Doing so will cost you dearly, though; the 30GB tier demands $300 per month, with the 40 / 50GB options coming in at $400 and $500 respectively. Naturally unlimited talk and text are included in each plan, just as before.
Plus $30 for each device you add to your share plan. Ouch.
Weibo users immediately begun to speculate about the meaning of that last sentence, with some noting that an odd flood of negative posts about Apple appearing on the site after 8:20pm. Speculation soon spread that Mr. Ho had been supplied with the text by CCTV as part of coordinated campaign to smear the Cupertino, Calif. electronics maker online.
…
While there is no evidence to suggest Mr. Ho or anyone else was paid to post messages in support of CCTV’s allegations, the reaction on Weibo points to rising mistrust of the country’s state-run media outlets among Chinese Internet users, who have increasing access to alternate sources of information via social media.
Who’s behind the coordinated campaign? And are they in cahoots with the analysts and hedge fund managers who seem intent on driving down Apple’s stock value in the States?
I’m getting increasingly paranoid about all of this stuff.
“We’ve been preparing the watch product for so long,” Lee Young Hee, executive vice president of Samsung’s mobile business, said during an interview in Seoul. “We are working very hard to get ready for it. We are preparing products for the future, and the watch is definitely one of them.”
In other words, ever since they heard Apple may be working on one.
Dave Grohl has become the unofficial Mayor of Rock ‘n’ Roll: a gregarious ambassador who wins armloads of Grammys and even directs a music documentary. Watch Grohl’s keynote address at the SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious disease specialist at Toronto General Hospital in Canada, had seen reports from scientists who turned their smart phones into microscopes. “There were a couple of papers that showed how certain groups were attaching the little ball lenses to their iPhones in a laboratory setting, and they were saying, ‘Hey, you can magnify specimens pretty easily,’” Bogoch told NBC News.
Since its founding more than a century ago, the company has worked on tens of thousands of landmark projects, including Hoover Dam, the Channel Tunnel, and entire airports in Hong Kong and Qatar.
“Bechtel projects by definition require innovation, because they are things that have not been done before,” says Walker Kimball, Bechtel Senior Vice President. Bechtel’s complex international operations demand powerful, flexible project management tools and support systems. iPad and an array of custom-built and third-party apps connect workers with essential information that helps them meet the company’s exacting efficiency, quality, and safety standards worldwide.
A few other mid and senior-level executives sounded surprised at the changes in just asking around so far. But EA suffered a big black-eye in the last few weeks with the botched launch of Sim City.
Neither of these are new, but they’re so funny I wanted to point them out anyway. The Clorox Company has two of the most disturbing and funny ads I’ve ever seen for a detergent.
“So, could we have built a subset offline mode? Yes,” Bradshaw admitted. “But we rejected that idea because it didn’t fit with our vision…The SimCity we delivered captures the magic of its heritage but catches up with ever-improving technology.”
More and more, the message from gamers is that they think EA’s vision sucks.
BrightNest will help you tackle important home tasks with easy-to-follow instructions, a personal schedule and helpful reminders. From basic maintenance to cleaning tricks to home design ideas, we deliver everything you need to shape up your home and simplify your life.
They appointed two co-CEOs after the Galaxy S 4 event. Apparently they must think that nightmare was a success. The two new co-CEOs will join the existing CEO.
Taking a page from RIM’s playbook (You see what I did there?).
A new app called Unbound for Mac allows photo viewing by waving your hands in the air to mimic gestures. I actually emailed the developer to see if the video was real and he assured it was.
Even assuming Congress wants to leave the broader problems of the DMCA alone for now, we can do much better. In this blog post, I give a brief background on the DMCA and its relation to phone unlocking, take a close look at each of the congressional proposals and suggest what an effective unlocking fix would look like. Both the Obama administration and the FCC have come out in favor of allowing American citizens to unlock their cell phones, contrary to legislation imposed by the Librarian of Congress which went into effect earlier this year.
Jennifer Granick, Director of Civil Liberties at the Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society, takes a look at some of the proposals already on the table to make it happen and suggests a different course of action. Worth a read.
“I’ve analyzed all of the data calls to and from EA servers – all of the APIs, every request for data, and all of the data that comes back,” explains the modder. And in doing so, he’s found some surprising results. “The SimCity servers are not doing any calculations that could not be done on your PC, even for an entire region single player offline mode, let alone just the city you are in.”
SimCity was released a couple weeks ago for the PC amidst a fair amount of controversy. First Origin, EA’s game download service, was overwhelmed. Then the game’s servers were too busy, causing failed connections, dropouts and saved game problems. The game’s DRM has drawn the sharpest criticism, however, since it requires a persistent online connection.
EA says SimCity absolutely requires servers to work, not just for DRM but also for its core operation. SimCity’s multiplayer support obviously needs a connection, but that’s different. EA may want the connection to be persistent to help combat piracy, but “Azzer” has shown that the game works otherwise.
I have two thoughts here:
Don’t be a thief. And don’t treat your customers like assholes.
Feedly has announced that more than half a million Google Reader users have signed up for its RSS service following Google’s service termination announcement on Wednesday.
Lots of services have stepped forward to fill the gap, or have announced their intent to do so. Feedly seems to have the most momentum right now, though.
A message on the Feedly blog says:
Our main priorities over the next 30 days are 1) to keep the service up, 2) listen to new users for suggestions and 3) add features weekly.
I’d like to thank Preschoolians for sponsoring The Loop this week.
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Our recently introduced E-Photo-Fit allows you to take a photo of the bottom of your child’s foot and know for sure which size to order. We have have the largest selection of footwear in the world for pre-schoolers; in fact billions of choices.
We are the only company which even allows you to custom design the colors using our Design Your Own.
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Lacking hard numbers (because Samsung doesn’t release them anymore) most analysts assume that the bulk of the Korean manufacturer’s mobile sales come from its low-end phones. According to Raymond James’ Tavis McCourt, Samsung’s high-end Galaxy smartphone line outsold the iPhone only once — in the summer of 2012, when many of Apple’s (AAPL) customers were holding out for the iPhone 5.
“The iPhone app will bring in an incredible amount of revenue this year … mobile will be the majority in Q2,” Lerer told VentureBeat after the panel. “It’s a beast. This is where our guys are.”
According to the report, Thrillist’s annual revenue is in the vicinity of $40 million. That’s a lot of iPhone activity.
He said they have an Android app too, but it doesn’t create nearly the same amount of activity as the iPhone app.
“The only hope for Apple and its suppliers is the possible launch of a low-cost iPhone later this year, which may help the U.S. company to gain market share in fast-growing emerging markets such as China,” said Capital Securities analyst Diana Wu.
They found an analyst that heaps praise on Samsung while shitting on Apple. How unusual.
Congrats to Daniel Jalkut of Red Sweater Software (makers of the indispensible Mac blogging tool MarsEdit) for launching Bitsplitting, a new podcast. The first episode features an interview with developer Guy English (creator of image annotation app Napkin), who’s also a promoter of the Çingleton Symposium, a Mac developer conference in Montréal.
Warby Parker did it for eyeglasses, offering style at a discount. Now one of the co-founders of the trendy retailer is tackling something almost every guy needs: razors. Warby Parker co-founder Jeff Raider and his longtime friend Andy Katz-Mayfield have built Harry’s, a startup selling more than just blades and handles, but what they are calling “shaving experiences.”
My wife the optician really likes Warby Parker, which sells trendy, high-quality eyeglasses and offers really great customer service without charging their customers through the teeth. So it’s great to see Jeff Raider try to duplicate his success with shaving products.