But the low-key Mr. Cook has already put his operational mark on Apple in ways that suggest the company won’t be entirely the same as under its intense and tempestuous co-founder.
Things had to change. Tim is not Steve and he won’t manage the company the same way — and he shouldn’t.
Universal Audio (UA) is proud to release UAD Software v6.1, featuring the new MXR Flanger/Doubler Plug-In, the Little Labs Voice of God (VOG) Bass Resonance Tool, plus enhancements to Pro Tools workflow and the Ampex ATR-102 Mastering Tape Recorder Plug-In.
My favorite audio company has another great round of plug-in releases. Anything from UA is worth checking out.
I will join Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and author Walter Isaacson as speakers at the 2012 Apple Investor Summit in Los Angeles, Calif. The event will be held March 15-16 2012 at the Los Angeles Convention Center.
Summit organizers are offering a “friends, family & followers” discount until November 4, so if you want to sign-up, you can get can a discount until Friday.
Woz will give attendees some early Apple stories and personal stories about Steve Jobs. There will be a book signing with Steve Jobs biographer Walter Isaacson and he will talk about the Jobs interview tapes.
I will be talking about the blogosphere and how it has changed the way we look at Apple and technology. There will be many other speakers too, like Horace Dediu and Jim Goldman.
Of course, there will be lots of investor talk as well. It’s going to be a lot of fun.
Feral Interactive has released LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars for the Mac. The game costs $29.99 and is available for download from various online distributors including the Mac App Store. You can also order the game in box form.
LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars recreates scenes from the animated TV show and some favorite moments from the movies, too. Players explore 16 different star systems as they go on 32 story-based missions, play 48 bonus levels and interact with more than 100 playable characters. Feral says this installment is the biggest LEGO Star Wars game to date.
LEGO Star Wars III features single-player and a cooperative multiplayer mode that lets the second player drop in and drop out whenever they want. A new customizable “Arcade Mode” offers head-to-head combat, and new abilities let player slice using a lightsaber or perform lightsaber jumps, squad command, long-distance Jedi attacks and more.
System requirements include a 1.4GHz or faster Intel-based Mac with 2GB RAM, 128MB or better 3D graphics and Mac OS X 10.6.8 or later. Some Intel, ATI and Nvidia graphics not supported – check the site for specific details.
Apple on Tuesday announced the release of GarageBand for iPhone and iPod touch.
Previously available for the iPad, GarageBand allows musicians to plug in their guitar to Apple’s devices and create songs on-the-go. The new version is a universal app, which means one app will work on all devices.
GarageBand also comes with some enhancements over the last version. You can now create custom chords for Smart Instruments; you can transpose songs in semitones or full octaves; the app has support for for 3/4 and 6/8 time signatures; you can reset song key without transposing original recordings; and the app has new audio export quality settings for AAC and AIFF (Uncompressed).
GarageBand runs on iPad, iPad 2, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPhone 4S and iPod touch (3rd & 4th generation). The app is available from the App Store for $4.99.
Twelve South’s latest creation is the PlugBug, a wall charger that piggybacks onto the power adapter included with all MacBooks and enables you to charge an iPhone or an iPad while charging your laptop simultaneously. It costs $34.99.
The PlugBug works with the power adapters included on all MacBook models. It plugs into the AC plug receptacle of your MacBook’s power adapter and then connects to a wall. It sports its own USB plug and provides up to 10W, enabling you to power up an iPad 2 while juicing up your laptop simultaneously.
The PlugBug makes it possible for you to leave your iPad’s separate power adapter behind when you travel, and it also frees up a USB slot on your Mac. What’s more, the PlugBug works independently of the MacBook power adapter – you can just plug it into the wall instead.
The PlugBug gets its unusual red color from author Guy Kawasaki, who was shown an early prototype and suggested the color so the PlugBug could be seen from across the room.
Marco Arment on magazines that charge for digital versions and have ads:
It’s no wonder ad-free traditional-style magazines are so difficult to fund. But that doesn’t change my dissatisfaction with flipping past ads every few pages as I’m trying to read the articles I paid $4.99 for.
The more I think about, the more I like the suggestion from Shadoe Huard that magazines should make sections available for purchase. Like Marco, I often skip through sections of magazines, but I may buy sports or music if given the opportunity.
Pangea Software has announced the release of Monkey Bongo, a new game for iOS. It normally costs $2.99 but is on sale for 99 cents for a limited time.
Monkey Bongo is a physics-based puzzle game in which you throw bananas at toucans while swinging on vines, blowing up crates of TNT and solving puzzles. The game features 50 levels and five different worlds.
Pangea is the developer of games like Enigmo and Cro-Mag Rally. The company was long a mainstay on the Mac platform and brought its games to iOS when Apple introduced the App Store.
The game runs on iOS 4.3 or later and is universal, so it runs natively on iPhone, iPod touch or iPad. If you’re working on an iOS 5 device paired with a second-generation Apple TV, you can also stream the game over AirPlay, so you can view it on your TV set. It’s Game Center-compatible, so you can compete for high scores against your friends.
Apple’s iOS is continues to grow, as it reached an all-time high among mobile operating systems accessing the Web in October.
According to data by Net Applications, iOS showed 61.64 percent share in October, a 6.99 percent increase over the 54.65 percent share it held in September.
Apple’s closest competitor in October was from Google’s Android operating system, which was at 18.9 percent, some 42.74 percent behind Apple. Android’s share grew 2.64 percent from September, which was at 16.26 percent.
Apple has grown from 49.19 percent in December 2010 to its all-time high of 61.64 percent in October. iOS has held the lead every month.
The Who’s Pete Townshend on Monday branded Apple Inc.’s iTunes a “digital vampire” that profits from music without supporting the artists who create it.Townshend said that faced with the Internet’s demolition of established copyright protections, iTunes should offer some of the services to artists that record labels and music publishers used to provide.
Come on Pete. Apple is giving bands the chance to sell their music. Many of these artists wouldn’t have that chance without iTunes. Apple isn’t responsible for the demolition of copyrights, they are the company that is helping people to legally purchase music. iTunes is helping artists.
“Like John Lennon, the man I love deeply, Steve Jobs was a dreamer who changed the world,” Ono is expected to say during the online awards ceremony that begins Oct. 31 at 8:30 p.m. PT at www.omusicawards.com. “But of course when we lose a genius of that caliber, they are never really gone. They live on all around us, through our memories, their words, and their work. Their spirit grows in us forever to the end of the days.”
Apple is only going to get serious about TV if they find a way to get past that paradigm.
Exactly. The paradigm is traditional TV as we know it. Turn on the TV and watch whatever is there. Apple feels that model is broken and until that changes, the company won’t enter the market in a big way. However, if Apple has figured out a way around that model, look out.
Being meritocratic is a really worthy aspiration, but will require active mitigation of individual and organizational bias. The operation of hidden bias in our cognitive apparatus is a well-documented phenomenon in neuroscience. We may think we are acting rationally and objectively, but our brains deceive us.
Lotus Development Corp. and Electronic Frontier Foundation founder Mitch Kapor is responding to a new installment of “Black in America” airing on CNN in which TechCrunch founder and high tech investor Michael Arrington is quoted as saying that he didn’t know any black entrepreneurs. Kapor posits that while overt 1950’s-era racism against blacks isn’t apparent in Silicon Valley, there does appear to be a bias in investors that makes them favor people like themselves:
If “young, white, geeky, and Stanford/Harvard/MIT dropout”, then “invest”, is a kind of mental shortcut that is anything but objective. This is mirror-tocracy not meritocracy.
Jared Newman reported on this gem for Technologizer where he shows how students were given the pros and cons of using the Internet in 1996. I love this con:
Speed — Some Internet activities can take a long time, especially when a lot of other people are using the Internet at the same time.
Elements 2.1 allows the user to sync their settings, appearance preferences and scratchpad contents between multiple devices using Apple’s new iCloud platform. Now if you set a specific theme, font style or default file extension on your iPhone, iCloud will remember that preference and copy it to your other devices as well.Elements 2.1 also adds an oft-requested feature to copy the Markdown generated HTML preview to the clipboard. If you’re a writer who uses WordPress or some other third-party CMS that Elements doesn’t yet support, this is a great way to write your article, preview it and then get the generated HTML into your CMS of choice.
ChronoSync is the easy way to synchronize, backup, and create bootable backups. Synchronize between folders on your Mac, other Macs, PCs, external drives or anything you can mount on your Mac. Set up a Synchronizer document to schedule and automatically mount volumes so your syncs and backups are never missed. Archive your data and go back in time to restore and view older files. With ChronoSync, you can do a lot more than just copy data, you can manage data, too. Exclude files and folders, check the current sync status of files, even run trial synchronizations to see what will happen before it happens.
ChronoAgent for Mac is a utility that runs on a destination Mac and communicates directly with ChronoSync. Normally, when you connect to another Mac you mount it using file sharing. ChronoAgent bypasses file sharing, giving you full access to the destination Mac and eliminating the need to mount via AFP, SMB or other protocols. With the combination of ChronoSync and ChronoAgent, you can automatically backup a Mac when it joins on a network, maintain bootable backups over a network, encrypt data over a network, gain full root access to destination Mac, and more. ChronoAgent only communicates with ChronoSync, meaning you need to have ChronoSync 4 in order to communicate with ChronoAgent.
IT directors who spoke with Piper Jaffray indicated that within the next five years, they expect to have more tablets per student than they currently have computers. And since the iPad represents 100 percent of tablets seen in schools, Munster said the word “tablet” might as well be synonymous with “iPad.”
It’s going to be a whole new way of teaching and learning.
I’m a good example of a guitarist who is really into synths but finds triggering these sounds from the piano interface very frustrating as technically I’m just not good enough on the piano. As soon as I got a MIDI system put into one of my guitars it was like a revelation. I could now play all these great sounds from an instrument I understood and had the technical ability to play.
I’m the same as Toby — I can’t play the piano well enough to trigger sounds reliably. Luckily, much of the music I write doesn’t use synths, so it’s not a big deal for me. The times I do use it to add orchestral instruments, I just have to practice my triggers and timing.
There are some really funky choices in Toby’s article. Fun stuff.
John S. Wilson, a health policy analyst, talking about how Siri could revolutionize our 911 system.
Once the word “emergency” is spoken to Siri, a range of beneficial activity could commence. First, the phone could video call 911 utilizing Skype or a similar VoIP video service. This would allow first responders to have a much better context of the emergency at hand. Armed with a live video and audio feed of the event, visual cues could assist the first responders as they deconstruct the problem. Second, Siri could send the GPS location of the caller.
I’m not sure how far off in the future something like this would be or how practical it would be. What if you spoke “emergency” by mistake? Interesting thoughts though.
A well thought out piece from Shadoe Huard on what he would like to see from digital publications and what would make him part with his money to pay for them.
Backblaze, the cloud-based backup service, introduced a 2.0 release this week. CEO Gleb Budman describes 2.0 as “unlimiting unlimited” in a blog post.
With Backblaze, you can back up your entire Mac’s contents to a secure online repository, for safe offsite storage and recovery in the event of a catastrophic failure.
The service hasn’t put limits on the maximum archive size or the bandwidth customers could use to back up content, but 2.0 improves performance and is “more unlimited” than before. Specific enhancements include:
Unlimited single file size, removing a previous 9GB maximum.
Unlimited file types, with support for backing up VMware, Parallels and other virtual machines, ISO images and every other file type as well.
Maximum performance – an “automatic throttle” has been added that helps users configure Backblaze to use its Internet connection more efficiently. File batching speeds the transfer of small files, hardware acceleration has been added, RAM use has been optimized, and more.
New customers get 2.0 right away; existing users will be transitioned to the new service “over the next few weeks,” according to Budman.
Pricing starts at $5 per month, with discounts available if you go on annual or biennial plans.