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Comment on Apple’s Earnings and Comments by Readers

Apple reports record Q3 earnings – Apple 2.0 – Fortune Brainstorm Tech

COO Tim Cook, who ran Apple while Steve Jobs was on medical leave, was asked repeated during a conference call with analysts how he plans to compete with netbooks that cost $399 to $499.

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I had to add my comment to this article in case they did not post it on CNN or Fortune as they have declined adding comments I wrote before.

But at any rate, here it is:

“If you are having problems with your iPhone syncing, maybe the problem is actually the PC syncing and/or the fact that you are not on mobile me. As an IT guy, I have made the painful move from PC to Mac with my fingers still in my PC and my toes dipping into the Mac…

I have found them not only flawless, but safe, easy to setup and a real wonder for unifying my information between iPhone apps, mobile me, social networking sites and iTouch. If you cannot get things working, maybe you should head into Micro Center and get a refurb mac mini for $399 or $499 and throw away that loud, hot, wasteful PC you got?!

I still use my PC, but only when I have to. Otherwise, Mac it is!!!!

One last note… I tried to render a video last year on my dual core PC and it froze, not even able to show thumbnails of things. I worked on it the other nite on my mac mini with less ram and smaller dual core processor and it not only processed it, but it did so in less than 45 minutes. As a matter of fact, it processed it while I was running imports for iPhoto from a thumb drive, processing the video on an external hard drive running at 5200 rpm, browsing the web, logged in through logmein.com from my iPod touch as I sat in bed watching a movie on my PC and playing iDragon on the iPod touch.

Once complete, with air sharing, I opened the file on the iTouch and checked its integrity!!!!

SHOCKING!”

Just a thought…

d

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iPhone Apps for Productivity and Organization

I had to add this article from the NY Times, because I have found it incredibly helpful. You can click below for the whole article.

Enjoy!
pd

IPhone Apps to Bring Some Order to Your Life – NYTimes.com

A couple of years ago, I fell into such a state, and because I’ve long believed in the redemptive powers of technology, there was only one thing to do: I ran over to my nearest AT&T store and bought an iPhone.

I was hoping the phone would function as a poor man’s personal assistant — that it would constantly remind me of what I had to do next, and would record anything urgent I had to say. In truth, it took some time for the iPhone to work its way into my life. Even though smartphones can be tricked out with thousands of add-on applications, only a few prove truly useful when it comes to organization.

Here are some of the best apps to keep your life running smoothly.

TO-DO LISTS The iPhone has so many apps for to-do lists that I had to make a to-do list just to get through the main offerings. Your preference will depend on how you work. Some of the best task-management apps — including Things, by Cultured Code, and OmniFocus, by the Omni Group, which each cost $20 — are meant to be used with their very good Mac counterparts; if you’re a fan of those programs, you would do well to add their iPhone companions.

My favorite stand-alone organizational app is reQall, which David Pogue has already praised in The Times. ReQall really does turn your iPhone into a personal assistant — you dictate all your to-dos, reminders, appointments and other ephemera, and it translates your commands into actionable tasks. (I find the free version good enough, but heavy users might want to invest in the $25-a-year Pro version.)

If you’re not a fan of dictation, consider Remember the Milk, a to-do app that distinguishes itself from others by its extensive operations on the Internet cloud. The program syncs with lots of calendar programs (including those from Microsoft, Apple and Google), and can be used anywhere online. To use Remember the Milk on your mobile device — not just for the iPhone but also BlackBerrys and Windows Mobile phones — you must subscribe to the Pro edition, which costs $25 a year.

AT WORK ON THE GO A great personal assistant will always be on hand with just the right document, spreadsheet or other little gadget that helps you out when you’re traveling. To get that kind of service from an iPhone, you’ll need to download several dedicated apps.

Among my favorites is Air Sharing ($5 for the standard version, $10 for more features), which turns your iPhone into a wireless drive — think of it as a U.S.B. thumb drive, without the U.S.B. plug.

Air Sharing requires a bit of one-time set-up on your computer (Mac, Windows or Linux); after that, your iPhone looks and acts just like another drive on your machine. Drag files in and out, and they are transferred over Wi-Fi. And now they’re accessible through any other computer you come into contact with. Plus, because the app works wirelessly, several people can gain access to the files at once. You can’t do that with U.S.B.

Of course, many kinds of files don’t travel well on a phone, because they don’t look very good on a small screen. A large spreadsheet, for instance, is nearly incomprehensible on an iPhone. That’s where RoamBi comes in.

This free app takes standard spreadsheet files from your desktop and turns them into beautiful interactive “visualizations” — pie charts, bar graphs, flip books and other designs made especially for a small interface. RoamBi is a terrific way to analyze huge sets of numbers quickly. You can feed it your company’s sales list, for instance, and then brush up on each client’s detailed sales history on the cab ride to the meeting.

Sometimes, when you’re traveling, you need one of those old-school devices that is still annoyingly necessary — a fax machine. Say the home office needs you to send a file with your signature, or you’ve got a pile of receipts that you need to scan in for your expenses. JotNot ($3) turns your iPhone into a scanner.

Snap a steady picture of a document and then outline the area you want to scan — JotNot enhances the image and turns it into a document to be e-mailed. I’ve found that if you take the picture carefully, JotNot can capture a document as well as a fax machine can. And, of course, it’s much easier to carry around.

Last, an app meant to keep you safe while you multitask: Email ’n Walk is a 99-cent program that uses your iPhone’s camera to show you a live picture of everything you’re missing while you hold your phone in front of your face.

This way, you can write a message while still keeping an eye on the sidewalk ahead. That’s probably still not very safe — use it wisely! — but it’s certainly better than e-mailing blind.

WHEN YOU NEED TO EAT Personal assistants, my celebrity friends tell me, have a talent for helping out with all the little things in life — making sure that your refrigerator is well stocked, or that you have reservations to the best restaurants. Here, the iPhone excels.

Take Grocery IQ (99 cents), the best of several grocery-list apps. It has a clever predictive-entry system that seems to know about every single item in the modern American megamarket. Type in K-R-A-F, for example, and a list pops up to show every product made by Kraft, like cocktail sauce or Jet-Puffed Mini Marshmallows. (You can also type in generic items, like toilet paper or toothpaste.)

Because you need to enter only a few letters of any word, drawing up your list is incredibly quick. Even better, you can check off each item as you buy it — and if you tell Grocery IQ about the layout of your neighborhood market, it will sort the list according to aisle number.

When it’s time to check out, try CardStar, a free app that displays your supermarket or drugstore club card. You can then scan the iPhone’s screen at the checkout. You no longer have to carry around a dozen discount cards every time you leave the house.

Your personal assistant will thank you.

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Apple unveils new iPhone & More!

I am so excited about these developments that I had to share them as soon as I found out!
Check it out!

pd

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Apple on Monday unveiled a new, faster iPhone, lowered the price on its existing model to $99, and released details of its revamped operating system.

But Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) CEO Steve Jobs did not appear at the company’s World Wide Developers Conference in San Francisco, where the company presented its products.

Instead, Philip Schiller, the company’s senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, demonstrated the iPhone 3GS, which can perform tasks up to 3.6 times faster than the previous second-generation iPhone, the iPhone 3G.

Apple shares, which were down as much as $5.24 earlier, were $2.07 lower at $142.60 after the presentation.

The iPhone will come in three sizes and prices. The new phone will have a 16-gigabyte model for $199 and a 32-gigibyte version for $299.

Apple will continue to sell a second-generation iPhone 3G with 8 gigabytes of memory for $99 — the cheapest price yet for the device.

The prices are subsidized by AT&T (T, Fortune 500), the exclusive wireless carrier for the phone, for customers signing new contracts.

The new phone also comes with a 3.2 megapixel camera with video capturing and editing capabilities, improved battery life with 5 hours of talk time and 30 hours of audio, voice command control by holding down the home button, and a built-in digital compass.

Snow Leopard: Apple said the new operating system, Snow Leopard, will be available in September and can perform some tasks up to 90% faster than its current Leopard OS. Apple said Snow Leopard is more crash resistant than its predecessor and is 6 gigibytes smaller.

Rival Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) has said its new Windows 7 operating system will be unveiled in October.

Snow Leopard will cost $29 to upgrade from Leopard, which is $100 less than the previous upgrade price.

Apple also unveiled a new, faster Safari Web browser. Safari 4 can track changes in many of the most frequently visited Web sites, and uses the iTunes “cover flow” interaction to scan through browser history.

The company redesigned its Quicktime video viewer and editor, giving users the ability to share video on YouTube, MobileMe or iTunes, which enables playback on the iPhone.

IPhone OS: Apple demonstrated its new operating system for the iPhone, days after after competitor Palm (PALM) launched its much ballyhooed Pre phone.

The new iPhone OS 3.0, which was first unveiled in March, will have cut, copy and paste capabilities for all applications, which iPhone users have long demanded. The operating system will also feature an undo gesture, which will undo the last action by shaking the phone.

Fully integrated search, multimedia text messages and auto-fill for passwords have also been added to the iPhone, though the multimedia text messaging will not be available on AT&T (T, Fortune 500) until later in the summer.

The new OS will allow users to rent and purchase movies right from their phones using iTunes, and it will have parental control functionality.

Some analysts also expect Apple to unveil a new, lower-priced iPhone.

New MacBooks: The new 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Pros will both showcase a 3.06 GHz Intel Core Duo processor, the fastest processor Apple has ever used.

Like the larger 17-inch MacBook Pro, the 15-inch will also feature a new lithium battery that gets up to seven hours of battery life and three times the recharges of most laptops.

The company announced the MacBook air will cost $1,499, a $700 price cut. A 13-inch MacBook Pro will cost $100 less at $1,199, and the the 15-inch and 17-inch MacBook Pros will be $300 less expensive at $1,699 and $2,499, respectively.

Jobs, who has been on leave because of illness, is expected to return to work at the end of the month.

Stanford’s iPhone U: The rise of the armchair coder

This was an incredible resource for me, and if you’re looking to really learn the proper way to write code for the iPhone & iPod touch, you need to digg this article and then download the videos from Stanford U.

The news from Stanford University this week that the free video podcasts of computer science course CS 193P — iPhone Application Programming — have been downloaded a million times is at once a bigger deal, and a smaller one, than it seems.

Smaller because the number is a little bogus. The university is counting each video separately, so although the total is more than a million — 1.2 million to be precise — that’s the sum of all the course videos (15 so far). A far smaller number of people, 186,500, downloaded the introductory lecture. More recent lectures, representing the meat of the semester, have a sustained download rate of more than 200,000 per class.

But the fact that 200,000 armchair coders are auditing a university level iPhone programming course — many of them doing the assignments and meeting after class in the Google auditors study group — is still pretty mind boggling.

The course, taught by a pair of engineers on loan from Apple (AAPL), packed a lecture hall when it began on April 1 and was quickly oversubscribed. But the podcasts, available here, opened it up to the masses.

Having muddled my way through the first couple lectures, I can tell you that this is not easy material. As prerequisites it assumes that you’ve taken both Stanford’s introductory and accelerated object oriented programming courses, and it launches fairly rapidly into the arcana of Objective-C and Cocoa Touch: classes, instances, methods, ivars and a lot of brackets, curly and square.

In another lifetime I had a summer job at BBN, where Seymour Papert and Wally Feurzeig were developing Logo, a dialect of the programming language Lisp. Logo was designed to be easy enough for children to master, and Papert’s big idea was that early exposure to programming in Logo could help kids learn how to model problems and construct creative solutions — in other words, how to think.

There was a lot of discussion then, and in the years that followed, about what the proper role of computers in the classroom ought to be. Should kids should be taught to program the things, or should they learn more practical computer skills, like how to use a word processor?

Word processing, for the most part, won out — with a little ill-formed Basic thrown in for the after-school crowd. The result, to vastly oversimply the situation: an education system that turns out lots of graduates qualified to fill low-paying jobs in the typing pool and a shortage of first-rate software developers.

Lego blocksSo the idea that anyone with a Mac, half a brain, and some spare time could download these lectures, learn the elements of Objective-C, snap together the pieces of an iPhone application like so many Lego blocks, and make real money on the App Store had a certain appeal to me. And, apparently, to a couple hundred thousand others as well.

If so, they soon learned, as I did, that programmers’ tools may be more sophisticated than they were back in the day, but none of this is a snap.

“Writing good code is as hard today as it was 20 years ago,” says Stanford lecturer Julie Zelenski, the university’s liaison for CS 193P. “There’s some additional scaffolding to help you build things, but the bar for building what’s considered an acceptable program is higher too.”

So how many of those 200,000 online auditors will actually finish the course, write an original app, and get it up on the App Store?

As first approximation, more than 50,000 people paid Apple $99 for an iPhone developers license and 11,735 have published something on the App Store — a ratio of about 5 to 1. That’s roughly the same ratio of Stanford undergraduates who take the School of Engineering’s introductory programming course and end up pursuing a career as a developer.

Zelenski says she would be very surprised if CS 193P yielded anything close to that. She figures that of the 200,000 who gave the course a look, perhaps 100,000 have been keeping up with the material. Of those, she estimates, fewer than 50,000 will try to write anything original. “If 5,000 get something on the App Store,” she says, “We’re doing above average.”

At last count, according to 148Apps.biz, the App Store’s 11,735 developers had published 43,465 applications, of which 40,365 are still active.

read more | digg story

iPhone in China – key dates to watch

Sunday, May 17, 2009 – World Telecom Day – China Unicom will unveil their new WCDMA 3G network (trial launch in 55 major cities) on May 17 and may want to add some icing on the cake by announcing their new iPhone deal with Apple.

It’s not a given that an announcement will happen in May as Apple may prefer to combine the new iPhone 3.0 unveiling with the “China deal” announcements. It is one thing to announce a deal, and another to actually launch. Given production, distribution and other corporate logistics, it is iPhonAsia’s view that there will be no iPhone launch in China before July 1. It is more probable that a formal launch won’t happen until mid to late summer 2009.
Monday, June 8 – World Wide Developer’s Conference (WWDC) Keynote. The WWDC Keynote is a logical venue for the iPhone 3.0 debut along with a special iPhone in China deal announcement.

read more | digg story

BlackBerry vs. iPhone: A Battle of Small-Biz ‘Apps’

SMARTPHONES PROMISE ALL of the capabilities of the Internet in the palm of your hand. For small-business owners, that means the potential to manage their daily interactions with clients and move merchandise from wherever they’re located. But which smartphone is the best?

Both Apple (AAPL) and Research in Motion (RIMM), the creator of the BlackBerry, want you to think that they have the answer — and they’re making some big plays aimed at small-business owners. The pitch: That the capabilities of each of their devices — whether it’s the iPhone 3G or the BlackBerry Curve — can be expanded exponentially through so-called “apps,” downloadable applications that have been reconfigured to work with mobile devices. Apps allow business owners to process a credit-card transaction, track a package or create an invoice from their phone.

Apple, which launched its app store 10 months ago and recently celebrated its billionth app download, launched an advertising blitz last month that claims its iPhone has an “app for everything” that a business person could want. BlackBerry has been a little slower to embrace app-mania. It just launched its BlackBerry App World a month ago.

Elizabeth Robinson, president of Volume Public Relations in Centennial, Colo., was a faithful BlackBerry Pearl user for a year and a half, but after seeing the wide range of business apps on the iPhone she decided to make the switch. (With more than 1,000 available apps on BlackBerry App World, Research in Motion currently falls considerably shy of the iPhone’s 35,000 apps — 1,840 of which are geared toward business customers.) The AP Mobile News Network app delivers news faster — and gives Robinson a leg up on the competition, she says. And Apple’s Keynote Remote application lets her view presentation notes and slides. “Why lug around an expensive laptop for a presentation when you can do it from your iPhone?” she says.

Beyond the number of applications, however, small-business owners need to consider the device’s ability to handle business needs, says Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group, a San Jose, Calif.-based technology research firm. “Apple’s iPhone is still mostly a consumer-based product and isn’t approved by many corporations,” he says.

To cut through the hype and the disparity in app selection, SmartMoney decided to find out which apps work best for small businesses — and on what devices. We canvassed the app stores for the most intriguing small-business-oriented downloads, talked to device owners about how they are using their smartphones and talked to tech experts.

READ ON FOR MORE! Click below…

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iPhone now represents 51% of U.S. smartphone traffic — repor

I don’t know about you, but I am starting to think that my next phone is going to be an iPhone. These statistics are just to interesting. I have to say that it’s more than likely that they are only going to take mobile computing to the next level.

pd
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This comes from one Web metric among many, so take it with a grain of salt.

But according to AdMob, one of the largest mobile Web ad networks, Apple’s (AAPL) handsets now dominate mobile Web traffic in almost every category.

According to AdMob’s analysis of the billions of ad requests it saw in January:

* The iPhone OS now represents 51% of U.S. smartphone traffic, leaving RIM’s (RIMM) BlackBerry (19%) and Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows Mobile (14%) in the dust.
* In the global handset market, the iPhone and iPod touch now represent 18.3% of worldwide ad traffic — second only to Nokia (NOK) with 30.1%
* Worldwide requests from Apple devices grew 28% month over month to 1.2 billion in January.
* The iPod touch is rapidly catching up to the iPhone; it now represents 40% of Apple requests, up from 20% in September.

AdMob stores and analyzes every ad request, impression and click from more than 6,000 publishers’ sites in over 160 countries every day, according to its website. Its January analysis of all that traffic, issued Thursday, is available here.

read more | digg story