May 22, 2012

Woz Remembers Steve Jobs

Macsupportcasts would not be here if Steve and Woz had not started. Thank You for having the determination, vision to start.

Thank you Steve Jobs for having the tenacity to stick with your vision through all the good and bad times. In the last 14 years you have been vindicated along with the Apple brand.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to your family and loved ones. We will miss you Steve.


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"Don't be sad because it ended, smile because it happened"
Dr. Seuss

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FaceTime for Mac

FaceTime_for_MacFaceTime for Mac makes it to the Mac App Store.

As Cult of Mac points out in their short synopsis, “Changes over the beta aren’t significant… but explicit mention is made that 720p video calling is supported.”

The cost for FaceTime is .99¢.

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Memo to iPad mimics: No one wants a $799 knockoff

iPadYou can’t beat Apple at being Apple

Open…and Shut There’s a growing list of would-be iPad killers born each month, but none yet to grok the central message that made Android beat the iPhone: cheapness.

Motorola and others may have all sorts of reasons for why their tablets are superior to Apple’s iPad, but until the price tag is significantly lower, their devices are going to sit on the shelves as museum pieces. Motorola’s mobility head, Sanja Jha, articulates a bevy of reasons for why the Xoom tablet is worth its $799 price, the primary one being “our ability to deliver 50Mb/s [will] justify the $799 price point.”

But he’s wrong. For one thing, though the Xoom comes with Verizon’s lightning-fast 4G network access, “Verizon’s new 4G LTE network is so fast that you can use up your entire 5GB, $50 monthly allotment in 32 minutes,” as PC Mag’s Sascha Segan found. So forget the cost of the device for a minute: once a consumer actually starts tapping into the power of the Xoom and its network, the consumer is going to be paying through the nose in data overage charges. Ouch.

But there’s a bigger reason few consumers are going to be willing to pay the same price for a Xoom (or any other tablet) as they would for an iPad: it’s not an iPad. The default brand that consumers associate with tablets is Apple. That’s where the cachet is. So long as its a Motorola Xoom, a RIM PlayBook, etc., it’s got to be cheaper or it’s not going to sell. (The only possible exception to this is Android-based devices, because Android has a great brand all its own, but even Android is ultimately successful because it’s cheaper. More on that below). There really isn’t any good way around this, either.

Read More at The Register

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Light Peak in 13″ Macbook Pro

From MacRumors:

Light Peak Port

Early this morning, a couple of sites posted specs from the upcoming low end 13″ MacBook Pro and revealed that Apple will be incorporating Light Peak into the new machines under the name “Thunderbolt”. We’ve confirmed that these specs and photos are legitimate, but only for the low end 13″ MacBook Pro model. We still haven’t seen the specs for the mid-range and high-end model.

Mac4Ever has posted a followup close-up image of the new Thunderbolt/DisplayPort hybrid port found on the new 13″ MacBook Pro.

Intel is expected to officially launch Light Peak/Thunderbolt on Thursday alongside Apple’s new MacBook Pros.

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The 5 Stages of Apple Rumors

Apple RumorsAs we approach the time when Apple is expected to launch two of its flagship products for 2011 — the iPhone 5 and the iPad 2 — the rumors around the company, its plans, the products’ features and the launch dates are entering a frenzy matched perhaps only by high profile celebrity rumor mills.

It is at this point that, to paraphrase the legendary post-modern saying, the rumors get so intense that everything is pointless. Even if you’re closely following Apple, which keeps its secrets behind a tightly locked 10-inch-thick steel door, it’s getting hard to track every single rumor about the upcoming products, and it’s even harder to discern which of them could be true.
We cannot be certain what features the iPhone 5 and the iPad 2 will have. Hell, we don’t know for sure that these products even exist. The rumors themselves, however, follow an interesting set of patterns that seem to reappear every time an Apple product is about to be launched.

1. The Age of Innocence

At this early stage, actual products are several months away, and the only palpable data anyone really has is the timing of Apple’s yearly events, such as the Apple Worldwide Developer Conference. It is also at this time when the rumors actually make the most sense, as analysts and media outlets take the obvious picks. The new iPhone, you will often read at this time, will have a better camera, a faster processor and more memory.

Well, duh. The features sound good, but they’re also so obvious that anyone could’ve predicted them. While the predictions at this stage are often correct, they only point toward an evolutionary product release, which Apple often does.

READ THE REST ON MASHABLE

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Apple Delays New MacBook Pro Shipments Until Week’s End

MacBook and Apple StoreWhile we’ve already reported that new MacBook Pros are expected to launch on Thursday and reports have even surfaced claiming that sealed shipments are already on their way to retailers, it’s worth noting that Apple’s top-priority U.S. online store has now gotten in on the act by pushing shipment estimates for all new MacBook Pro orders out to 3-5 business days.

Apple’s brick-and-mortar retail stores will of course continue to sell off any remaining stock of the current models, but the company’s online distribution system has clearly dried up and any new orders placed will almost certainly be upgraded to the new models released later this week.

Some observers have questioned why Apple would release new MacBook Pros on a Thursday, as opposed to its traditional Tuesday release date. The most likely reason is related to the federal Presidents’ Day holiday in the United States today. Apple generally prefers not to launch new products straight out of a weekend, in part due to ensure that media coverage is not diminished as some reporters may still be making their way back from the long weekend. Consequently, Apple has been known to deviate from its usual Tuesday and Wednesday releases in weeks with major U.S. holidays.

Others have noted that Thursday is Apple CEO Steve Jobs’ 56th birthday (as well as MacRumors’ own 11th birthday), which almost certainly simply makes for a nice coincidence.

Original Article on MacRumors

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Why Nobody Can Match the iPad’s Price

iPad in BagWhen Steve Jobs introduced the iPad last January, the biggest surprise wasn’t the actual product. (Many shrugged and called the iPad a “bigger iPhone.”) It was the price: Just $500.

Nobody expected that number, perhaps because Apple has traditionally aimed at the high end of the mobile computer market with MacBooks marked $1,000 and up. And perhaps we were also thrown off because Apple execs repeatedly told investors they couldn’t produce a $500 computer that wasn’t a piece of junk.

But Apple did meet that price, and the iPad isn’t junk. The iPad is still the first, and best-selling, product of its kind. Competitors, meanwhile, are having trouble hitting that $500 sweet spot.

Motorola’s Xoom tablet is debuting in the United States with an $800 price tag. (To be fair, the most comparable iPad is $730 — but there’s no $500 Xoom planned, and the lack of a low-end entry point will hurt Motorola.) Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, with a relatively puny 7-inch screen, costs $600 without a contract.

Why is it so hard to get to a lower starting price? And how was Apple able to get there?

Jason Hiner of Tech Republic suggests it largely has to do with Apple’s retail strategy. Apple now has 300 retail stores worldwide selling iPads directly to customers. That’s advantageous, because if the iPad were primarily sold at third-party retail stores, a big chunk of profit would go to those retailers, Hiner reasons.

Read the Full Article at Wired.com

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Archive Gmail into Apple Mail

Apple_Mail_iconSo you use Apple Mail to access your Gmail. But how do you archive your Gmail into your Apple Mail?

No need to worry. Over at Mac|Life they have a short, and to the point "how-to" for those of us who need a little extra help. If their tutorial isn't easy enough, they even give us a tip on how to make the process even easier.

Happy archiving.

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“Working with your iPad” released

Working-with-iPad"Take Control Books" has released version 2 of "Working with Your iPad".

Over at MacNews they've posted an overview of what the updated revision of the book covers. TidBITS Publishing has an ever growing library of books that can teach you how to use your Mac, its software and externals. For the "adult learner" who still likes to gain, or grow, their knowledge from a book TidBITS is an excellent resource.

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iPhone Nano? Bloomberg Story

iPhone NanoApple Inc. is working on new versions of the iPhone that are aimed at slowing the advance of competing handsets based on Google Inc.’s Android software, according to people who have been briefed on the plans.

One version would be cheaper and smaller than the most recent iPhone, said a person who has seen a prototype and asked not to be identified because the plans haven’t been made public. Apple also is developing technology that makes it easier to use the iPhone on multiple wireless networks, two people said.

Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs, who remains involved in strategic decisions while on medical leave, would use lower prices to widen the iPhone’s appeal and keep it from losing further ground to Android devices. Less expensive iPhones may also ratchet up pressure on Nokia Oyj, whose Symbian software is especially popular in Europe and some developing markets.

READ MORE at Bloomberg

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