did a major site redesign for an international company. It went from a lot of Flash, to no Flash. Why? Marketing wanted a site that would be more easily viewed on BlackBerrys and iPhones. Daring Fireball drives this home:
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. |
Posted: 31 Jan 2010 06:07 AM PST According to an anonymous source in attendance at Apple’s recent, internal iPad town hall meeting at the Cupertino campus, Steve Jobs answered some employee questions by saying “Adobe is lazy” and that Google’s “don’t be evil” motto was “BS”. Wired reports:
Wired points out that, by getting around the App Store pocket veto and delivering Google Voice for iPhone via an HTML5 web app, Jobs should be careful what he wishes for. Google maps data and YouTube were shown off during the iPad launch, as was PDF support, though no Flash (despite some ad-related confusion). More than a battle of words, however, this is a battle for control of the consumer internet experience — and the tremendous revenue that comes with it. MacRumors brings a few more details on that:
An “A+” update for the 4th generation iPhone, eh? Bring it on! This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. |
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