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tuaw.com rss archive / October-07-2007
New Apple keyboard has protection against accidental caps lock
Filed under: Hardware, PeripheralsI have a confession: I hate the caps lock key! I mean it's a crazy holdover from typewriter days and for me at least it's always much more of an annoyance than a help. Fortunately, as we covered in an earlier Mac 101, Apple makes it easy to turn the caps lock key off altogether in the Keyboard tab of the Keyboard & Mouse Preference Pane. It looks like they've gone even farther with the new Apple Keyboard. "Wolf" Rentzsch has discovered an undocumented anti-caps lock function whereby the keyboard will not register a very quick press of the caps lock as sometimes happens by accident when reaching for the left shift key. You can still activate it by pressing and holding the key. Rentzsch notes that if caps lock is already active a quick press will disable it, confirming that this is an intentional feature. He posts a little video to demonstrate.This is vintage Apple: thinking about and implementing the little things that make your computing...
iTunes: Free Sunday
Filed under: iTS, Features, DealsHere's an up-to-date dose of some extra freebies to enjoy this weekend. Be aware that you cannot download videos yet using the iPhone or iPod touch music store. And, if you want to download the Japanese single, you must first sign into the your Japanese account on iTunes and then sync your touch or iPhone.Continue reading iTunes: Free SundayRead | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Apple acknowledges iMac freeze problem
Filed under: iMac, TroubleshootingWe've had several folks let us know about an apparent problem with the new iMacs, both in post comments and by email tips. There has been an Apple Discussions thread about the issue, which involves random freezes in the new iMac. It apparently causes the interface to completely lock up and requires the user to perform a hard restart to recover. Macworld is reporting that Apple has now admitted that there is a problem. An Apple spokesman told Macworld that they are "tracking down the root cause of this bug, and will issue a software update which corrects it as soon as we can - most likely later this month."Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Replug: MagSafe for your headphones
Filed under: Audio, PeripheralsApple's MagSafe is a great feature that has saved many a Mac portable from crashing to the floor from a trip over the power cord. Now the Replug extends the same basic idea to protecting your headphone jack. Basically the device has two parts: the interface that plugs into the audio device jack, and then a separate connector jack into which you plug your headphones. Just like the MagSafe the two parts of the Replug are joined magnetically and thus easily separate if you yank on the 'phones (e.g. by standing up). The Replug should work with any standard 1/8" audio jack.The Replug "will be in stock and ready to ship this fall."[via Freshpilot]Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Rumorland: Bungie leaving Microsoft, Apple gaming on the horizon
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Gaming, Rumors, Software, AppleRumors are flying in Seattle that Bungie, makers of Halo and, much more relevant here, Marathon and Pathways to Darkness, may be splitting from Microsoft. A complete and total rumor, unsubstantiated and unsourced, but like all good rumors, it has just enough good reasoning that it might actually be true. Microsoft certainly has no reason to let go of Bungie, but it's totally believable that Bungie is tired of being the Halo company, and ready to do some developing on its own again.And of course, if Bungie breaks away to work on the platform of its choice, it's almost a given that we'll see a brand new Bungie game on the Mac. And how fortuitous, says Christopher Price-- he cites Bungie's rumored split as part of a trinity of Mac gaming developments lately that all point to one thing: Apple is poised to return to (and take over) gaming.We are securely in rumorland here, so take all of this with a full tablespoon of...
Joost releases beta 1.0 to public
Filed under: Software, Video, Freeware, Apple TVThis blew by us earlier in the week, but in case you haven't grabbed it yet, the Joost beta 1.0 is now available for download to the public. So all of us plebians who haven't gotten invites to try it out yet can now inspect the groovy IPTV viewer that everyone's been talking about (and running on AppleTV) for months.There is one catch that will trip up a few of us newcomers: Joost is still only for Intel Macs, so our PowerPC brethren are left out in the cold watching TV the old fashioned way-- on a television (and at normal quality with no lag-- whoops, low blow?). The latest release also adds a few new features, including faster streaming for low bandwith connections (touche), and a few other interface tweaks. Joost is available for free, now to anyone, over on the website.Thanks to everyone who sent this in!Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
TUAW Interview: The Pixelmator Team
Filed under: Features, TUAW Interview, DeveloperAs we mentioned last week, one of the most anticipated OS X applications in a long while finally hit the street when Pixelmator shipped version 1.0. We were fortunate enough to get the two brothers behind the application, Saulius (right) and Aidas Dailide, to contribute our latest TUAW Interview. In terms of their relative contribution to Pixelmator, Saulius is more focused on the UI, while Aidas provides most the heavy lifting on the back end. In this interview they discuss some of the thinking behind Pixelmator, where it came from, and what they are trying to accomplish.Continue reading TUAW Interview: The Pixelmator TeamRead | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Guitar Hero III previewed, will release Oct. 28
Filed under: Gaming, Hardware, Retail, SoftwareGametap's got a quick look at the new Guitar Hero sequel, coming out for the Mac later this year, and the biggest news is that they've got a date: the PC and Mac versions are shipping simultaneously with the consoles on October 28. Rock on! Apparently you'll also be able to use the mouse and keyboard to play (although, come on, Guitar Hero is all about that guitar controller that ships with the game), and this part is pretty slick, too: PC and Mac users will be able to play against (or with) each other online. Very, very nice.No system requirements yet, but I'm guessing that, like Tiger Woods and Madden, this is going to be for the non-integrated video cards only. Still, if you've got the kit to run it, it'll definitely be a good time. Our sister games blog Joystiq has rounded up the entire setlist for the game, with YouTube links to every song in it. In fact, if you've already got Frets on Fire working, you can start practicing...
Mark 3/21 on your calendar for the Apple Backlash
Filed under: HumorThank goodness there are still genuine journalists out there who are willing to cover the important stories that nobody else bothers to investigate. According to vestigial organ The Onion, Apple Inc.'s goodwill with customers -- already stretched thin by iPhone price cuts and Leopard delays -- is bound to hit a limit sooner or later, and the smart money is on next spring. March 20-22, in fact, are the days pinpointed by Wall Street analysts for the high-flying company to lose the faith of its notoriously loyal consumer base.From to the story in this week's issue:"At the current rate, we believe that at this time a sea change will occur in which people will look down at their glossy white or black devices and feel a sense of embarrassment and gullibility," Goldman Sachs analyst Steven Shore said. "They will realize that, despite all the sleek design, they got caught up in a wave of hype that made them shell out additional hundreds of dollars for options and...
Confirmed: Apple component cable works with iPhone
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Multimedia, Video, iPhoneSo first, the iPhone appeared on the Apple Component cable page, and then we heard it didn't run video out, and then it did again, or maybe it didn't. At any rate, we finally have confirmation for you, thanks to punkassjim, that the iPhone will do video out.In fact, he tells us that it will even show a preview of what you're watching on the iPhone itself while the video plays, along with the standard video controls and information. Very slick. I assume the display is the exact same resolution as whatever your video is-- on some TVs that will matter, on some it probably won't. And I'm pretty sure, even though he didn't say, that this is an unhacked iPhone on 1.1.1-- the update to do TV out came with that.Finally, Jim says he was disappointed to find that the cables didn't, however, work with his iPhone's dock-- when he plugged them in, he wasn't asked to display to TV as in the pic above. Good news, though-- he also notes...
Analyst: 10% of iPhones sold to unlockers
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Retail, Apple Financial, Apple, iPhoneApple Insider has an analyst saying that 10% of iPhones sold in Apple stores in September were being bought by people who are then turning around and selling them unlocked. That seems like a big number when you picture the situation Gene Munster, the analyst, describes: "one Apple employee acknowledged that customers were buying five iPhones per store visit in order to turn around and resell them unlocked."But is it really that big? 90% of people buying iPhones are sticking with AT&T, so considering that Apple got the support of a network and a slice of the service plan profits, a number like 10% of unlocks actually seems to me like it validates Apple's choice to sell the phone locked. SDKs, jailbreaks, and customer rights (oh my) aside, if only 10% of iPhones out there are unlocked (and the number's probably much lower, as all the iPhones sold before September were probably not unlocked at all),...
Flickr find: Homemade iPhone Amplifier
Filed under: Humor, iPhoneThe iPhone has a tiny speaker that distorts at high volume. To listen to music without headphones or external speakers, you'll need an amplifier. If you're a cheapskate with disdain for hygiene, check out this homemade version, rigged up by camh. The benefits include: Security. No one will walk off with an iPhone that's been stuffed inside this thing. Eco-friendly. Instead of putting a used, tattered roll of toilet paper into the trash, it goes on your desk. Economical. Enjoy a memorable audio experience at a fraction of the cost of decent headphones. John Williams via a 5 inch cardboard tube stays with you. Chick magnet. Nothing says "I have expendable cash" like an iPhone...in a roll of Charmin.Enjoy your enhanced iPhone.Update: Erica Sadun tested her own TP iPhone Amp against a cone made of stiff paper and a non-enhanced iPhone with a Radio Shack sound level meter (part 33-2055) at both the 60 and 70 dB base settings. Here are the results:At...
Rumor: Mac mini turns Nano in late October
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Hardware, Rumors, Mac miniI've had this plan ever since the mini almost died earlier this year, and I'm sticking to it: as soon as I can buy a Mac mini with Leopard on it, I'll do so. And no one's going to stop me-- except maybe Jobs himself. Mac OS Rumors reports that they've heard that as of October's end, the mini is dead-- long live something new called the Mac Nano. Supposedly, the new low-end Mac will be even smaller than a mini (just tall enough to fit a hard drive in), and the enclosure will have a completely new design.Intriguing idea indeed, even if it isn't quite new-- the Nano name has been floating around for a while. There are four other products sliding out of the rumor mill as well-- AppleTV is rumored to get an update (and a hard drive), and supposedly we'll see a MacBook Nano as well, the long-rumored ultraportable that Apple is supposedly working on-- a.k.a. Rumor #3.The future of Mac, or wishful thinking? At this point, we...
CrossOver 6.2 supports Team Fortress 2
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Gaming, Software, Video, Odds and endsThe latest version of CrossOver, Codeweavers' Mac and Linux application designed to get Windows games and applications working on those systems, has been released. CrossOver 6.2, now available, features a number of different updates both to increase compatibility and to make Windows applications run faster than ever.And first among these updates is the fact that it will now run Team Fortress 2 right out of Valve's new Orange Box, as seen in the video above (caution: awkward narrative and bad acting ahead-- skip to about 2:09 to see the actual product). They're also saying it features improvements when working with Outlook, and, in the strangest feature description ever, they say it really will work much faster-- when you install Leopard.CrossOver is available as a free trial on their website, and to promote the new release, you can get it for 10% off when you enter "zomg" as a special deal in the shopping...
Rumor confirmed: Bungie is free, kind of
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Gaming, Software, DeveloperWow. The rumors were true -- Bungie is "evolving" its relationship with Microsoft, and "embarking on a path" to become, once again, an independent developer. Pretty amazing.Unfortunately, the press release from MS makes it sound like Bungie's not quite free and clear yet. Microsoft expects Bungie to keep developing Halo, and working with them on future Halo-related projects. But that could be Microsoft just trying to look at things through rose-colored glasses. Or then again, it might not: the official word from Bungie is that they remain partners, and "nothing has changed." What a shame.My official guess (TM) is that Bungie will release a brand new intellectual property, and that it will arrive not only on the Xbox, but on other consoles as well (possibly including the Mac, but let's not count our chickens before they hatch). For all their talk of a split, Bungie still isn't as independent as it once was. Microsoft...
Liveblogging the big iPhone 1.1.1 hack
Filed under: Hacks, How-tos, iPhone digg_url = 'http://digg.com/apple/Liveblogging_the_big_iPhone_1_1_1_hack'; Last night, iPhone hackers "dinopio" and "Edgan" brought 1.1.1 hacking into a new arena. By using symbolic links before doing a 1.1.1 upgrade, they were able to gain access to the entire 1.1.1 file tree. Today, I'll be liveblogging my attempt to duplicate their hack. So sit back and reload as I put my poor iPhone to the test.Continue reading Liveblogging the big iPhone 1.1.1 hackPermalink | Email this | Comments
iPod sets man's pants on fire
Filed under: iPod Family, Odds and endsA Georgia man got a surprise recently when his iPod caught fire -- inside his pants pocket. Danny Williams was working at a kiosk at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport when he says he noticed "flames coming up to his chest." It seems the year-old Nano he had in his pocket spontaneously combusted and the only thing that kept him from sustaining serious injury was a piece of paper in the same pocket that acted as a shield. Williams told Atlanta's WSB-TV, "If [the] TSA had come by and seen me smoking, they could have honestly thought I was a terrorist."Williams says Apple has offered to replace the Nano, and his mom notes she's relieved it didn't happen while he was sleeping or driving because the outcome could have been "much worse." Not that it's a good idea to keep your Nano in a pants pocket while driving, and many people sleep without pants, but you get the idea.Read | Permalink | Email...
My iPhone's IMEI
Filed under: Bad Apple, iPhone This morning, my iPhone's IMEI was perfectly fine. My iPhone has never been unlocked. I was able to use my AT&T Pick Your Plan SIM. And as recently as a week or so ago, I wrote about using iASign, which picked up on and used my normal, correct IMEI settings. Today, as I liveblogged, I finally applied the 1.1.1 upgrade. This afternoon, when I finally got around to trying to reactivate my phone, which was displaying the "wrong SIM" message, I found that the iPhone update had apparently changed my IMEI to the dreaded 004999010640000. I cannot figure out any other way that the IMEI had changed. When I last used iASign, it showed the correct IMEI. Today, not. Basic facts: My iPhone has never been unlocked. When I used iASign the last time, my IMEI was correct and I was able to switch between my two AT&T SIM cards. I did pitch in very peripherally with the unlock effort. However, I used a version of the program that had every...
Long-awaited Nike Amp+ remote wristband finally on sale
Filed under: iPod FamilyHas it really been nearly a year since the Nike Amp+ wristband remote first appeared on the pages of Men's Health, teasing us with its polyurethane smugness? Sure, back in August the FCCians caught wind of it, but no joy for shoppers... until now. (Nike Store requires Flash, FYI)The futuristic wrist remote (vaguely Logan's Run-looking to me, but I am not an industrial designer) shows the time in bright red LEDs which also double as indicators for the iPod controls immediately below. Snazzy!If you're using your iPod Nike+ Sport kit for its intended purpose, exercise/running, the Amp+ can also provide immediate voice feedback on distance, calories burned, workout duration, and all that other stuff that runners find somehow motivational.If you or someone you care about picks up an Amp+, let us know.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Bungie says Mac games are still a possibility
Filed under: Macworld, Analysis / Opinion, Gaming, Software, Odds and endsMacworld has a quick chat with Bungie after this morning's big announcement that the company is "evolving" away from Microsoft a bit, and the good news is that a new Mac release from our favorite game developer (before they were bought out by the Evil Empire, that is) is not out of the question.Spokeman Brian Jarrard plays pretty loose with the announcement, and says that while Bungie and Microsoft are going to retain their developer and publisher relationship, his company won't "rule out anything going forward." He says the move will let Bungie "[control] our destiny, and that puts us in a position where we could put ourselves back on the [Mac] platform definitively again."We can only hope. EA and id games made a big appearance at this years' WWDC, and I think I speak for many, many Mac gamers when I say we'd love to see Bungie announcing a brand new game at Macworld in a few months.Read | P...
Macworld Editors' and Readers' Choice awards voting begins
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Hardware, Software, Odds and ends, LeopardMacworld has announced that they're looking for nominations and votes for their fourth annual Reader's Choice awards-- they're asking interested parties to drop a note over on this forum thread in the categories of Apple Product of the Year, Third Party Hardware and Software of the Year, and Mac Gem of the Year (an under-$50 software out there that deserves more recognition than it usually gets).As I suspected, there's no question about Apple Product of the Year: it's definitely the Hi-Fi. Wait, no, I mean it's definitely the iPhone. Duh. And the rest of the votes are literally all over the place, from Parallels, Adobe's suites, and even Leopard (despite not actually being from a third party, but maybe it's just that good) to smaller stuff like Panic's Coda and Gus Mueller's Acorn. I gotta say good luck to Macworld's editors-- they're going to need it to come up with some good award winners from that...
TUAW Best of the Week
Filed under: Features, TUAW Business, Weekend ReviewHow was the week that was? Good, bad or indifferent, we don't want you to miss a moment -- so let's run down some favorite stories from the last 168 hours.TUAW Interviews: Andrew Welch & the Pixelmator TeamMat goes all Mike Wallace on the iToner developer and the brothers Dailide.Liveblogging the big iPhone 1.1.1 hackIf it wasn't clear enough by now: Erica dreams in C.Getting ready for the next big catTips from Nik on basic Leopard-proofing. Step 1: procure extra-large sack of Fresh Step.iPod Therapy: Bringing your backup failures into the openI'm no Dr. Phil, but I think we'll all agree that you can't retrieve what you don't back up.notMac Challenge winner declaredBen Spink turns on the sync, makes $9K. I thought that's what the faucet handle was for.EyeTV 2.5 offers free slingbox-style video streamingMind you, there's no security on this sharing -- everyone will know you watch America's Got Talent.Rumorland: Bungie...
Apple working on pressure sensitive touchscreens
Filed under: Hardware, Odds and ends, AppleApple Insider's got the latest on yet another Apple patent application, this one for not just touch sensitive screens, but for pressure sensitive touchscreens. Right now, the iPhone can tell where you're touching it, but not how hard you're pressing on it. The device described in the patent could do just that, and use the force information "for purposes of providing command and control signals to an associated electronic device."Pretty interesting. I can't think of a great use for it besides the one Wacom and other high-end input tablets already use (the harder you press, the darker mark you can make with a virtual pencil), but then again, I'm not an award-winning user interface designer (just a pretty average user interface user). Who knows what Apple could come up with using an interface like this-- maybe flip through CoverFlow albums front-to-back as well as horizontally?Of course, like all patents, as AI notes, Apple has no obligation...
Student Mac ownership at Cornell more than tripled over 5 years
Filed under: EducationIt may have slipped past last month, but Daring Fireball reminded us of September's TidBITS article about the student computing profile at Cornell University. Since 1999, Cornell has required students to report their OS when signing up for Ethernet connectivity in campus housing; prior to '99 the reporting was voluntary. Back in the early 1990s, Mac-using students made up more than a third of the self-announced connected population, but by 2000, after the start of mandatory registration, that number had dropped to only five percent of the base.Times, as they say, have changed. 2007 stats show that 21 percent of the attached student computers are running Mac OS X, a dramatic increase over the past few years. This isn't necessarily a surprise, but it's still nice to see. It also aligns with reports noted by MacRumors yesterday which show dramatic share gains for the platform at other schools, including Princeton (60 percent of on-campus sales this year are...
Ask TUAW: Swapfiles, Bluetooth Caller ID, Audio interfaces, iPhone streaming and more
Filed under: Features, Troubleshooting, Ask TUAWAs mentioned on Wednesday, we again had a bunch of questions last week and so we'll have a second round of Ask TUAW this week. This time around we'll be tackling questions about delete swapfiles, bluetooth caller ID, external audio interfaces, streaming media to the iPhone, WYSIWYG web design, reinstalling your OS, and more.As always your suggestions are most welcome, and questions for next week should be left in the comments.Continue reading Ask TUAW: Swapfiles, Bluetooth Caller ID, Audio interfaces, iPhone streaming and moreRead | Permalink | Email this | Comments