August 23, 2012
Written by Peter Cohen
Tony Wolverton for MercuryNews.com:
The company owed $30 million to $40 million to various creditors and had little money to pay them. It had failed to find a buyer despite shopping itself around and was facing a complete shutdown of its services, said Joel Weinberg, CEO of Insolvency Services Group.
OnLive is the video game service that enables you to stream popular PC games to your Mac or PC over the Internet, or to your TV using a small settop box.
OnLive made headlines last week when its assets were abruptly sold to a newly formed company (also called OnLive) and many employees were terminated. The service continues for customers, however.
The CEO of a firm tasked with paying some of OnLive’s old debts explained that OnLive “had only days to live” because of cashflow and credit issues.
OnLive emerged as one of the highest profile “cloud gaming” services, which enable people to play games without actually buying them and downloading them – paying a monthly subscription fee instead.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
This pack is perfect for the songwriter looking for a wide variety of basic drums for a broad spectrum of playing styles. It covers anything from mellow ballads to funky midtempo swing and straight uptempo rock, all categorized in different songs and full 4-8 bar song part blocks.
I love Toontrack’s products. I have almost everything they make.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Glassboard premium was created to give you more of what you need from Glassboard – more storage, more boards, the ability to bookmark messages and much more, all for just $5/month.
Great stuff from Sepia Labs.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
You knew it was going to happen.
Like all of us, Tom Webster gets spam. E-mail spam, Web site comment spam, the usual. Unlike most of us, Tom’s put it to good use on his blog called Tom Reads His Spam.
Webster, VP of Strategy at Edison Research in North Carolina, has a terrific voice, and Tom Reads His Spam is a whole bunch of audio clips of Webster doing exactly that. Funny stuff – check it out!
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Some cool tools to help you with your CSS.
August 21, 2012
Written by Shawn King
iPhone in Canada:
For those accessing iTunes today, you may have noticed Apple has added extra security to your iTunes Account by asking you to fill out three security questions and input an alternate recovery email address. With these additional security questions now being asked in the event of account recovery, and the additional rescue email option, it should increase Apple ID security. But of course, nothing can beat a strong password, which Apple ID accounts now require a capital letter and numbers.
I’ve checked with friends in Canada and some of the questions are really obvious – like, “What is the name of your lead dogsled dog?” and “How many relatives do you have in Toronto?”
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I laughed so hard at this. Especially the Siri part:
“Chickpea salad. Nom nom nom. I am happy.”
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Dell just announced its quarterly earnings:
Income: Down Revenue: Down Enterprise: Down Government: Down Small and medium businesses: Down And Consumer: You guessed it, down.
Oh and stock price: Down
Despite all of that, Dell posted “better than expected second-quarter earnings.”
Written by Shawn King
Autoblog:
Miimo is an autonomous robotic mower that Honda will be selling in the European market only (for now) starting in 2013.Miimo runs on power supplied by its lithium-ion battery pack and, just like a Roomba robotic vacuum, will return to its charging station for a fresh batch of electrons when it runs out.The mower can operate in a random pattern, a directional mode where it mows back and forth in lines, or a combination of the two. As for safety, Miimo has bump sensors so it won’t break any potted plants, and if lifted off the ground, its blades will automatically stop and starting up again requires entering a unique PIN number.
As a kid, sweating behind an old fashioned push-blade mower (no – I’m not that old. My father was that cheap!), I would have saved my allowance and bought one of these!
Written by Shawn King
Columbia Journalism Review:
The big market news today is about Apple’s gargantuan market capitalization reaching a new, stunning high. There’s a big problem with all of the headlines: They’re all false.Apple is not the biggest or most valuable company in history—not by a longshot. That’s because the press is overlooking reality for the apparently irresistible pull of a headline that includes “Apple” and “record” = pageview gold.Apple’s $622 billion market cap is a nominal record, which means “in name only,” or alternatively, not really. That’s because it’s a record only if you don’t adjust Microsoft’s 1999 market cap for inflation.
Keep this story in mind next time you read of something or other achieving “record” status. Always question the numbers and where they come from.
Written by Shawn King
The Moscow News:
Gadgets manufacturer and darling of the hipster set, Apple Computers plans to sell its products in Russia without the use of middlemen, bringing the price of its trendy equipment down.Apple has registered a company Apple Rus and assigned Vitaly Morozko, the corporation’s local legal advisor, as its director general, Kommersant reported.According to an unnamed manager of an Apple distributor, the company could start direct sales in Russia in 2013, but it is unclear when first Apple Stores will open.
“darling of the hipster set…”? Hipsters didn’t make Apple the most valuable public company in the world.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I’d love to have one of the Strats.

Written by Jim Dalrymple
Goodrich, who worked for Jobs since 1998, was promised by late chairman of the world’s most valuable company in a one-on- one meeting in May 2005 that he would always have a job at Apple, according to the complaint. The conversation took place after Jobs’s return from medical leave to receive treatment for pancreatic cancer, Goodrich said.
Just playing devil’s advocate here, but aren’t things like this said all time? “You’re good, you’ll always have a job here.” Things change.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
We’re re-doubling our efforts to bring you an all-new version of Twitterrific: one that complies with Twitter’s new guidelines and makes reading and posting to Twitter even easier and more fun.
Great news. I’m glad to hear that the guys will continue one of the great Twitter apps on the market.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
A new cool Mac app from Matt Gemmell. I just picked it up.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
The jurors have to answer 700 questions in the Apple v. Samsung case.
Written by Peter Cohen
Blake Patterson for TouchArcade:
Rantmedia Games will soon be releasing Vectrex Regeneration, a universal Vectrex emulator that comes bundled with the entire original game library — nearly 30 titles. Beyond this, a number of feature packs will be available as in-app-purchases to enable extended functionality.
The Vectrex was a video game system from the same era of home consoles that spawned the Atari 2600 and the Mattel Intellivision. It sported its own built-in monitor, which displayed vector graphics (think “Asteroids” or “Tempest”) instead of the traditional blocky color graphics that were standard for the era. It died an ignominious death in the early 1980s with a paucity of games available, but anyone who’s ever handled one will tell you how cool it was.
August 20, 2012
At the Loop, we love our pets – Jim and his family have two awesome dogs, while my family and I have a cat and a goldfish (and of course, Jim’s beard has a human pet). So a new Tumblr gallery called Dogshaming drew our attention. Owners of dogs frustrated with their canine’s inappropriate behavior take photos of their pets – preferably at the scene of the crime – with a card or paper that (often hilariously) describes the pet’s infractions.
If you’ve ever had a dog, this will make you laugh.
Written by Peter Cohen
Everett Rosenfeld for Time.com:
The Dub the Dew campaign must have seemed like such a good idea at the time. After all, letting the Internet choose the name for a green-apple infused soft drink is great marketing and helps build brand loyalty, right? What could possibly go wrong? But promoters forgot just what they were dealing with when soliciting the opinion of the masses — these were, after all, the same people who exiled rapper Pitbull to a Walmart in Alaska. As could have been expected, the results of Dub the Dew were so offensive and useless that the entire promotion needed to be shut down.
It’s worth noting that the promotion wasn’t Mountain Dew’s dewing doing – it was a pizza restaurant, apparently.
Anyway, some of the names the griefers came up with are absolutely hilarious, totally inappropriate and wrong. I’m still chuckling.
Note to Jim: Never, ever leave it to our readers to decide anything about the site. Heaven only knows what they’ll come up with.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Eric Slivka for Mac Rumors:
Microsoft’s market capitalization peaked on December 30, 1999, reaching an intraday high of $119.94 per share. With Microsoft having documented 5,160,024,593 outstanding shares as of October 31, 1999 in its quarterly earnings report, the company would have had a market capitalization of $618.89 billion on December 30.Apple’s most recent quarterly filing listed 937,406,000 outstanding shares as of July 13, 2012, and with the company’s stock price hitting $660.73 today, its market capitalization reached $619.37 billion.
Impressive.