The iPhone Blog |
- What’s Bluetooth? [iOS A-Z)
- Facebook rumored to be readying $5 billion IPO
- Foxconn plans to build five additional iPad production plants in Brazil
- Hands on with FavorIt for iPhone
- App Giveaway: Revertis for iPhone and iPad
- Add customization options to ‘slide to unlock’ text with Slider Pro [Jailbreak]
- China Telecom aiming to launch iPhone 4S in February
- Could Apple release a separate 4G LTE iPad 3 and Phone 5 in select markets?
- Angry Birds boss doesn’t see app piracy as a problem
- How to replace a GSM/AT&T iPhone 4 speaker assembly and cellular antenna [Weekly mod]
- Hot apps: Call of Cthulhu: The Wasted Land, Meeting Mapper, Tiny Review, Ringtones & Alert Tones Maker, The Very Cranky Bear
- Final Cut Pro X updated to turn your multi-cam iPhone videos into masterpieces
- Daily deal: Ballistic Shell Gel (SG) Series Case for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 only $18.95
- Apple appoints John Browett as Senior Vice President of Retail
- Top free iPhone app devs paying $1.81 in marketing per loyal user
- iPhone 4S demand finally satisfied, all models now in stock for next day delivery
- Case-Mate POP! Case with Stand for iPad 2 review [Giveaway]
- Hands on with the Crimson cases, sticker skins, and edgings for iPhone
- This was our Macworld
Posted: 31 Jan 2012 05:02 PM PST B is for Bluetooth, a wireless technology that lets your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad talk to headsets, keyboards, speakers, computers, and other accessoriesIf you’re new to iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad and are wondering just what exactly Bluetooth is and what it means to you, worry not — iMore has you covered. Bluetooth is an open standard wireless communications protocol, which just means that it’s a commonly available way for devices to talk to each other, and to other electronics, without having to be plugged in together. The most common things iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad users do with Bluetooth include connecting to headsets and speakers. Bluetooth works over short-wave radio (between 2400 and 2480 MHz if you’re techie) and has a range of about 30 feet. If you move further away than that, say leave your iPhone in your car and go into a store, you’ll lose connection. There are several different Bluetooth profiles, each of which enables its own type of functionality. iOS doesn’t support all Bluetooth profiles, but it does support several important ones.
Most previous iOS devices, including iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch support up to Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR (enhanced data rate). EDR allows for faster data transfers, meaning smoother, better sound support and internet speeds (between 2 and 3mbps). Bluetooth 4.0, a newer specification is supported by the iPhone 4S and will presumably be supported by future devices like the iPad 3. Bluetooth 4.0 allows for BHS (Bluetooth high speed) and BLE (Bluetooth low energy), which aim to provide better, faster data with lower battery drain. There are very few Bluetooth 4.0 accessories available yet, for example the Find My Car Smarter. However, Bluetooth 4.0 offers the potential for more ubiquitous, persistent, and useful peripherals than ever before. Want to know more? Check out more of our iOS A-Z words-of-the-day, or jump ahead to our complete iPhone and iPad glossary for the full on dictionary list! |
Facebook rumored to be readying $5 billion IPO Posted: 31 Jan 2012 03:33 PM PST Facebook, the massive social network that counts one of the most popular iPhone apps of all time in their portfolio, is rumored to be readying a $5 billion IPO (initial public offering). Yes, Zuckerberg and co. might finally be ready to hit the stock market. The New York Times reports:
While huge, it narrowly misses out on being the biggest tech IPO ever — that distinction belongs to Infineon. That is, of course, unless Facebook raises the stakes to $10 billion, then they’ll own all the records. And the money. Facebook has enjoyed enormous growth but not without growing pains, including and especially in regards to user privacy and transparency. Along with Google and Twitter — the former public, the latter still private — Facebook faces Federal privacy oversight for the foreseeable future. Still, if Facebook does pull the trigger on this IPO, will that change anything? If any of us could buy stock and become a shareholder, does that make trusting our data to Facebook any easier, or any more difficult? Source: New York Times |
Foxconn plans to build five additional iPad production plants in Brazil Posted: 31 Jan 2012 02:54 PM PST Apple’s largest production partner, Foxconn, has plans to build five new production plants in Brazil to help support the growing demand for the iPad tablet.
This news comes shortly after iPad production in Brazil got a generous tax break from local government following Foxconn reportedly investing up to $300 million in a São Paulo factory. The new production facilities could house up to 1,000 employees each, with officials from Foxconn and the Brazilian government said to be meeting after the Chinese New Year in order to make a final decision on the desired location. With Apple selling through over 15 million iPads during Q1 2012, increasing production to help meet future demand is a no-brainer. And although Brazilian-made iPads may be a little behind schedule, adding more facilities to the mix can only help the situation in terms of availability. Source: Folha via AppleInsider |
Hands on with FavorIt for iPhone Posted: 31 Jan 2012 02:42 PM PST FavorIt is the place where favorite friends and favorite apps meet. This new twist to app discovery lets you share your five favorite apps with your Facebook friends and view theirs. You can also see which apps are popular among all your friends. This is one of those types of apps that needs participation from your friends in order to be useful, but the good news is that it only takes a few moments to login and do your part, so it shouldn’t be too difficult to get your friends on board! We took a closer look while at Macworld 2012.
FavorIt – Where Favorite Friends and Favorite Apps Meet is available on the iPhone for free. Have an app you’d love to see featured on iMore? Email us at iosapps@imore.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look. |
App Giveaway: Revertis for iPhone and iPad Posted: 31 Jan 2012 01:36 PM PST If Tetris were to wed a matching game, their resulting child may be something similar Revertis. The goal of this casual puzzle game is to draw 4 dots at a time in such a way that matches identical colors. The objective is simple, but execution may not always be. I’m enjoying playing Revertis. It’s relaxing, has nice music, but isn’t mindless.
GiveawayThe makers of Revertis have given us promo codes to give away to 5 lucky readers! For a chance to win, just leave a comment below! Revertis is available on the iPhone and iPad for $0.99. Have an app you’d love to see featured on iMore? Email us at iosapps@imore.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look. |
Add customization options to ‘slide to unlock’ text with Slider Pro [Jailbreak] Posted: 31 Jan 2012 01:33 PM PST Slider Pro is a lightweight but useful jailbreak mod in Cydia that lets you customize the slide to unlock text on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. It comes with a handful of great presets including adding the date and time to your lock slider. Time and date are available in a number of different formats. If you’d just like to add custom text to the slider, you can do that as well. Once installed you can just pop into your general Settings app and customize it from there. If you’re looking to add functionality to your lockscreen but don’t want to overload your jailbroken iPhone with too many tweaks and mods which may conflict with each other or just bog down your device, then this may be the way to go. It’s especially convenient if you have an app like IntelliscreenX or LockInfo and want to hide the lock clock to create more room for additional widgets. It’ll allow you to use space that’s already there in a more efficient way. Slider Pro is already available in Cydia and will run on any iOS device running iOS 4 or higher. If you’re looking for even more tweaks and utilities to install, check out our guide to the best jailbreak applications for iOS 5.
More jailbreak resources: |
China Telecom aiming to launch iPhone 4S in February Posted: 31 Jan 2012 11:35 AM PST Beijing Telecom, a subsidiary of China Telecom, has announced that they’re aiming to release the iPhone 4S by the beginning of March, and that the final regulatory certifications just made it through on Monday. As you might guess, iPhone launches in the area can get a little crazy, but with wider carrier availability, maybe the congestion and panic will let up a bit. Currently, the iPhone 4S is only available on China Unicom, though there have been hints that China Mobile will enjoy the next-gen iPhone. It’s interesting to hear more about the retail side of the iPhone in China, since the vast majority of news from that corner of the world revolves around Apple’s manufacturing partner, Foxconn. I’m sure by this point, Apple’s retail presence isn’t sullied by knock-off stores anymore, even though there’s still plenty of copycat devices floating around. There’s no pricing information available for the CDMA-based iPhone 4S on China Telecom, but something tells me a steep pricetag won’t deter the locals from snatching ‘em up. Source: China Daily |
Could Apple release a separate 4G LTE iPad 3 and Phone 5 in select markets? Posted: 31 Jan 2012 11:28 AM PST We’ll likely get a new iPad 3 sometime this March and an iPhone 5 later this summer or fall, but will either or both of them run on the new, ultra-fast 4G LTE (Long Term Evolution) networks? And if they do, will LTE be built into every device, or will there be special models made for just those networks that support it? Right now there’s only one iPhone 4S and it runs on both GSM/HSPA+ and CDMA/EVDO Rev. A, on every carrier that offers it. That’s a change from the iPhone 4 that debuted as GSM/AT&T only and later had a different model, with a different antenna, released for Verizon. Likewise, the iPad 2 still doesn’t come in a unified model, having on version for AT&T/GSM and one for Verizon alone. So, while Apple has moved to unify their manufacturing for iPhone 4S, they have in the past, and still to this day, made separate models of iPhone and iPad to handle different network technologies. And they could do it again for LTE.
Size and power consumptionPrevious generation LTE chipsets were deemed unusable by Apple due to their size and battery-draining power demands. Early Android LTE handsets like the HTC Thunderbolt bled power at an almost comical level. Early devices were also chunky, but soon thinned out again and grew in length and width instead of depth, like the Nokia Lumia 900, letting larger screens take advantage of that extra space. While rumors persist of a 4-inch iPhone 5, it’s hard to imagine that Apple would let the iPhone 5 casing grow very much if at all just to accommodate an LTE radio and its battery. And they wouldn’t put one in the iPad 3 now if they weren’t planning on putting one in the iPhone 5 later. The phone is still the flagship, for now. Qualcomm is releasing new chips, however, and it’s possible they’ll have one ready in time for the iPhone 5 that’s small and power efficient enough to meet even Apple’s demands. Let’s grant for a moment that that proves true. There’s still a much bigger problem when it comes to LTE. AvailabilityVerizon has a decent U.S. LTE roll out, claiming coverage in 190 markets of varying size. AT&T claims 26 markets with large scale deployment not complete until the end of 2013. Sprint will have 4 markets on LTE by mid 2011, but it will likewise take years to roll out nationally. Internationally things get worse. Both Rogers and Bell have a handful of LTE cities each. In Europe and Asia there are a smattering of cities, but many huge markets are still years way. LTE simply isn’t very common yet, and Apple is the company that didn’t even add 3G to the iPhone until the second generation version launched in 2008. ModelsWould adding the expense — both component and engineering — of an LTE radio, along with any remaining size and power demands, make sense to Apple if there are so few markets able to make use of it? Apple sold the one-iPhone 4S-model-to-rule-them-all faster and further than any other handset in the history of the business, getting it into more countries, on more carriers, for more users than ever before. Would that be possible if the iPad 3 or iPhone 5 similarly included LTE all in one model? Instead, what if Apple kept the current radio stack in place for the iPad 3 and iPhone 5 and but also launched separate models for LTE in the markets where they make sense, like the U.S., Canada, and those European and Asian countries that support it. Not all LTE operates on the same frequencies, so engineering even an international LTE radio wouldn’t be dead simple, let alone a GSM/CDMA/LTE across all bands. Letting HSPA and CDMA continue to do what they do now, in markets that don’t have other options, isn’t a bad idea. But if complexity and scarcity are still the case, why worry about LTE at all in 2012? Why not just wait until 2013? VerizonThe current iPad and iPhone run at up to 14.4mbps on AT&T and GSM carriers. They run at 2-3mbps on Verizon’s CDMA network. Apple went out of their way to avoid calling the HSPA+ iPhone 4S a “4G” phone last year, knowing if AT&T and others claimed it as such, Verizon’s version would be made to look less-than by comparison. That hasn’t hurt Verizon’s sales yet — iPhone 4S set records on every carrier including Verizon, eclipsing devices with bigger screens and LTE radios on the same shelves — but it likely hurts Verizon pride. With the best LTE deployment in the U.S. and a desire to use it that’s so strong Verizon reportedly won’t let Windows Phone and BlackBerrys on their network without LTE anymore, how happy would they be to sit on CDMA for another year, to again have to market an EVDO Rev. A iPad 3 and iPhone 5? Apple could pull the trigger on LTE in 2012. In most markets they don’t need to, but in the U.S. in general and Verizon in specific, there’s reason to consider it. Doing two models — HSPA+/CDMA for most of the world and LTE for Verizon and the other carriers that support it — wouldn’t be unprecedented for Apple, and could indeed be the best of both worlds. |
Angry Birds boss doesn’t see app piracy as a problem Posted: 31 Jan 2012 10:21 AM PST In a recent interview, Rovio CEO Mikael Hed said that app piracy isn’t a huge threat to their signature title, Angry Birds. In fact, it may help increase their popularity. Hed draws a lot of parallels to the music industry, and sees suing your fanbase as fundamentally “futile”.
This is pretty smart on Rovio’s part, since they don’t just have a little slingshot game now — they have a brand. That brand is proving to be way more valuable for cartoons, merchandise, and cross-licensing (like the case with Rio) than as an iPhone app. It’s on these fronts that Rovio is staying agressive. “We have some issues with piracy, not only in apps, but also especially in the consumer products. There is tons and tons of merchandise out there, especially in Asia, which is not officially licensed products.” While Angry Birds might be the exception rather than the rule when it comes to app store success stories, Hed’s mindset here should show that publishers should always be thinking beyond the app. There’s a big world outside of mobile apps, and the more of it developers can latch hooks into, the more relevant their software becomes. Of course, smaller developers might think that’s easy for Hed and his massive pork-and-poultry-fed bank account to say. With thinner margins for their apps, and nowhere near the same popularity with which they could viably sell shirts, plushies, or other branded goods, no doubt they’re hit much harder by app piracy than Rovio. Source: The Guardian |
How to replace a GSM/AT&T iPhone 4 speaker assembly and cellular antenna [Weekly mod] Posted: 31 Jan 2012 09:37 AM PST Having speaker or cellular reception issues on your GSM/AT&T iPhone 4 and want to DIY repair it? iMore has you covered. We can guide you through the process and give you advice on where to get your parts and tools. Replacing the bottom speaker assembly or cellular antenna are both pretty straight forward repairs if you’ve got good instructions, the right tools, and quality parts.
Disclaimer: As with any repair, iMore nor PXLFIX can be held responsible for any damage you may do to your device. It's also worth considering that opening up your device to perform any repair or modification can and will void your Apple warranty. If you don't feel comfortable opening your device, don't. Use extreme care and caution when performing a repair on any device. What issues this repair will address
What you need for a DIY speaker or cellular antenna repairPXLFIX recommends using only quality and genuine parts from a reputable supplier like eTech Parts. They have quality parts, tools, and much more for all your repair needs. Please note the speaker assembly is the same across all models of iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S but the antenna will be different.
Power off your iPhone 4Before performing any repair, always power off your device before removing any screws or parts. Remove the back
Remove your SIM cardUse a SIM removal tool or a paperclip to remove your SIM card and tray. Set them aside. Remove the battery
Remove the dock connector shield and disconnect the cable
Remove the top logic board shield
Disconnect the 6 cables from the top of the logic board
Remove the logic board
Remove the speaker assembly
Replace the speaker assemblyIf you’re replacing the speaker assembly, you’ll just need to unscrew the cellular antenna and peel back the adhesive holding it in place. There are only 2 screws holding it in place. Place the cellular antenna carefully on the new speaker assembly and follow the instruction video for reassembly below. Replacing the cellular antennaRemove the 2 screws holding the old assembly down and peel it off the speaker assembly. From here you can apply the new cellular antenna to the speaker assembly. Most will come with adhesive already on them and ready for installation. Be sure to put any folds or creases where necessary as some come flat and you’ll have to work it into place. Reassemble your iPhoneOnce you’ve gotten your new speaker assembly or cellular antenna reassembled using the steps above, you’ll just need to reassemble your iPhone 4. We’ve put together a reassembly video you can watch above. And… done!Your bottom loud speaker should now work or your cellular antenna should be back in working condition. As a side note, once replacing the cellular antenna you may have to toggle 3G on and off in certain cases. Have you done this repair yourself? Let us know how it went! Want to know how to perform another type of iPhone repair or modification? Send me suggestions to ally.kazmucha@imore.com or leave a comment in our brand new Mod and DIY Repair Forum! For questions or to inquire about mail-in repairs through PXLFIX, please follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook or e-mail us directly! Of course, you can like us and follow us just because you think we’re cool too! |
Posted: 31 Jan 2012 09:25 AM PST Every day the iPhone and iPad App Stores get flooded with new and updated apps and games, and every day we sort through them all to bring you the very best. Today’s hottest apps and updates include an RPG from the slimiest pits of the Old Ones, a cool and clever way to map your meetings, the shortest review app on the planet, a new ringtone creation app vying for the crown, and a much-loved children’s book comes to iPhone and iPad.
Call of Cthulhu: The Wasted LandA turn-based strategy/role-playing game based on Call of Cthulhu RPG. Set in the midst of World War One, the game pits your team of investigators and soldiers against an ancient enemy, one older than humanity itself… Can your team of investigators keep their grip on sanity long enough to stop these diabolical plans? The fate of humanity is in your hands…
Meeting MapperDocuments all the important information in meetings and display a graphical depiction of your meetings. The information can be exported as a PDF and emailed and uploaded into your CRM application, SharePoint or just save it on your computer.
Tiny ReviewReview stuff with just one photo and three lines of texts. Seriously, if they read how much we just wrote about them, they’d be pissed. (But now you can login with Twitter or email!)
Ringtones & Alert Tones MakerPersonalize your iPhone by creating your own ringtones, text tones and other alert tones with Ringtones & Alert Tones Maker. Choose the song you want to use as your ringtone, specify the type of your alert, then choose the required segment from the audio track.
The Very Cranky BearThe award winning and much loved children’s book, The Very Cranky Bear* is now an animated, interactive app! Join Moose, Zebra, Lion and Sheep as they try to hide from the rain in a cave, but accidentally disturb a very cranky bear…
Any other big app or game releases or updates today? Have an app you’d love to see featured on iMore? Email us at iosapps@imore.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look. |
Final Cut Pro X updated to turn your multi-cam iPhone videos into masterpieces Posted: 31 Jan 2012 08:44 AM PST Apple has just released an update to Final Cut Pro X, their executive video editing software suite, which adds multi-camera syncing and broadcast monitoring suport. Final Cut Pro X 10.0.3 also includes enhanced XML, so it can talk with third-party plug-ins more easily. As always, there’s a bunch of great audio, animation, and color correction tools in there which professionals have come to rely on. So, okay, okay, maybe Final Cut Pro X is a little overkill for something shot on your iPhone 4S, especially with iMovie available right on the device, but if you’re knee-deep in the Apple lifestyle, maybe you like adding an extra layer of polish to your mobile videos. Or if you just shot your new music video with a four iPhone setup and need that new multi-cam sync. (Hey, it happens!) Even though Final Cut Pro X is clearly built for, well, pros, it’s still interesting to see some people kit out their iPhones with all manner of video-enhancing accessories. While I can’t speak much to the quality of those videos versus something done with a “real” camera, I still admire folks who try to close the gap. A full-blown version of Final Cut Pro X on iPad — even the iPad 3 is still the stuff of legend, but I’d love to see a bunch of mobile companion apps to enhance desktop publishing. Adobe’s done a lot of stuff like this, and I think a similar strategy for Apple would be a great way to keep an iPad in the workflow. Even if Apple doesn’t take up the call, maybe the enhanced XML support will enable third parties to make some cool iPad companion apps for Final Cut Pro X. There are just so many separate panes and menus to keep in order when editing video, that it would be nice to shunt a few of the less vital ones to a separate display. Full press release after the jump.
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Daily deal: Ballistic Shell Gel (SG) Series Case for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 only $18.95 Posted: 31 Jan 2012 07:51 AM PST For today only, the TiPb Store has the Ballistic Shell Gel (SG) Series Case for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 on sale for only $18.95!. Get them before they’re gone! Get the Ballistic Shell Gel (SG) Series Case for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 now!
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Apple appoints John Browett as Senior Vice President of Retail Posted: 31 Jan 2012 06:04 AM PST Apple has appointed John Browett as their new Senior Vice President of Retail. Mr Browett will be leaving his position of CEO of Dixons Retail, Europe's largest specialist electrical retailer. "Our retail stores are all about customer service, and John shares that commitment like no one else we've met," said Tim Cook, Apple's CEO. "We are thrilled to have him join our team and bring his incredible retail experience to Apple." Prior to taking the reins of the Dixon Group, Browett also held high positions within Tesco plc and even had the CEO role for Tesco.com. Browett replaces former retail head, Ron Johnson who left Apple in the summer of last year to take the post of CEO at JC Penney. Full press release below.
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Top free iPhone app devs paying $1.81 in marketing per loyal user Posted: 31 Jan 2012 05:00 AM PST Fiksu, a mobile marketing firm, released some interesting data on how much money top iPhone app developers are spending on promoting their creations. After looking at the top 200 free iPhone App Store for December, the average cost to get someone to run an app more than three times is $1.81. This is up significantly from $1.41 in November. Fiksu also determined that the App Store saw a little over 6 million daily downloads in December, helped in no small part by the oodles of Christmas sales. In fact,m the last week of December saw advertising budgets (and traffic) double. Fiksu gathered up this information through their marketing platform, which spans over 200 million downloads, and 11 billion in-app actions. App Store rankings freeze between December 25 and 28, which creates a rush to get top position beforehand, so you hold that visibility while folks start downloading apps on their new iPhones. Fiksu CEO Micah Adler said: "For so many app brands, December is a strategically critical month for app discovery. What we witnessed during the month was a 'land rush' in which advertisers earnestly spent marketing dollars in order to achieve ranking before the traditional App Store freeze which then would generate substantial organic downloads through increased visibility."It paints a harsh picture of the app development world when you have to pay nearly two bucks just to get someone to run your app a couple of times, nevermind spend any money on in-app purchases, or click on any ads. With iPhone app download volume climbing, and showing no signs of letting up, it’s bound to put a lot of pressure on developers to compete. Considering all the noise, discoverability is huge, and it’s not entirely surprising to see publishers willing to pay so much to get it. Of course, if developers just wrote good apps and dropped us a line, maybe they’d get some free advertising by way of our Daily Apps series. Jussayin’. |
iPhone 4S demand finally satisfied, all models now in stock for next day delivery Posted: 31 Jan 2012 12:39 AM PST Apple has finally caught up with the huge demand for the iPhone 4S. For the first time since its iPhone 4S launch way back< in October/a>, all models of the iPhone 4S are now shown as in stock. No matter which model you go for, 16GB, 32GB or 64GB or which carrier you choose from AT&T, Verizon or Sprint, they are all in stock. Even the unlocked and contract free models too. Source: Apple Store via Macrumors |
Case-Mate POP! Case with Stand for iPad 2 review [Giveaway] Posted: 31 Jan 2012 12:13 AM PST “If you want your iPad 2 to finally be able to stand on its own, then the Case-Mate Pop! Case is for you. “The Case-Mate Pop! Case with Stand for the iPad 2 brings the same blend of protection and kickstand-enabled performance to the iPad 2 as it’s younger, smaller sibling does for the iPhone 4S. And like with the iPhone version, that’s a very good thing.
Available in two-tone black or white, the Case-Mate Pop! Case with Stand for the iPhone 2 is composed of hard, protective rubber shell and soft, easy-to-grip rubberized sides. The shell feels strong and can handle any minor impact that might otherwise scratch or dent your precious iPad. The sides are what make the difference for me, however, as they really let you grab a hold, and keep a hold, on what’s sometimes a slippery device. The stand folds out from the back and does a great job either staying open or being closed. However, unlike the iPhone version, there’s no ability to set an angle in between. You either have to keep it closed, set it open, or watch it flap about. Awkward. The Case-Mate Pop! Case for iPad 2 does a great job protecting the back but the sides feel a little loose at times. I’ve seen this on numerous iPad cases and while it might just be that these materials don’t hold up well over long surfaces like the edges around the iPad’s 9.7-inch screen, I still wish they’d figure that out. But this case is really about the kick stand, and how it lets you put your iPad 2 down yet keep watching your movies, following your recipes, reading your books, typing your notes, or any other of a dozen activities. The Good
The Bad
The conclusionIf you want your iPad 2 to finally be able to stand up on its own, then the Case-Mate Pop! Case is for you. Wonderfully grippy, nicely protective, the Case-Mate Pop! Case for iPad 2 is everything you could want in a movie-watching, note-typing, kickstand-packing accessory. The giveawaySimply leave a comment below telling us how the Case-Mate Pop! Case for iPad 2 could make your life easier and you’re entered to win one of your very own! Giveaway starts now and ends Sunday, February 5 at midnight PT. U.S. shipping address required for delivery. |
Hands on with the Crimson cases, sticker skins, and edgings for iPhone Posted: 30 Jan 2012 11:23 PM PST Crimson makes some colorful, sparkly cases, skins, and edgings for the iPhone, and I know this because while at Macworld 2012, I noticed a couple people sporting them around the antennas of their iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S’s. This is what drew me towards Crimson’s booth.
Crimson offers many options for adding personality and protection to your iPhone. Currently available is the Aluminum Frame Case and six different types of screen protectors. In the near future, Crimson will be offering skins for the backs and antennas of the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S. Most of these skins are colorful and sparkly, but there will also be options that are more subtle and “manly”. While visiting their booth, I picked up a purple skin for the back of my iPhone 4S and a purple Aluminum Frame case. I may be enjoying my sparkly skin, but I’ll admit to not being a huge fan of the case. The nubby corners are a turn off and add quite a bit of bulk to the overall size of my iPhone. If the corners were small and rounded, I may actually consider using it regularly.
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Posted: 30 Jan 2012 08:20 PM PST This was our Macworld. Other Macworlds were different. But this one was ours.Macworld | iWorld 2012 was not the event of old, where Steve Jobs put sneaker to keynote stage and introduced us to everything from the iPhone to the MacBook Air, and where Apple’s massive booth, and the massive booths of countless accessory makers, filled Moscone to capacity. Apple has held their iPad keynotes — and just recently the education event — outside of Macworld, at a time and place of their own choosing. And CES has made a concerted effort to steal away the accessory booths, and now has more iPhone and iPad cases in their halls than any person, sane or otherwise, would ever want to walk through at any one time. Some would say they tried to take the heart from Macworld, but all they took was the keynote and the bigger booths. Macworld’s heart, it turns out, was never in either of those things. It was in the community. And it endures.
Those who only ever bothered to fly in for the keynote and fly out again no longer bother. Those who only scoured the booths for deals no longer show up to scour. Now it’s the dedicated media who stay the week. It’s the fans who show up and want to find out about what’s going on. And we all had a great time. After dealing with travel delays, Leanna and I arrived on late Thursday and enjoyed only the briefest glimpse of the show floor before it closed. But Macworld didn’t end at Moscone. That night we met up with a veritable whose-who of fellow Apple bloggers and journalists, developers and designers, accessory makers and advertising/pr reps. We drank, we ate, we shared stories and opinion — we shared Macworld. The next two days we hit the show — hard. We recorded a bunch of videos and a ton of interviews you’ll see over the course of the coming weeks. And those two nights we kept meeting up with our fellow Apple enthusiasts, our community. Because that’s what Macworld is and really always was. A reunion of those who cover and create and consume the Apple experience. A homecoming. That’s not to say everything is perfect now. It isn’t. Macworld has transformed into Macworld|iWorld and turned from a traditional expo into a modern fan event. But they haven’t fully embraced that change yet. A lot of the talks, a lot of the panels, were filled with the same Mac pundits that have always filled them. Just like Macworld has added iWorld, the agenda needs to add the energy and insights of the new iOS-centric generation. Don’t lose the old guard, but add the new blood. We’ll all be richer for it. Likewise, build on the smaller accessory makers and the developers, the kickstarters who don’t fit in at CES, and the indies who want to network with each other and with their most enthusiastic consumers in a way WWDC could never allow. Still, new Macworld|iWorld is just getting their footing. Just like we envision iMore to be the ultimate online site for iPhone and iPad enthusiasts, Macworld|iWorld is aiming to do that for the entire Apple community in the real world. I expect great things ahead. So great, in fact, I don’t really miss Apple or the big accessory makers at all anymore. So many things, smaller, more delicate, more unusual things have blossomed in their absence. If IDG can keep up what they’ve started, if the community can realize the benefits of coming together like this, of being a community together like this, there will be many more amazing Macworld|iWorld events to come. And I for one can’t wait to attend. |
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