Movies for $4.99 as Apple Intros “Movies of the Week”

Joining the ranks of their 99¢ movie rentals and mirroring their “Albums of the Week” for bargain hunters, Apple has introduced “Movies of the Week” on iTunes. Each movie will be available for the duration of the week at a lowered price of $4.99 to own. To kick it off they're highlighting Terminator 2: Judgment Day as the “movie of the week” and offering an additional nine titles: Total Recall Last Action Hero Red Heart Air America Basic Instinct St....

Joining the ranks of their 99¢ movie rentals and mirroring their “Albums of the Week” for bargain hunters, Apple has introduced “Movies of the Week” on iTunes. Each movie will be available for the duration of the week at a lowered price of $4.99 to own. To kick it off they're highlighting Terminator 2: Judgment Day as the “movie of the week” and offering an additional nine titles: Total Recall Last Action Hero Red Heart Air America Basic Instinct St. Elmo's Fire The Karate Kid Air Force One A Guy Thing A bit heavy on the Arnold—leading in four of the available movies—the initial offering is definitely skewed towards the action movie fan. However, if the “Albums of the Week” are any indication (currently featuring Miles Davis' Birth of the Cool, Beyoncé's Dangerously In Love, and Dixie Chicks' Home; among others) there's no doubt that in coming weeks there will be something for everyone looking to boost up their digital video collection.
  • 7 for 7: A New Publication Wrapper

    This is the third in a series of 7 posts in the 7 days prior to Apple’s January 27 media event in which I explore various possibilities for an Apple Tablet and other potential announcements. Perhaps one of the most exciting aspects of a new Apple tablet many expect to be introduced next week–whether called the iSlate, iPad, or something else–is a new publication wrapper that will allow publishers to create varied, compelling multimedia experiences for their content. By wrapper, I mean a format for a publisher's core content so that it can be displayed on the device alongside whatever additional digital content the publisher chooses to include. Apple already has two such wrappers. The first, iTunes Extras, is designed to allow movie studios to create DVD-like experiences for movies downloaded from iTunes to display in iTunes or on an Apple TV. iTunes LP allows bands and music labels to publish albums with related content like bonus tracks, videos, liner notes, lyrics, photos, and more. iTunes Extras and LP Technologies iTunes Extras and iTunes LP are effectively one and the same from a technological standpoint. They are a collection of now-common technologies like HTML, CSS, JavaScript and XML, used along with a set of standards and parameters for publishing WebKit friendly multimedia interfaces. The only real difference is that one is associated with filmed entertainment, the other with audio content (one file extension is different, and one file's aspect ratio is different… that's about it). The solution is quite simple and rather elegant. In many ways, these wrappers are nothing more than little mini websites that run inside of iTunes and Apple TV, whose user interfaces are WebKit browsers just like Safari, Mobile Safari, Chrome and Android. But to the end user, they appear to be custom little applications full of interesting and engaging content. An entire bundle of files–or package–that can include several directories, subdirectories and files–appears instead to be a single file and is downloaded and managed by end users as such. This is exactly how most applications and many file types work on the Mac today. The key difference between the iTunes wrappers and Mac application bundles is the types of contained filed in their respective packages. The iTunes wrappers are mostly standard web technologies, whereas the Mac apps contain more native code objects which are not as common and familiar. The true beauty of the iTunes Extra and LP formats is that publishers essentially only have to know web programming to create a great experience. Because they most likely already have a lot of assets for their websites, they can simply reuse those assets for iTunes. In fact, its possible to write code that identifies the device the content is to be displayed on and render it appropriate for the device, just as you can optimize websites for different browsers. Because these wrappers are based on common standards and familiar technologies, they are incredibly easy and inexpensive to create. Likewise in using the iTunes Store for distribution. Getting Written Word Content Onto the Tablet Because of their openness and portability, the iTunes Extras and LP content should very easily translate to Apple's new tablet computer expected to be announced on the 27th. In fact, the tablet might very easily already support existing Extras and LP packages by rendering the Apple TV version. Some design tweaks might be necessary to optimize the experience for touch input, but everything else should essentially “just work.” Every indication is that Apple is working hard to support a wide variety of traditional written word formats with the tablet, including books, magazines and newspapers. Expectations are that the iSlate will support reading long-form content, which typically means black text on a white background with little distraction. Both Extras and LP are more akin to DVD and multimedia CD-ROM experiences, and neither lends themselves to lengthy reading sessions. But simply putting books on screen likely falls far short of Apple's ambitions. Colorful, graphics-intensive magazine spreads will probably be part of the Apple tablet experience, as will newspapers with charts and graphs like those from the Wall Street Journal and USA Today, or video content like that featured regularly on The New York Times website. Fiction, non-fiction, and textbooks will likely be supplemented with multimedia content and features to engage with other readers, peer groups, or even authors. In short, Apple is likely attempting to completely reinvent what today we think of as books, newspapers and magazines. The Extras and LP format aren't likely robust enough to fulfill this grand vision. But they serve as an excellent foundation, and as with movie studios and music labels, publishers can quickly and cost-effectively migrate their content to the device. Predictions for a New Content Wrapper When Apple introduces the world to its new tablet on the 27th, and more broadly speaks to consuming digital content, I expect them to announce not a new publication wrapper, but a new Content Wrapper instead. I expect them to do away with the distinctions between Extras and LP, and launch a new, single version of the solution that also supports books, newspapers, and magazines. This publishing engine will be to Apple's products what WordPress is to web publishers: an open, core publishing engine based on simplicity and standards that can efficiently support a wide array of content and easily be extended through a form of plugin architecture. Plugins will support all sorts of functionality, from news feeds from sources like Lexis-Nexis, reader discussion forums, and educational solutions like Blackboard, McGraw-Hill Connect, and Prazas Live. This new content wrapper will also have some features specific to the tablet. For example, if you are reading a book in portrait mode, perhaps it will work much like the Amazon Kindle, Sony Reader, and Barnes and Noble Nook. Rotate it into landscape mode, however, and the book may take up half the screen, with multimedia widgets on the other half. In either view, the text itself will support gestures for accessing the dictionary or adding audio, video or text annotations. And the wrapper will support many iTunes App features, like notifications, and importantly, in-app purchases. The growth of the iTunes App Store will pale in comparison to the explosion in titles that will appear in Apple's new content format. There are a tremendous amount of publishers thirsting for a solution, and the Apple tablet will deliver.

  • iTunes 9: Deconstructing LPs & Extras

    Leading up to Apple's music event last week, rumor sites had been circling about a new format from Apple that would provide additional content, like lyrics, liner notes, video interviews and more. The rumors came true as Apple announced yet one more way to spend more money inside iTunes: iTunes LPs for music and iTunes Extras for video. Here's what they look like up close. Deconstructing the LP When you purchase an iTunes LP (for this example, I'm using Tyrese Gibson's MAYHEM!), you actually end up downloading the songs included and the animated content in a new format, called .itlp. This new format is (in this example) a very big file, a little over 400MB. Not only does it take a while to download that content, but if you start to fill your library with several of these, you'll run out of room very quickly. For diehard fans, iTunes LPs are simply amazing. In MAYHEM!, the additional content is an animated comic book that comes to life with spoken dialog. As more and more artists sign onto creating iTunes LPs, these will become big time components of true music enthusiasts. Let's just hope new iTunes LPs are released more frequently than the GarageBand Artist Lessons. And Now for Video Apple also announced iTunes Extras for video content, allowing quick scene selection and other animated “behind the scenes” content available in these exclusive packages. For many, this could be the real deciding factor between opting to purchase a new movie on DVD or Blu-ray versus purchasing it within iTunes. The end result, while perhaps not equal in terms of additional content, is a complete movie experience, with a substantial amount of supplemental content. Unfortunately, iTunes Extras are only available when purchasing content from iTunes; they are not available with movie rentals. If you purchase content from iTunes on your iPhone and that content supports iTunes LP or iTunes Extra, the base content (songs or movie) will download immediately to your device. The LP and Extras content will download to your computer the next time you sync your iPhone or iPod touch. Upon doing so, be sure to go to “Store” and click “Check For Available Downloads” to download the additional content. A Good Start The iTunes Store currently has 12 iTunes LPs available (and even some of those are pre-orders) and 15 movies featuring iTunes Extras. Though Steve likes to attribute Apple's new iTunes LP concept to a desire to pay homage to classic LPs that included bonus content, one can't help but think that these extra features are offered to persuade users to purchase complete albums instead of a la carte downloads. The concept is very trendy and will definitely turn heads, but will the majority of our music collection feature iTunes LPs? Probably not. Will we have them for some of the big time major artists? Maybe. What about iTunes Extras for movies? Will this stop some people from ripping their own DVDs and purchasing the content from iTunes? Perhaps. It's unlikely that anybody (or perhaps this is a challenge to the Handbrake team) will be able to reverse engineer the .itlp format to allow users to have their own ripped DVDs with all special features play natively within iTunes. At the moment, iTunes LPs and iTunes Extras are only playable within, you guessed it, iTunes 9. Others have already noticed, however, that the interface for these could definitely support interaction through touch, so perhaps eventually we'll see the ability to sync these content types with our iPhones, iPod touches or even Apple TVs. Now the question is passed to you. What do you think? Is it worth it? Have you pre-ordered Pearl Jam or downloaded The Doors yet? Read the Report, "Surveying the Mobile App Store Landscape." Only at GigaOM Pro.

  • The Complete iTunes History -- SoundJam MP to iTunes 9

    Watching Steve take the stage and roll out a new version of iTunes got us all nostalgic for the old days, when iTunes logos changed color and our jukebox looked like it could withstand a bomb blast. Below is the history of the application that is running more than any other on our Macs. It spawned the iPod, iPhone, Apple TV and gave us an excuse to throw out those ugly CD towers that resided in the corners of our houses in the 90s. The ever present, iTunes. THE STARTSoundJam MP Somewhere around the time Metallica began suing Napster over the leak of its "Mission: Impossible II" track, "I Disappear," in 2000, a light bulb appeared over Steve Jobs’ head. Ever the innovator, Apple’s iCEO saw the peer-to-peer network as more than an illegal nuisance and began to develop a way to leverage the Napster revolution into the next killer Mac app. Audio players such as Audion and SoundApp had already exposed the inadequacies of QuickTime, and Apple knew it needed to build its solution from the ground up.After being rebuffed by Panic, which was already in negotiations with AOL over use of its Audion code, Steve Jobs approached Robin Casady and Michael Greene to discuss their SoundJam MP app, a powerful digital encoding program that looked a lot like Apple’s QuickTime player. After a series of short negotiations, Casady & Greene sold the rights for SoundJam to Apple for an undisclosed sum, and Apple immediately set to work on the app that would forever change the digital landscape.While the terms of the contract were top secret (Casady and Greene discontinued their app on June 1, 2001, but were barred from discussing the Apple deal for two years), Apple certainly wasn’t shy about ransacking SoundJam as it incorporated many of its signature features into iTunes, including visualizers, plug-ins, online retrieval of album data and drag-and-drop playlist creation. Much to the dismay of Jelly fans, however, Apple opted to leave SoundJam’s skins on the cutting-room floor. iTunes 1 (Jan. 9, 2001-Oct. 23, 2001) About 10 months later, at Macworld San Francisco in 2001, Apple debuted iTunes alongside iDVD and the CD-RW-enabled Power Macs. While it wasn’t exactly a show-stopper (though 275,000 copies were downloaded in the first week), the "world’s best and easiest to use ‘jukebox’ software" definitely raised the bar for music players on the Mac, which were relatively sparse and rather pricey (SoundJam cost $40). By offering iTunes as a free download and installing it on every new Mac, Apple essentially cut down the competition at the pass--or at least put a good scare into them. "Apple has done what Apple does best--make complex applications easy, and make them even more powerful in the process," said Steve Jobs at the time. "iTunes is miles ahead of every other jukebox application, and we hope its dramatically simpler user interface will bring even more people into the digital music revolution."For many Mac users, iTunes was an introduction to digital music, and Apple strived to create a straightforward jukebox that needed little or no instruction to get started. Popping a music CD into your Mac automatically launched iTunes, which loaded the disc, collected track data from Gracenote and added them to your library. A clean interface split into boxes kept everything neat and always within reach of a mouse click.Conspicuously missing from iTunes 1 was the ability to burn a CD on an external drive, a deficiency compounded by Apple’s mostly CD-RW-less line of Macs. Apple answered the cries a month later at Macworld Tokyo with the introduction of new iMacs and Cubes with write-able drives, a 1.1 update that added third-party support, and the launch of the controversial "Rip, Mix, Burn" campaign. iTunes 2 (Oct. 23, 2001-July 17, 2002) After racking up more than a million downloads in just a few short months, it quickly became clear that iTunes was every bit as revolutionary as Apple hoped. What all those users didn't know, however, was that the music player was merely the first part of a strategy that would redefine the company as more than a Mac maker. in October 2001, Steve Jobs showed us the next piece of Apple's digital hub in the form of an oddly named, undeniably sexy hand-held device. Built exclusively to leverage the popularity of Apple's music app, iPod came bundled with a brand-new version of iTunes that allowed it to seamlessly integrate with the songs and playlists stored on our Macs.Along with a considerable ratcheting of burn time, Apple also added "the three most requested features" into iTunes 2: MP3 CD burning, a 10-band equalizer and cross fading. A holdover from SoundJam, iTunes’ overdue equalizer came preloaded with more than 20 presets and brought robust, receiver-style tweaking to the desktop. The new crossfader eliminated the annoying gaps between songs and paved the way for a new generation of laptop DJs, and a sound enhancer appealed to audiophiles by adding depth and richness to tracks.But the real reason for iTunes 2 was iPod support, offering an unparalleled experience that transferred a few days’ worth of music from your Mac to your pocket in just about 10 minutes. iTunes 3 (July 17, 2002-April 28, 2003) Introduced at the final Macworld New York keynote as a companion to the first “solid-state touch wheel” iPod, iTunes 3 was a mostly incremental update with few dramatic changes. In the 18 months since its inception, some 14 million copies had been downloaded, so Apple had little reason to change the formula; rather it added just enough new features and enhancements to keep the iPod + iTunes revolution rolling.With iTunes 3, however, Apple threw down another gauntlet. Reduced prices, greater capacities and slimmer enclosures made the second-generation iPod even more desirable, but the addition of Windows support was the big change, opening up the popular player to millions of new music lovers. But Apple wisely kept iTunes tied to the Mac, forcing Windows users to sync their iPods with MUSICMATCH, a sub-par jukebox that basically served as an advertisement for iTunes’ sleek interface and finer points.As if to drive the point home, iTunes 3 added a few dozen new features, including track ratings, Sound Check for consistent volume playback, support for Audible audiobooks and Smart Playlists, which streamlined and automated the creation of digital mixes based on a series of predetermined rules. A few other enhancements--new track tags, library consolidation, playlist importing/exporting and track joining--added to the experience and widened the gap between iTunes and every other jukebox on the market. Click to embiggenTHE STOREiTunes 4 (April 28, 2003-Sept. 7, 2005) If iTunes 1 was a revolution, iTunes 4 was a bloody coup. What otherwise would have been a point update with a few minor playback improvements, AAC encoding and network sharing, iTunes 4 would have barely been noticeable without the addition of a new member to the "Source" sidebar: Music Store. A first-of-its-kind shopping experience that blew the roof off the industry and turned a thorn into a rose, the iTunes Music Store brought 200,000 high-quality songs from BMG, EMI, Sony Music Entertainment, Universal and Warner under one fully searchable, completely legal roof.Album artwork, one-click purchasing, in-apps video and a mostly unrestrictive DRM all for less than $1 a track. A million tracks were sold in the first week; four months later it surpassed 10 million. Along the road to the milestone 100 millionth download, however, Apple took iTunes 4 in a decidedly different direction when it rolled out the second generation of its store. Determined not to duplicate its prior proprietary mistakes, Apple didn’t renege on its promise to deliver the iTunes Music Store to Windows users by year’s end--and certainly didn’t skimp on the goods. A near-identical port of its award-winning iApp made its way onto PCs in October 2003 with a streamlined, expanded store (Mac users called it iTunes 4.1).With a 28-month upgrade path, version 4 stayed on desktops longer than any other iTunes release, gaining a slew of new features before retiring to digital graveyard: iMix, Party Shuffle, Apple Lossless, Podcasting, AirTunes, iPod photo and shuffle, and the European and Asian Music Stores all made their debuts under the iTunes 4 umbrella. Half a billion songs and 10 updates later, Apple had established itself as the undisputed king of the digital music domain. iTunes 5 (Sept. 7, 2005-Oct. 12, 2005) Where iTunes 4 was a lengthy, meandering release, the next version came and went in just five weeks. Introduced in tandem with the iPod nano at what would become an annual September digital music event, iTunes 5 packed an overall peppiness and a refined, cleaner mini player, but was surprisingly light on new features--and fittingly was the first numbered upgrade that didn’t come with a new color for the music note in its icon.Sadly, the highlight of the pack was a new Search Bar that made quick work of rummaging through the store’s two million songs, rounded out by Smart Shuffle, playlist folders, parental controls, AAC VBR importing and Outlook syncing. Ultimately, though, it was the bug-ridden app’s dark platinum makeover that got the most attention. iTunes 5 ditched the outdated brushed-metal skin of its predecessors, and the thinner, sexier look filled many a forum with praise and criticism.Better known as iTunes 4.10, the fifth version of iTunes was mostly a disappointment. Rumors about TV show purchases and movie rentals that had swirled in the days leading up to the event failed to materialize, and even Steve struggled to come up with something nice to say: "We are constantly improving iTunes with new features like... better searching because we love music ourselves and want to surprise and delight music fans around the world." iTunes 6 (Oct. 12, 2005-Sept. 12, 2006) What a difference 35 days make. At an unexpected "One More Thing" event in early October, Steve kicked iTunes 5 to the curb and rolled out the red carpet for the next generation of the digital jukebox. Arriving in tow with new iMacs and video iPods, iTunes 6 brought serious changes to the store, adding online gift options, customer reviews, "Just For You" recommendations and some 2,000 music videos and Pixar shorts, all priced at $1.99 and formatted for new iPod’s 2.5-inch color screen.But that wasn’t all. Never content to rest on his laurels, Steve rolled out TV show downloads with iTunes 6, priced at the same $1.99 as the far-shorter music videos. Just five Disney shows were available at launch--"Lost," "Desperate Housewives," "Night Stalker," "That's So Raven" and "The Suite Life" --but when more than a million videos were purchased inside of three weeks, it didn’t take long before other networks came knocking. Before the end of the year, NBC Universal had signed up, followed shortly by MTV, Showtime, Fox and CBS, and soon iTunes 6 had done for TV what iTunes 4 did for music, cramming more than 220 shows onto its shelves within 12 months.iTunes 6’s TV Store didn’t make quite as much noise as the Music Store, but its 11-month tenure marked the start of an exciting time for Apple, as momentum began to build toward something huge on the horizon. Click to embiggenTHE SYNERGYiTunes 7 (Sept. 12, 2006-Sept. 9, 2008) Billed as the "most significant enhancement to the world’s most popular music jukebox and online music and video store since it debuted," iTunes 7 was indeed a dramatic reinvention of the five-and-a-half-year-old iApp, with sweeping interface changes, speed boosts and a renewed focus on the jukebox.Packing two new navigation views--a list mode dotted with album artwork and an officially sanctioned version of Steel Skies’ Cover Flow--iTunes 7 put the emphasis back on iTunes as a music player, starting with the debut of the MiniStore, which strengthened the marriage between the two segments. Everything from the Source list to iPod integration received an overdue makeover, and Apple even fixed the age-old microsecond of silence that iTunes stubbornly inserted between joined tracks. Of course, it wouldn’t be an iTunes update without a new addition to the store, and Apple didn’t disappoint here, either. With users already downloading more than a million videos and TV episodes each week, iTunes 7 made the logical leap to movies, adding some 75 near-DVD quality titles from Walt Disney Pictures, Pixar, Touchstone Pictures and Miramax Films at launch and growing to more than 2,500 films from nearly every studio over the course of its two-year upgrade cycle. What made the seventh version so significant, however, was its versatility. By the time it had run its course, iTunes 7 had well grown into its role as the center of the digital hub, with iPhone, iPod touch Apple TV, movie rentals, the App Store, and a slew of nanos and shuffles all landing on its watch. Through it all, iTunes 7 never felt stale, bloated or sluggish, smoothly adapting to the new demands with little more than a software patch. iTunes 8 (Sept. 9, 2008-Sept. 9, 2009) After 19 software updates to iTunes 7, it was time for the next whole number, and Apple finally delivered iTunes 8 at its annual music event in 2008. Following such a tremendous update was no easy task, and Apple could easily have packaged the new stuff into iTunes 7.8, if not for the super-smart technology hiding within.The centerpiece of iTunes 8 was the Genius feature, an underrated playlist tool that combined the controlled randomness of Smart Shuffle with the queue capabilities of Party Shuffle (iTunes DJ after 8.1) to transform your Library into a personalized radio station. Adding to the fun was the optional Genius Sidebar, a mildly intrusive strip of song recommendations culled from a mix of your favorite songs (and in later versions, TV shows and movies) and "anonymously-gathered knowledge from millions of other iTunes users," all crunched by a series of Apple algorithms, neatly packaged and beamed back to your computer.Minor tweaks elsewhere improved upon the broad refinements introduced in the prior release, and Apple dumped the Search Bar in favor of a return to field-specific exploring. An enhanced grid mode replaced album view with an iPhoto Events-like scheme that grouped albums and artists into interactive mini widgets. Taking a break from its relentless tide of upgrades, the store was mostly left out this round of enhancements, but iTunes 8 did usher in high-definition content (despite Steve’s previous declaration of 2005 as the year of HD).iTunes 9 (Sept. 9, 2009) Exactly a year after iTunes 8 meekly landed on desktops, Apple welcomed Steve Jobs back to the main stage by dropping a bombshell of a release that overhauled the store, made iPhone syncing effortless and updated the classic vinyl jacket for the 21st century.Open iTunes 9 and you’re immediately smacked by a new white background, giving the grid a clean, bright look that makes your album art pop and beckons you inside. Speed improvements are noticeable throughout, particularly when using Cover Flow, which can now handle speedy scrolling with only the slightest bit of lag. Delving further into the latest version of Apple’s nearly nine-year-old jukebox reveals hipper icons, a few extra curves and whistles, and a new Home Sharing feature that finally lets your trade music with friends and family members.Flip to the store and you’ll find a host of newness, beginning with a personalized welcome note, sensible layout, enhanced album pages with quick view windows and previews that borrow cues from the mobile iTunes Store. Dig a little deeper and you’ll find iTunes Extras (think DVD bonus features for digital movies) and iTunes LPs, the greatest thing to happen to music since, well, iTunes. A far greater thing than the digital PDF booklets bundled with album purchases, iTunes LP--while currently limited to just 12 albums and saddled with nonuniform pricing (Jay-Z’s pre-order costs $16.99 while Pearl Jam’s costs $9.99)--is poised to rekindle the creativity and connection that’s all but been stripped away by MP3s. With iTunes X most likely slated for a September 2010 release, we can only wonder what new features are being realized in a secret bunker in Cupertino. Only time, and Steve Jobs, will tell.  What has been your favorite feature over the years? Share in the comments. 

  • Why Macs Will Never Get Blu-ray

    Ever since 2008 when Blu-ray and HD-DVD were battling for consumer mind share, Mac users have been speculating about Apple's next optical drive technology. Since 2001, SuperDrive has been Apple's name for DVD and CD burning optical drives built into or available in every Mac sold, and now SuperDrive is standard but Apple doesn't mention it anymore because it's not that big of a deal to include in Macs. Almost every PC manufactured today has this. The MacBook Air was released in 2008 with no optical drive, which started a flurry of rumors about Apple's thoughts on where we were going as Apple mentioned the irrelevance of optical drives since content was available via iTunes and the web and you only needed one for installing software since even backups could be done over the air with Time Capsule. Apple still sells a $99 USB SuperDrive for the MacBook Air for people who need one. As a Macbook Air owner, I have never needed one since all of my software was installed via the web and all consumable content (movies, music and podcasts) are all available in iTunes. The two most notable technology visionaries of our time, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, have both weighed in on Blu-ray since it became the standard physical media for  high-definition content so I thought it would be beneficial to provide their quotes here before I give a bit of my thoughts. Bill Gates gave two very powerful quotes on the subject. The first: “Well, the key issue here is that the protection scheme under Blu-ray is very anti-consumer and there's not much visibility of that. The inconvenience is that the [movie] studios got too much protection at the expense consumers [sic] and it won't work well on PCs. You won't be able to play movies and do software in a flexible way.” and: “For us it's not the physical format. Understand that this is the last physical format there will ever be. Everything's going to be streamed directly or on a hard disk. So, in this way, it's even unclear how much this one counts.” The note of it being anti-consumer is frankly a matter for any digital content these days. Movie studios will have their DRM on any future media that they control whether you get that content from Microsoft, Apple or built into a disk that you put into a dedicated player. DRM is the current reality unless you pirate it, but Gates' comment about Blu-ray being the last physical media is very important. Gates actually said this in 2005. Yes, five years ago. Gates said this long before YouTube was a house hold name and at a time when the iPod with video was a brand new product and before the Apple TV. Of course, Microsoft had its home theater software built into Windows XP, but if you look at how we consume media today, it's apparent that he was on to something. Then, in October 2008, Steve Jobs gave his thoughts on Blu-ray with one line: “Blu-ray is just a bag of hurt. It's great to watch the movies, but the licensing of the tech is so complex, we're waiting till things settle down and Blu-ray takes off in the marketplace.” Of course, Blu-ray has taken off in the marketplace but Steve hasn't changed his tone very much in the last year and a half. An email response from Steve Jobs last week mirrors Bill Gates' comment in 2005 and reiterates Apple's stance on Blu-ray and pretty much sums up why we'll never see the technology included in future Macs: “Blu-ray is looking more and more like one of the high end audio formats that appeared as the successor to the CD — like it will be beaten by Internet downloadable formats.” After the customer sends an email response to him again stating Blu-ray has a purpose for use of system backups and high-density storage or the distribution of home movies Steve adds: “No, free, instant gratification and convenience (likely in that order) is what made the downloadable formats take off. And the downloadable movie business is rapidly moving to free (Hulu) or rentals (iTunes) so storing purchased movies or TV shows is not an issue. “I think you may be wrong — we may see a fast broad move to streamed free and rental content at sufficient quality (at least 720p) to win almost everyone over.” The rise in broadband speeds paired with the fact that you can download a movie anywhere in the world (with a cell phone connection) to your mobile device and it's clear that Steve simply doesn't see a point in Blu-ray being included given the complications of licensing it and echoing sentiment into Bill Gates' opinions of DRM via the new format. Steve thinks that with a Time Capsule or an online backup system (like SugarSync and Mozy) paired with YouTube for sharing video and iTunes at the center of it all with media consumption, the industry has made Blu-ray obsolete before it even makes it to Mac machines and I agree. I once thought Blu-ray was a key addition to have on my Mac and now that I have a Mac without an optical drive, I don't miss it. Everything I own is synced to my iMac and MacBook Air over the web in real-time, my iPhone and iPad can purchase movies and they download over the air and I can share a movie with my family that I shot and edited on iPhone 4 and uploaded to YouTube within one hour compared to burning and shipping a Blu-ray disk to them. Blu-ray is something a lot of pros want but it's out of desire and not true need. I'm not a professional filmmaker and I'm not working for a movie studio, but DVD Studio Pro and products like Toast from Roxio support Blu-ray if you buy a drive separately and plug it into your Mac. Apple just won't be shipping support for the technology anytime soon and it may never include it in its machines and I bet that most consumers are okay with that.

  • 10 Things that Apple Could Unveil Tomorrow (That's Not a Tablet)

    As everyone in the free world knows by now, Apple made its January 27 media event a reality at long last, complete with invites to the press. That means we’ve all been spending the days leading up the event like a bunch of kids waiting for Santa to fly down the chimney on Christmas, speculating on what wonderment our Techno-Santa (that would be Apple CEO Steve Jobs) will unveil. MacLife.com would like to take a moment to throw out our own list of possibilities -- some more realistic than others, naturally, but that’s half the fun.iPhone OS 4.0It’s been quite awhile (in tech time) since Apple rolled out the modest iPhone OS 3.1.2 update -- so much time that folks much wiser than us have predicted that iPhone OS 4.0 must be right around the bend. The logic behind such assumptions is that the refreshed OS contains too much code that will spill the beans on Apple’s aforementioned tablet, and therefore the company has boxed itself into a corner by having to wait and introduce them both together.Of course, all of that assumes that Apple even plans to use iPhone OS for its tablet, essentially turning it into a larger, souped-up iPod touch instead of allowing it to run a full (or even pared down) version of Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6. For the past two years, Apple has waited until March to unleash iPhone OS updates to developers via their SDK, with a proper release coming closer to early summer when the new hardware is ready. But plenty of folks are placing bets that this third year will buck that trend, especially after the recent leak of a screenshot claiming to show a device using iPhone OS 4.0. Among the rumored features are some graphical and UI changes, new ways to run applications in the background (we’re guessing that means a form of multitasking) and even new syncing abilities for contacts & calendars.We’d venture a guess that won’t be all that iPhone OS 4.0 has in store for us: Our wish list includes improved push notifications (preferably a solution to the problem of only one being displayed at a time), a more efficient home screen and hey, while we’re at it, isn’t it about time for the ability to wirelessly sync media between iTunes and our devices? There are plenty of occasions where the dock connector umbilical cord makes sense (for instance, when you need to get a battery charge while you sync), but really, it’s 2010 already. Wireless is where it’s at!Bonus points to Apple if they give us push e-mail on any account (even the Palm Pre can do it!) and maybe 720p HD video recording -- the iPhone 3GS hardware has already shown it's capable of doing it, so why not enable it?New MacBook ProsWe realize there’s only so much Apple can do with the notebook form at this point, and they’ve made some good choices, such as the unibody designs of late. But a peek over at the world of Windows-equipped laptops shows that those folks are really working overtime to pile on the features, and they generally do it for a whole lot less than Apple’s notebooks.There are already standing rumors that the MacBook Pro is going to get a nice speed bump -- courtesy of Intel’s latest Core i5 processor -- while retaining current battery life. That would be welcome, but what about a Blu-ray enabled SuperDrive so we can watch HD discs on the go -- and of course, have the ability to burn them as well. PC laptops have been doing that almost forever (okay, a couple years now), while Apple continues to tiptoe around the fact that the world isn’t quite ready to totally abandon optical media in favor of iTunes downloads. (That’s the real “bag of hurt,” if you ask us.)So, we say: Apple, bring on some real innovation with these laptops again! If you’re really going to sell us on a multitouch tablet computer, why not add the same technology to the MacBook Pro so we have the best of both worlds? Or better yet, give us some of that sweet swivel-screen action like HP has done, so your notebooks can actually double as a tablet? We figure while you’re at it, it’s also time to make the iSight camera part of the actual screen, so you can extend the screen real estate all the way to the edges, too.And hey, bring back those Firewire and ExpressCard ports! What’s with this Van Helsing routine, trying to put a stake through the heart of your own Firewire innovation?! Sure, an SD card slot would have been nice a few years ago, but true MacBook “pros” would get better use out of those ports, especially for digital video & audio use.iLife ‘10The 2009 edition of iLife added some welcome new features, particularly with iPhoto and the inclusion of Faces, Places and Facebook integration. But some components of the software got less love than others -- primarily iDVD, which, like its pro cousin DVD Studio Pro, appears to be on the outs with Apple.Rumors abound that iDVD will gain some new tricks with the next iLife release, such as the ability to create iTunes LP media. Color us not so impressed. For starters, it’s downright silly in this day & age that the program can’t burn Blu-ray discs in addition to DVDs, especially as hard as Apple has pushed the whole “create your own HD content” with iMovie.Perhaps our biggest wish for iLife ‘10 is less on new features and more on speed: All of the components in the iLife bundle have a lot of old legacy code (and lack 64-bit optimization), which makes them sluggish at best. What’s the point of ramping up the processor speeds in their systems when these aging products can barely keep up?iTunes 10Please oh please, Apple gods: Hear our pathetic cries for a near-total revamp of iTunes! For all of its joys -- such as the iTunes Store and pretty decent media management (at least for music & apps) -- iTunes is an old dog that’s ready to be put out of its misery. It’s slow to open, frequently sluggish to scroll through windows and as we mentioned above, enough with the tethered syncing already. MobileMe wireless syncing for contacts & calendars is already a year and a half old, and it’s just made us want to sync our media the same way even more (at least for photos, music & apps).It’s sort of embarrassing that iTunes opens faster and runs more efficiently on Windows than it does under even Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6 -- shame on you, Apple. (No wonder it was recently ranked number 46 on Forrester’s Consumer Experience Index.) There’s already speculation that Apple’s recent acquisition of Lala will push more of iTunes to the cloud -- we’re not big fans of that idea overall, unless it allows us to also keep our media on our computers at the same time (again, at least the smaller files such as photos, music & apps).iTunes is yet another Apple innovation that’s become a bit long in the tooth -- despite recent updates that have introduced features like Genius (which ultimately benefits Apple more than the user with their paid music suggestions), it’s taken way too long for truly inspired additions like the ability to manipulate the iPhone & iPod touch home screen from the app itself.Our biggest wish for iTunes 10 is to soup up the movies, television and, to a lesser degree, music video aspects of the program. Even with enormous hard drives in our computers, who wants to store gigantic HD video files inside their iTunes library? It’s like a noose around our necks. Apple needs to take a cue from Netflix here, with their excellent streaming video service to all kinds of content boxes -- or at the very least, make the downloading part of the equation at our discretion, particularly for times like traveling where Internet access may be spotty or simply unavailable. There will always be times when you want a TV show episode on your iPhone for when you’re traveling without data access. Freedom of choice, we say!MacPad (iPad?)There have been rampant rumors of late that Apple is trying to seize upon a trademark for the term “iPad,” which many tech bloggers are translating to mean that Cupertino intends to use it as the name of their tablet computer. But what if it was actually going to be a super-groovy combination of Magic Mouse and MacBook-style trackpad that could attach to any Mac via Bluetooth (or at the very least, USB 2.0)?The Magic Mouse was released last fall to plenty of anticipation, but if you ask us, it fell way short by delivering such a lackluster amount of multitouch fun. Sure, the third party developers have since stepped in with a multitude of choices to soup up the Magic Mouse, but we’re still left itching for more.We prefer to call it the “MacPad,” which is essentially a mouse replacement for your desktop that replicates a Mac notebook trackpad, complete with awesome multi-finger gestures assignable to most any task.You’ll recall, of course, that such technology once existed for the Mac courtesy of a small company called Fingerworks, who was subsequently purchased by Apple. Their website recently shut down after years of remaining live, leading many to speculate that Fingerworks technology will finally be implemented in the Apple tablet -- but we’d like to see it land in a small external pad that works with any Mac. Is that too much to ask? (Fingerworks image courtesy of MacRumors.com)Apple TV ReduxDon’t get us wrong: There’s nothing inherently wrong with Apple TV, especially if you buy into the entire iTunes ecosystem. But the mere fact that so many people buy the device with the intention of using ATV Flash or other methods to hack them should tell Apple something.That “something” is that they want more content choices besides the iTunes Store and YouTube. XBMC and Boxee are both widely used on hacked Apple TVs in order for users to watch their own home-brewed content -- be it ripped from their DVD collection or acquired by “other means.” (We wouldn’t endorse nor have any knowledge of that, however.) Netflix has made great strides to latch onto every conceivable kind of hardware with their streaming service (now including all three major gaming systems), yet it remains closed to Apple TV for the most obvious of reasons -- Apple’s greed (or rather, arrogance that the iTunes Store and its “pay per download” model is the best way).Expecting a new Apple TV may seem like a wildcard, but let’s not forget that the device hasn’t really, truly been refreshed in a looong time. It’s still running Tiger 10.4 Mac OS X, for God’s sake! Apple clearly wants to capture the living room and they’ve acknowledged that their first try didn’t quite cut it -- even dismissing the Apple TV as a “hobby” to the press. Entrenching themselves into customers’ living rooms should almost be a higher priority than that silly old tablet, we say.Macquarium, Featuring iFish OSSpeaking of the living room, messy aquariums and accidentally overfeeding your aquatic pets will soon become a thing of the past, thanks to Apple’s latest home entertainment wonder, Macquarium. If you’ve enjoyed the multitouch fun of the 99-cent App Store favorite Koi Pond, prepare to have Apple totally blow your mind with the first completely computer-driven fish tank -- no water required!Imagine a razor-thin, Jonathan Ive-designed, holographic fish tank that’s totally customizable thanks to its pared-down Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6 software interface. Fill Macquarium’s virtual tank with a wide variety of default "iFish" personally hand-picked by Steve Jobs himself, or use the included OceanMe software to customize the defaults and even create your own new fish -- whether they exist in real life or not! Of course, for the less-ambitious among us, additional fish will also be made available at the iFish Store, a new virtual market included as a feature of iTunes 10, with an SDK immediately available for download to all potential iFish OS developers.Of course, Macquarium includes accelerometers to allow your fish tank to stand vertically or horizontally (let’s see your real fish tank do that!) and the multitouch screen includes a new “multi-dimensional” feature that allows you to actually reach inside the device to play with or feed your iFish, all without ever getting wet. Amuse your friends by bumping the side of the tank and watch those iFish come running at chow time!Macquarium features a Mini DisplayPort jack so you can plug in your Apple laptop or desktop and use it as a convenient computer display when not in use, and includes a wireless 802.11 b/g/n network connection to sync with your iFish Store purchases. (Mac G4 Cube fish tank mod image courtesy of WalYou.com)iRumors.apple.comIn an effort to single-handedly kill the rumor-blogging community that’s made their products such a hit in the past, Apple Inc. will finally announce next week that they’re going public with all of their ideas under one easy-to-find shingle -- the ultimate “one more thing” for Apple CEO Steve Jobs.The Cupertino tech giant, finally backed into a corner by the Internet’s incessant digging for juicy trade secret nuggets to expose to the world prior to the launch of the Apple tablet, will launch the subdomain iRumors.apple.com as part of their strategy to give away all of their best (and worst!) future ideas, far in advance of the actual product launch and at long last, finally knock the wind out of our sails for all Apple events to come.Apple had “no comment” regarding speculation that unemployment lines would be overloaded with former tech journalists & bloggers as a result of next week’s move.iBabySure, Apple might have dropped “Computer” from their name back in 2007, but that doesn’t mean that a lifelike, computerized baby wouldn’t be in the cards. After all, in these tough economic times, both parents have to work just to eke out a living, so who has time for making babies the old-fashioned way? Enter Apple’s new iBaby.Your iBaby’s multitouch faux flesh will be perfect for tickling or stroking their lifelike hair, arriving complete with a pair of swanky new super-fast USB 3.0 ports for feeding your simulated baby with all the knowledge & dreams a real child would one day fail to retain (sorry, no Firewire here!). Also included is Mini DisplayPort for plugging iBaby into an external monitor (ideal for monitoring dreams and other brain activity that would cost thousands of dollars in real life) and of course, a standard headphone jack (which also doubles as an optical audio output) so you can enjoy your iPod playlists from the comfort of your stereo speakers. Of course, a Mute button comes standard with every iBaby, a must for all first-time parents.iBaby’s chest will include an iPhone/iPod dock connection built-in, so you can keep up with the latest news, sports scores and information while you rock your little bionic tot to sleep -- and if the charming lil’ tike won’t go to sleep on their own, you always have the easy Sleep menu option that you’ve come to know & love in Mac OS X to simply knock that sucker right out.Best of all, iBaby’s sleek unibody design has the option of giving a Steve Jobsian “Boom!” to take the guesswork out of those messy diaper changes, and the whole thing will run the latest & greatest Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6. Available as either male or female in Caucasian, African-American and Chinese models (with other races arriving in time for the holiday season in Q3 2010), your iBaby can easily swap personalities with a simple trip to the iTunes Store -- a handful of new ones will be available for only 99 cents each when the product hits stores in March.Apple AirAs if to hammer home the point that Apple fanatics will buy virtually anything the company makes and love it unconditionally, Steve Jobs will announce a tiny clear plastic box next week, similar to the current diminutive casing that the iPod nano comes in. The contents of this package will make even the iPod shuffle look positively obese.Called “Apple Air,” the packaging will contain absolutely nothing, save for the nitrogen and oxygen (aka, air) exhaled in the hallowed halls of the Apple Cupertino campus. The company will offer a variety of different Apple Air models, each indicated by the iPod nano-style color scheme of the packaging: One color for Steve Jobs’ office, another for the reception area, different colors for both Phil Schiller and Jonathan Ive’s offices -- the possibilities are endless.Prices will start at $199 with the equivalent of 8GB of air space. Remember, you heard it here first!*****Did we miss anything that you’d like to see? Make your own predictions heard in the comments!

  • iPhone OS 3.0: Some Things You Knew, and Some You Didn’t

    A lot of this will not be news to those of you who've either experienced the iPhone OS 3.0 beta first-hand, or who've read about it here on TheAppleBlog or elsewhere, but the official announcement of what features will be coming via the final release version of 3.0 (dropping June 17) came today via the WWDC keynote address, so here's a quick recap and breakdown, in case you've forgotten or have been hiding your head in the sand. We'll also look at the 3G S-only features that are coming with the new handset, which Apple is also releasing next week (June 19). Cut/Copy/Paste It's here, it's universal, it should work in all apps since it's built right into the iPhone's Cocoa Touch controls. This is big news for a lot of people who've been waiting for this ever since the release of the original iPhone two years ago, but BlackBerry users are probably snickering at all of us right now. All I know is, thank goodness I can finally text message complicated URLs instead of telling people what keyword to Google and what number link to click on in the results. Shake to Undo Maybe it's the lack of a physical keyboard, but I'm always doing the wrong thing with my iPhone and iPod touch. There used to be no easy way to retrace my steps, but now all it takes is a little wrist action to set things right again. Command + Z is the way of the world, and I predict its presence in iPhone 3.0 will be much appreciated. Now, there's the little matter of Redo. I humbly propose Spin to Redo. Or blow into the iPhone mic. Both would be very stupid-looking. Landscape Everywhere Portraits are nice, but sprawling landscapes are sometimes more pleasing to the eye. With 3.0, Apple has enabled landscape mode for all of its official apps, which is great for heavy Mail and Notes users. Maybe this will act as a cue to Twitter app devs? MMS Available (Selectively) Your iPhone is no longer preventing you from having MMS capabilities, though your service provider might. Twenty-nine of Apple's telco partners will have full MMS support available for iPhone users when OS 3.0 goes live in a week, but some will be left out in the cold, including AT&T users, until a later (summer, in AT&T's case) date. Here in Canada, we may be slaves to terrible three-year contracts, but at least we'll have MMS — for a price. Spotlight Search your whole phone, not just parts of it. That means music, contacts, email, notes, the works. As someone who's been using the beta since its release, I can say for sure that this is a great feature. Especially if you're an app glutton or have a large address book/iTunes library. Just swipe right or double tap from the home screen to access it. iTunes: Movie/TV Show/Audiobook/iTunes U Direct Downloads Buy, download, and view all iTunes video content directly on your device, using Wi-Fi or 3G. Not only that, if you like to read with your ears, audiobooks are now also available directly from the iPhone, as is iTunes U content for those students out there. One step closer to cutting the cord. Now where's that Bluetooth syncing? Tethering (Also Selective) Twenty-seven carriers are backing tethering via the iPhone, including Rogers in my homeland. Guess who's not? I'll give you a hint: It rhymes with “Haiti and Tea.” Not exactly clear on whether that situation is temporary or not. HTML 5, HTTP Streaming A/V, Autofill, Javascript Improvements Safari is getting a whole whack of improvements which should make the iPhone mobile browsing experience much smoother. HTML 5.0 standards support, 3X faster Javascript rendering, intelligent HTTP audio and video streaming that picks bitrate and data quality based on your connection speed, and autofill for forms and logins are all included in the 3.0 update. Over 30 Languages Supported Chinese, Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, Korean and Thai are among the new languages supported in 3.0, extending the iPhone's international appeal. Parental Controls Just as suspected, you'll be able to control iPhone content via a settings pane and age group ratings. Good for parents who are spoiling their kids with iPhones, but don't want to go so far as to let them ogle bikini babes. Find My Phone A “30 Rock” clip featuring Tina Fey as Liz Lemon having lost her iPhone was used to demo the new Find My Phone feature, which has been an option in the beta, but didn't actually do anything until now. It allows you to track the location of your phone via MobileMe's web interface, and even send it a message with a phone number for a kind stranger to call if they're feeling benevolent and want to return your device. Remote Wipe If you're worried that the person who finds your lost phone might not be so benevolent, you can always initiate a remote wipe, which will erase all your data permanently. Nice security feature. In-App Media Library Access Get at your iTunes library from within games and other apps. The demo used Gameloft's Asphalt 5, which now allows you to access your music and playlists via your in-game car's radio. Pretty cool, and something a lot of games will probably end up taking advantage of. Much cheaper than licensing music for use. Device Access Hardware peripherals can now access iPhone software via the dock connector so that third-party companies can develop apps to accompany their iPhone and iPod touch accessories. The tech demo today involved a nifty science experiment, and guitars. Lots of cool stuff possible here, though I predict a lot of buggy stuff coming to market first. Tom Tom showed off a GPS augmentation dock that could be pretty neat with its turn-by-turn software. Push Notification Text, audio, and icon badging are all supported as forms of push notification in iPhone OS 3.0. Apple didn't kid around with the tech demo for this at WWDC, which featured a medical app that can update a doctor in real time of a patient's status. It rightly awed the crowd. In-App Purchasing Let the flood of DLC begin. Level packs, magazine subscriptions, book purchases, cute hats for your in-game avatars, anything you can imagine will be made available by someone. Can't wait for fart noise add-on packs. 3-Megapixel Autofocus Still/Video Camera (3GS Only) At least in the controlled environment of the keynote presentation, the new camera looks loads better than the existing 3G's. Lots of neat “tap to focus” options, better saturation/exposure control, and video capture. Videos can also be instantly edited on the device, as many predicted. The implementation of video functions looks very slick. There is also developer API access to the still and video camera. Voice Control (3G S Only) I'm not entirely sure why this is limited to the 3G S, since the iPhone 3G has a mic and software, so it should be able to handle a little voice recognition. I guess it looks cool, though, especially with universal iPod commands (”Play my playlist” and “Play songs like this” to activate Genius) and audio track information just like the iPod Shuffle. Nike+ Support (3G S Only) It was supposed to happen, and it did. Not very surprising, but a nice addition. Definitely ups my interest. Battery Life Improvements (3G S Only) Nine hours on Wi-Fi, 30 hours audio playback, 10 hours video, 12 hours 2G talk, and five hours 3G. Again, Apple estimates, so likely exaggerated, but should beat the existing iPhone pretty handily. On a more muscular device, too. Digital Compass (3G S Only) Just as speculated, the magnetometer made it in. It allows Google Maps to know your orientation, among other things. Developer API access is also included. It's a long list, it's a good list, it's an incomplete list. iPhone OS 3.0 brings 100+ new features, many of which won't be immediately apparent. These are the ones that will likely matter to you on a day-to-day basis, and that's why they're here. If there's anything I've missed, feel free to comment below.

  • Keynote Recap!

    So here is a quick recap of things from the Keynote: New Product - Time Capsule. From the press release: Apple today introduced Time Capsule, a backup appliance that automatically and wirelessly backs up everything on one or more Macs running Leopard(TM), the latest release of Apple's Mac OS(R) X operating system including the amazing Time Machine(TM) automatic backup software. Time Capsule combines an 802.11n base station with a server grade hard disk in one small package. Simply plug it in, then easily set up automatic wireless backup for every Mac(R) in your house to a single Time Capsule with just a few clicks. Time Capsule offers the benefits of a full-featured 802.11n Wi-Fi base station, and comes in two models: a 500 gigabyte model for just $299 and a 1 terabyte model for just $499. iPhone Update From the press release: Apple today announced a free software update for its revolutionary iPhone that allows users to automatically find their location using the redesigned Maps application*; text message multiple people in one message; create Web Clips for their favorite websites; customize their home screen; and watch movies rented from the new iTunes(R) Movie Rentals right on their iPhone. With its revolutionary multi-touch user interface and pioneering software, users can easily add significant new features to their iPhone through software updates whenever an update becomes available. New iPhone products shipping from the factory will include the software update and existing iPhone customers will automatically get the update for free when they sync their iPhone with iTunes. iPod Touch Update From the press release: Apple today announced a major software upgrade for the iPod(R) touch, making the best iPod into even more — the world's best Wi-Fi mobile device. iPod touch customers already have the most advanced mobile web browser in the world with Safari, and now Apple is adding five more great mobile applications — Mail, Maps, Stocks, Weather and Notes. The iPod touch software upgrade also includes new features such as Web Clips, a customizable home screen and beginning today, the ability to watch iTunes(R) Movie Rentals. New iPod touch products shipping from the factory will include the software upgrade and existing iPod touch customers can get the software upgrade for $19.99 by purchasing and downloading it from iTunes. iTunes Movie Rentals Apple today announced iTunes(R) Movie Rentals featuring movies from all the major movie studios including 20th Century Fox, The Walt Disney Studios, Warner Bros., Paramount, Universal Studios Home Entertainment, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Lionsgate and New Line Cinema. Users can rent movies for as low as $2.99 and watch them on their Macs or PCs, all current generation iPods*, iPhone(TM) and Apple TV(R). iTunes Movie Rentals launches today and will offer over 1,000 titles by the end of February, including over 100 titles in stunning high definition video with 5.1 Dolby Digital surround sound which users can rent directly from their widescreen TV using Apple TV. iTunes Movie Rentals are priced at $2.99 for library titles and $3.99 for new releases, and high definition versions are just one dollar more with library titles at $3.99 and new releases at $4.99. Apple TV Take 2 From press release: Apple(R) today unveiled all new software for Apple TV that allows movie fans to rent movies on the iTunes(R) Store directly from their widescreen TV, and lowered the price of Apple TV to just $229. With iTunes Movie Rentals and Apple TV, users can just click a button on their remote to effortlessly rent movies from a catalog of over 1,000 titles by the end of February, including over 100 titles in stunning high definition video with 5.1 Dolby Digital surround sound, with no computer required. DVD-quality iTunes Movie Rentals are $2.99 for library titles and $3.99 for new releases, and high definition versions are just one dollar more with library titles at $3.99 and new releases at $4.99. Apple will provide the new Apple TV software free of charge to existing Apple TV owners when it releases the new Apple TV priced at $229 in about two weeks. iTunes Digital Copies From press release: Twentieth Century Fox and Apple(R) today announced Digital Copy for iTunes(R), which provides customers who purchase a DVD with an additional Digital Copy of the movie. Just like movies purchased from the iTunes Store, an iTunes Digital Copy can effortlessly be transferred to iTunes and then viewed on a PC or Mac(R), iPod(R) with video, iPhone(TM) or on Apple TV(R). The first DVD to make its debut with iTunes Digital Copy is the Special Edition DVD premiere of the Family Guy “Star Wars” parody, “Family Guy Presents: Blue Harvest,” which is being released in stores today. Fox and Apple are planning to deliver many more DVDs with iTunes Digital Copy this year. Macbook Air From press release: Apple(R) today unveiled MacBook(R) Air, the world's thinnest notebook. MacBook Air measures an unprecedented 0.16-inches at its thinnest point, while its maximum height of 0.76-inches is less than the thinnest point on competing notebooks. MacBook Air has a stunning 13.3-inch LED-backlit widescreen display, a full-size and backlit keyboard, a built-in iSight(R) video camera for video conferencing, and a spacious trackpad with multi-touch gesture support so users can pinch, rotate and swipe. MacBook Air is powered by a 1.6 GHz or 1.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor with 4MB L2 cache, and includes as standard features 2GB of memory, an 80GB 1.8-inch hard drive, and the latest 802.11n Wi-Fi technology and Bluetooth 2.1. “We've built the world's thinnest notebook — without sacrificing a full-size keyboard or a full-size 13-inch display,” said Steve Jobs, Apple's CEO. “When you first see MacBook Air, it's hard to believe it's a high-performance notebook with a full-size keyboard and display. But it is.”

  • 50 Rad Firefox Add-Ons

    Sometimes, one-size-fits-all doesn’t really fit, and this is especially the case on the Internet. It’s a wonderful place out there on the World Wide Web, full of sites for every purpose we can think of (and some we’d rather not). That’s why, we’re glad there’s Firefox. No Mac browser is nearly as flexible, nor as customizable. With the right--or the raddest--add-ons installed, you can transform Firefox from a tool to surf the Web into an Internet wrangling toolbox you can tweak to your heart’s content. We’ve collected fifty Firefox add-ons to help you get the most from your visits to the Worldwide Intertubes. Some aren’t for everyone, but that's okay. Read on, and you may discover ways to work a little easier and play a little harder. For those about to restart Firefox to complete your changes, we salute you.AppearanceAging TabsHow do you know when you’ve been browsing too long? Your musty old tabs can tell you. Aging Tabs makes them change color as they sit on the page waiting for your scrutiny. Naturally, colors and aging speeds are customizable. Should tabs fade to grey or yellow like newsprint? It’s your call, but you better hurry; those tabs aren’t getting any younger.Looks like our tabs could use a little Botox.Colorful TabsNeed a little more color in your life? Or maybe you just need to get organized? Try Colorful Tabs, the add-on that lets you apply colors to coordinate groups of tabs, make important tabs stand out, and make Firefox look pretty. Tabs can have random colors as you create them, one color specific to a site’s domain name, or you can apply colors to individual tabs with a context-click. You’ll have to keep up with the latest tab fashions from Paris, but that’s the price of progress.Colorful Tabs are cute and useful.GreasemonkeyDon’t like the way a Web page works? Don’t get mad, get Greasemonkey. With it, and hundreds of scripts available at the official website and third-party sites, you can make pages perform the way you want them to. Want Google Reader to look like a Mac app? There’s a script for that. Want to strip the ads out of Facebook? There’s a script for...you get the idea. Simply locate the script you're looking for, install, and...there is no step three! Just enjoy your favorite sites customized to your liking! Greasemonkey can make YouTube look like Google Videos.History TreeFirefox’s History browser is so...linear. And so yesterday’s news once you install History Tree. It displays your browsing history as a branching tree complete with screenshots, page names, and the time you visited each page. History Tree also enables you to search your pages’ descriptions to find a past page, view pages as a Cover Flow-ish series of screenshots, and open old pages in new tabs. You won’t look at browsing the same way again.We’ll take customizable browsers for $100, Alex.Multirow Bookmarks ToolbarKeep your favorite sites close and your bookmarks closer with Multirow Bookmarks Toolbar. Simply choose how many rows of bookmarks you want to appear beneath your toolbar--from 2 to too many--and get your freaky bookmark on. You may never need to click the Bookmarks menu item again! You’re not seeing double, you’re seeing Multirow Bookmarks Toolbar.ReadabilityReadability is as simple as it sounds: it strips away almost everything but an article’s text and links to maximize, well, readability. Instead of the original Web page, you get something closer to a book or newspaper’s layout (or even a Terminal window). It’s great if your screen is a little smaller than you’d like, and easier than futzing with menu items to change a page’s font size. If a story is worth your time, it’s worth Readability.A more legible Internet is here today with Readability.RSS TickerThis just in! RSS Ticker scrolls your Live Bookmarks below your toolbar or at the bottom of the page. When an item catches your eye, mouse over it to see a pop-up that offers more information, then right-click to open the article in a new tab or window. You’ll never be at a loss for cocktail party conversation again.RSS feeds keep on tickin’ into the future with RSS Ticker.Split BrowserYou’ve got a shiny new Mac with a honkin’ big screen, so why view just one web page in your Firefox window? Split Browser lets you divide your windows into multiple panes with a Menu Bar or context-command. Keep your web mail or calendar at the ready, compare multiple versions of the same page, or just create modern art with your panes.Two panes are better than one with Split Browser.StylishStylish lets you transform the way the Web looks, one site at a time. Just visit a page you’d like to re-theme, click the Stylish icon in your status bar, and view all available styles for that page. Installation requires just a click, and most effects occur after refreshing the page in your Firefox window. If you get tired of your new style, or if it causes problems displaying a page, you can turn off the theme (or switch to another) just as easily.Every day is Lego Google logo day with Stylish.Tab Mix Plus Tab Mix Plus puts you in charge of how tabs are displayed, made, and manipulated. Protect tabs so they can’t be closed, lock tabs so they don’t load new pages, and add these and many more commands to Firefox’s contextual menu. Got too many tabs? No such thing--just scroll right or left through your tab bar, add additional rows of tabs to your window, and keep track of unread tabs by styling their titles to stand out from the pack. Now you’re playing with power...tab power. Tree Style TabTabs rock, but wouldn’t it be great if the relationship between them was clearer? It can be, with Tree Style Tab. Once installed, tabs branch off from their parent tab, so you know where in the Interweb you are at a glance. Better still, an entire tab-tree can be closed or minimized with a context-click. Tabs’ appearance and position onscreen (left, right, or below the toolbar) can be extensively customized, as can their behaviors when opened or closed.Tree Style Tab and a misspent youth can explain how we got here. VertTabbarVertTabbar isn’t a lovable French children’s book character, it’s an add-on that makes your horizontal tab bar vertical to make the most of your fancy widescreen monitor. It’s a new look for the same tab bar you know and love, and you can even control tabs’ widths, placement of their icons and close buttons, and which side of Firefox’s window tabs appear on. It works well with Tab Mix Plus, too, letting you really VertTabbarMix things up.Let’s get vertical...vertical….Add-ArtAd blockers are nice, but what to do about all those empty spaces they leave on Web pages? Add-Art works with AdBlock Plus to replace static ads with artwork, populating your pages with online art shows that refresh every two weeks with new works of art. Most of Add-Art’s showcase isn’t the usual soothing stock image fare, but rather just the thing to spice up sparse, ad-free pages.The image on the left isn’t an ad, it’s art. Next Page: Daily Browsing >> Daily Browsing1-Click YouTube Video DownloadThe Internet made celebrities of the Dramatic Look prairie dog, a sneezing baby panda, and Rick Astley, but that doesn’t mean these lovable critters have to stay on the Web. With 1-Click YouTube Video Download (and, duh, one click) you can snag videos from YouTube.com as FLV, M4P, 3GP, or HD downloads to play offline. 1-Click, we’re never gonna give you up.That’s gotta hurt. Let’s see it again, and again….Adblock PlusSomeday beer will be free and Adobe will release a Mac version of Flash that doesn’t suck. Until then, there’s Adblock Plus to keep your browsing free of annoying Whack-a-Mole banners and other unwanted ads. Just install, subscribe to an ad filter unique to your country, and you’re good to go--no more ads on any site you visit. Or you can control-click on specific ads to keep them from loading, and allow certain sites to keep displaying important messages from its sponsors. MacLife.com, for instance….Those white spaces were ads before Adblock Plus.Auto CopyIf you regularly mine the Web for text and images to copy and paste into other documents, give Auto Copy a try. Once installed, merely selecting something copies it to the Clipboard. Auto Copy’s contextual menu commands also let you paste selections directly into Firefox’s address or search fields and reload previously copied items into memory. These and Auto Copy’s other time-saving tricks will give your mousing fingers a well-deserved rest.To copy with Auto Copy, just highlight, paste, and you’re done.Converter You know those currency and measurement converters all over the Internet? Forget ‘em...if you’ve got Converter. Just plug in your preferred units of time, currency, temperature, and measurement into Converter’s settings and it translates most Web pages to whatever you think is normal with a single click. Now you can plan that trip to Europe with confidence (we’re totally free to come with in the spring).Converter’s conversions appear right with the text.DownThemAll!You spend a lot of time surfing the Web, but how much is spent downloading application updates, movie trailers, and other vital stuff? If your answer is ‘too much,’ DownThemAll can help. Not only does it accelerate up to 10 simultaneous downloads, retry stalled downloads, and give you live statistics about each file as it zips to your Mac, it lets you grab all a page’s images and links at once with a few clicks. Oh, and that acceleration? Our demo download crept along at 40 kbs a second until DownThemAll gobbled up the same file at more than 150kbs. If you gotta download, you gotta get DownThemAll.Down the hatch with DownThemAll.Download StatusbarSay goodbye to moving the pop-up Downloads window out of your way. Download Statusbar replaces it with, well, a status bar at the bottom of your Web pages that’s there when you need it and gone when you don’t. Despite its small size, the status bar boasts plenty of information about your files, and it even lets you pause and resume downloads between sessions.Discreet downloads are yours with Download Statusbar.ErrorZilla PlusWhen a page’s server can’t be found, ErrorZilla Plus replaces the standard Firefox error page with a battery of tools to help you find what you’re after. Peek at a Google Cache version of the page and use Ping, Whois, the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine to see what’s what. ErrorZilla is like a utility belt that magically appears when trouble strikes.ErrorZilla Plus lets you do more than just click the Reload button.FEBE (Firefox Environment Backup Extension) Sure, add-ons are rad, but applying your favorites to every computer in your life isn’t. Enter FEBE to back up and restore your add-ons, themes, bookmarks, passwords and more with a single click or on a schedule you define. You can backup your extras to a local disk or send them to the cloud with FEBE’s Box.net integration. Did we mention that FEBE plays wacky sound effects, too? Don’t worry, they’re optional.Want all your add-ons on multiple machines? You want FEBE.FlashBlockFlash gives us Web games and YouTube, but it’s also responsible for processor-hogging pop-up ads and annoying site intro movies. Try FlashBlock--it replaces embedded Flash with a generic box you can click to see the Flash file do its thing. If you don’t, you and your Mac’s processor can go happily about your business. FlashBlock also lets you leave your favorite sites unaffected if they always deliver Flash files you want to see. Ming the Merciless wishes he could block Flash like this.Quick DragIn a world of Multi-Touch pinches and swipes, we’re happy Quick Drag puts a new spin on the O.G. gesture control, the venerable drag and drop. Just select text and drag and drop it anywhere on a page to kick off a Web search, or drag and drop images to save them to your Downloads folder. Modifier keys let you mix things up, and you can even drag and drop partial URLs to open them in new tabs. Who says you can’t teach an old dog new tricks?Quick Drag doubles your drag and drop prowess.WeatherBugIf you organize your life around the weather, why not bring weather reports to you with WeatherBug? Just plug in your location and WeatherBug adds the temperature, weather alerts and up to three days of forecasts to your Firefox pages. Additional forecast details, radar information, and weatheriffic news items open in a pop-up with just a click. You may not need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows, but for everything else, there’s WeatherBug.Looks like Saturday is a good day to stay in.XmarksThis may sound like science fiction, but someday people will use multiple computers to get their work done. If that future is now, you need Xmarks. It syncs your bookmarks and passwords across multiple computers and browsers (Firefox, Safari, IE, and Chrome), and lets you add tags to your bookmarks that help other Xmarks users find interesting Web pages. And hey, their tags help you, too! Maybe this brave new world won’t be so bad after all.Xmarks the spot and syncs your bookmarks, too.Yet Another Smooth ScrollingYou visit a lot of Web pages. That means a lot of scrolling, and if the iPhone has taught us anything, it’s that the right kind of scroll can make navigating lengthy pages a breeze. That’s why YASS is so nice--its settings apply only to your Firefox windows, giving you as much (or as little) smooth, accelerated scrolling as you like. You can set three custom scrolling presets and switch among them on the fly with an icon in the status bar.We nicknamed our presets First Gear, Second Gear, and Krazy Nitro.Next Page: Search & Communication >>Search & CommunicationCoolirisEver wonder what the Web would look like with a dose of Cover Flow? Then you’ve imagined Coolris. It turns the results of searches on YouTube, Facebook, Google Images, and other sites into a scrollable, zoomable, 3D gallery even Steve would dig. If you feel like keeping closer to home, Coolris also recognizes your iPhoto library and can display its pictures in the same slick style. That’s one giant leap for Google Images.FastestFoxWhich would you rather have, a fast fox, or the FastestFox? We thought so. After all, FastestFox throws up a tiny pop-up that puts a search for your selection on Google, Wikipedia, YouTube, and Twitter (among other sites) just a click away. FastestFox also adds instant Google search results to the address bar as you type, as well as a bookmark launcher you can call up with a key command to access your favorite sites on the fly. Searches are never far away with FastestFox.GlubbleThink of Glubble as your family’s private Facebook. Once parents add accounts for their kids and trusted relatives, everyone can log in to the family’s main page and send text messages, share photos, and schedule activities. Kids can explore the Web safely through Glubble’s browser. It takes over a Firefox window and limits Internet access to games, activity pages, and sites declared safe by Glubble (or mom and dad). Better still, Glubble is so simple and streamlined, even adults can use it.Glubble’s kids browser offers plenty to see and do.IMDb PreviewThe IMDb is the best way to settle bets about which actor starred in the original version of the remake you just saw, and IMDb Preview just may help you win your next dispute. Hover over an actor or movie’s IMDb link--in any site, not just IMDb.com--and a configurable, scrollable pop-up window appears sporting a relevant picture and links to related films and performers. The add-on also drops a link to IMDb’s My Movies feature on any movie’s IMDb page, letting you add flicks to your My Movies collections as you browse...er, settle the next score.Bring IMDb data to you with IMDb Preview.Integrated GmailAre you a Gmail junkie? Then you probably use Google’s other services on the regular. Why not put them all in a single window with Integrated Gmail? Just install, log in to Gmail, then access Google Calendar, Maps, Notebook, Picasa, and more in through unobtrusive, collapsable icons. Integrated Gmail is so good, you’ll wonder why Google didn’t do it first.Get mail and much more with Integrated Gmail.InterclueWhat’s behind that next link? Interclue can tell you. Click the Interclue button that appears when you hover over a link, and a pop-up window shows you--with a screenshot and selectable text--the page the link will open. Without even going to the page, you can add it to your bookmarks, open it in a new tab, post a link to Facebook, and more. That’s right--now you can share Web pages you haven’t even seen yet with all your friends. We’re through the looking glass here, people.  Interclue knows what’s new.ShareaholicIf you can’t get enough shareahol, we’ve got the add-on for you. Shareaholic adds a button to your toolbar that lets you easily broadcast pages to a zillion blogs and social networking sites, squash long Web addresses with URL shortening services like TinyURL, and even simply e-mail links to people with your default mail client. Don’t worry about running out of things to share. Shareaholic puts in your status bar links to the latest dirt on Twitter, OneRiot, and Buzzster--you heard it here first.New Sonic Youth in 2010? Gotta tweet that.SimilarWebEveryone wants to find cool new sites, but nobody has time to scour the Web for them. Enter SimilarWeb. As you browse, its sidebar suggests other pages related to whatever you’re looking at. You can approve or reject these suggestions to help fine-tune SimilarWeb’s topic matches, but what if you think you know better than SimilarWeb? No problem--just suggest your own site matches for other users to discover and vote on.SimilarWeb puts sites you may have missed right in your sidebar.Simple MailIf you want all your mail in one place, you want Simple Mail. It supports POP3, IMAP, and SMTP accounts, and lets you compose WYSIWYG messages with multiple fonts, colors, and other formatting options. Create mail folders, color-code messages, and set up filters to apply to incoming messages. It’s your mail, simplified.Simple is no sin when there’s work to do.YoLinkYou could search for text on pages like Craigslist or CNN.com the old-fashioned way, or you could use YoLink. Install it, load your page, then search with the new YoLink field in your toolbar. Instead of just finding and highlighting matched text, YoLink splits your Firefox window in two and lists summaries of all matches ranked by significance from within the site. Results can be saved to be read later with a free YoLink account, shared via social media sites, or plain-old bookmarked...but that’s so last-decade. YoLink finds links that lurk beneath the surface.YoonoBetween work and play, you’ve got enough to do online without making all the new tabs and windows your digital lifestyle demands. Yoono can help. It lets you log in to multiple social networking and media sites (all the usual suspects and more) so you can flit among them in a collapsable sidebar in your Firefox window. There you can also search for YouTube videos, Wikipedia articles, and bargains on Amazon while sharing them all with your friends. Why open another window again?Yes, we feel smug when we tweet we’re browsing the Smithsonian.Next Page: Work & Productivity >>Work & ProductivityEvernote Web ClipperOh, you smug Evernote junkies. You’ve got a Mac app to stay organized, an Evernote iPhone app to take your notes on the go, and the Evernote Web Clipper, a Firefox add-on that lets you easily add Web pages, links, or selections to your Evernote account. Bet you think you’re pretty tough. We’d show you a thing or two, if only we could find them! Never forget important sites with Evernote Web Clipper.FirebugIf you spend as much time making Web sites as you do browsing them, you probably already have Firebug installed. If not, what are you waiting for? Firebug puts a Web development toolbox in a new Firefox window or a split screen below the page you’re working on. You can edit HTML, fine-tune CSS, zero-in on JavaScript errors, and much more in a simple, easy to read interface that lets you get to work quickly. Now you’ve no excuse not to write the next great American Web page.If you’ve got the development bug, get Firebug.iCyteWhen you need to collaborate on Web research, or just keep all sites that interest you readily at hand, don’t copy and e-mail links...use iCyte. It lets you “cyte” pages or selections--saving the link and a snapshot of the page as you found it--and include them in projects to share with people you know, or total strangers. You can add tags and notes, too, and once you create an account, the iCyte sidebar keeps your projects and saved cytes in view as you surf...er, research.iCyte, therefore I remember.LeechBlockLeechBlock isn’t something to pack on your next camping trip, it’s a productivity booster that blocks access to distracting sites while you work. It lets you create 6 sets of rules to apply to troublesome sites, including what days and times sites are blocked, which sites users are redirected to, and more. LeechBlock works great for individuals, but its password-protected controls and ability to export and import settings can keep everyone on a network on the job. That’s a good thing, right?Get back to work with LeechBlock.Morning Coffee We admit it, we’re hooked on our morning coffee and on Morning Coffee. It lets us quickly add sites to lists for each day of the week (and weekends, or every day) to quickly access sites at those times. Gotta check out the news sites first thing each morning, or launch all your favorite sites that update every Thursday? With Morning Coffee, they can be launched together with just a click. Its even easier than adding cream and sugar.If it’s Friday, we must be reading the Onion A.V. Club.Read It Later We’re always doing things later...writing thank-you notes, meeting deadlines...so its no surprise we dig Read It Later. Just click a checkmark in your address bar to add the current page to your list of things to read later. When you have spare time--on a commute, say, with the Read It Later iPhone app--you don’t even need an Internet connection to access your list and catch up on your reading. Install it today...or, y’know, later.Procrastinate effectively with Read It Later.ToodledoDo you use Toodledo, the service that lets you manage your schedule and send it to an online calendar to share with others or read on the Toodledo iPhone app? Then you’re way more organized than we are. You’ve probably already scheduled time to install the Toodledo add-on that lets you quickly add Web pages, text selections, and general to-dos right from your Firefox window. Well...good for you!You have your to-do list, we have ours with Toodledo.ZoteroResearchers, rejoice. Zotero lets you surf news sites, academic databases, libraries, even Amazon and YouTube to save citations, links, snapshots of pages, and PDFs in a pop-up mini-app that lives in your Firefox window. There you can tag and add notes to your finds and organize them according to just about any parameters you can think of. All this can be synched to other computers running Zotero to follow you and your research across campus or the world. It even exports bibliographies and citations in almost any style you can think of when you finally get around to writing your dissertation.Zotero’s iTunes-like interface is easy to use.Next Page: Workplace Security & Shopping >> Workplace SecurityTab RenamizerAre you goofing off or hard at work? With Tab Renamizer, no one knows but you. It changes the names of closed tabs to something safe for work while leaving their contents intact. A few innocent looking substitutions--Wikipedia, Google, a 404 error message--are built in, but you can add your own. Then change individual tabs as the need arises, or set and forget Tab Renamizer to automatically rename tabs as you, ahem, “work.”Nothing shady going on here, no sir.PanicImagine you’re at looking at a site you don’t want your boss to see. Don’t panic, you’ve installed Panic. It puts an unobtrusive icon in your status bar you can tap to make any naughty tabs in your frontmost window disappear, replaced by the inoffensive page of your choice. The default page is a Google search for “increasing workplace productivity”...nice.Who’s panicking? We weren’t doing anything wrong!ShoppingCamelizer Like to buy things at Amazon, Newegg, or Overstock.com? Yeah, us, too--that’s why we installed Camelizer. It adds a button to items on those sites (and others) that delivers price histories courtesy of the camelcamelcamel service.Sign up for e-mail or Twitter updates when an item’s price drop to a figure you set, and you’ve got no excuse for paying too much for that USB-powered backscratcher Uncle Frank has been hinting about for his birthday.Hey, that price isn’t much higher than it was on Black Friday!GlueGlue is all about you--or more specifically, the things you’re interested in. Just install, sign up, and start letting Glue get to know you by rating movies, books, gadgets, and more with a simple thumbs up or thumbs down. Then visit the sites you already use (like Amazon, Wikipedia, Apple, and many, many more), and Glue reminds you of what you like and suggests new stuff you might like to like. Glue’s the good friend you always take shopping, if your friend was a pop-up banner at the bottom of your Firefox page.The more you let Glue know about you, the more accurate it is.PriceTrace ToolbarAttention, Kmart.com shoppers--and shoppers at Amazon, Macy’s, B&H, and many more online stores. The PriceTrace Toolbar add-on puts a PriceTrace.com search bar on your pages for instant comparison shopping on supported sites. You can compare past and current prices and subscribe to price drop alerts with a click, but the coolest feature is quick access to searches for fillers--items you buy to qualify for special offers--based on price range and other criteria.Shopping? Put PriceTrace on the case.

  • Weekly App Store Picks: June 6, 2009

    The week may be drawing to a close, but here at TheAppleBlog we've got an array of apps to get your through the weekend. As ever, I've got four notable new iPhone releases from the App Store to tell you about. Before we jump in to the apps, though, let's take a look at the week that was with a quick news roundup. The week kicked off with a bit of a downer as news broke that Apple will be charging for re-downloading premium apps that you've already purchased for iPhone. It's not a big deal — it seems downloading via iTunes will still be free — but it'll be an inconvenience to users who are prone to deleting and re-downloading apps while on the go. Next up, Microsoft is well and truly on the warpath with its forthcoming Zune HD, and what's more, they're gunning for the iPod touch. The new device will have a touchscreen, web browser, Wi-Fi, HD radio and, I think, looks rather scrummy. Delicious-looking it may be, but I still don't know if that makes it a true contender. Our own Henry Balanon stepped up to the plate with a seriously impressive iPhone development resources article. He managed to squeeze in 43 different links to various resources around the 'net. Coders should head on over to the article and bookmark it immediately, it'll prove useful as a reference tool. Another new feature coming to the iPhone has been doing the rumor-rounds: Apple is integrating geo-location within Mobile Safari. Are location-aware websites the next big thing? Setting aside Google Latitude, I'm not entirely convinced. Hit up the article for Darrel Etherington's take on the matter. Pipping Apple's new devices to the post, Palm's Pre should be hitting the shelves today. Owners of the Pre will be pleased to hear that Palm's new devices will sync seamlessly with iTunes. To celebrate the recent release of Dave Matthews Band Revenge for iPhone and iPod touch, I've got three promo codes to give away. To be in with a chance of winning, leave me a comment explaining why you'd like to play this new game. Moving on to the picks, this week I've been looking at Put Things Off, Jaman Free Movie Fridays, Pocket Alan, and Terminator Salvation Lite. Put Things Off ($2.99) My essential iPhone tool for staying organized is Evernote, however sometimes I seriously consider switching; especially in the case of Put Things Off — an app that packs in the functionality I need, with great visual design too. The app allows you to focus on the tasks you need to get done on a given day, filtering everything else out of your immediate to-do list. The aesthetic strikes the right balance between satisfyingly tangible, with office-esque paper trays, and functional. My favorite feature is the auto-nag mode: putting off a task for too long moves it to your 'Today tray,' forcing you to complete a given item rather than endlessly procrastinating. Jaman Free Movie Fridays (FREE) Never turn down a free dinner and never turn down a free movie either. Free food almost always tastes scrumptious and free movies can make for unexpected fun. In the case of this app, Jaman bring you a new movie to watch every Friday. There are a few big names in there, like the complete collection of classic Superman cartoons and black and white spook-fest Nosferatu, however you won't find the latest Transformers, Terminator, or Star Trek films on the list. Most notably though, there's a great selection of independent full-length features, alongside new short films. Pocket Alan (99 cents) It's interesting that Apple seems to have no sort of process in place for protecting the intellectual property of copyright holders. Interesting but, in this case, lucky for us, as Alan Partridge has unofficially arrived on the iPhone in the shape of a handy soundboard. Essential classics such as, “Ahaa,” and, “Jurassic Park,” are there, alongside oft-forgotten, but no less amusing sound-bites, including my favorite, “Jackanackanory.” Plus, fans of Partridge with friends named Daniel will be be able to make good, repetitive use of the, “Dan,” button. Cheap and fun, nothing more than a novelty item, but a perfect toy for fans of the show. Terminator Salvation Lite (Free) Gameloft seems to have surpassed itself with its latest movie-based game. Terminator Salvation packs in convincing 3D environments, reminiscent of console games, alongside a well-designed control-system and game mechanic. Of course, the real joy is trudging through the distopyian, post-apocalyptic devastation, offing shiny silver terminators with a variety of weapons. TheAppleBlog's David Appleyard checked out the iPhone version of Terminator Salvation a few weeks back. If you're looking to try out the game without spending five bucks on the full version, download the Lite edition today. That's all the picks for this week. I'll be back in seven days with more news from the week and picks from the App Store. In the meantime, what apps have you been using this week?

  • Hot Future Tech Coming to Your Mac, iPhone and iPad

    Some seriously cutting-edge tech is cresting the horizon, ready to take your Apple devices and other gear to the next level of awesome. We’ve searched out the breakthroughs on the verge of becoming reality to discover how Macs, iDevices, and other tech are about to become even more impressive.Illustrations by ArtBombersIf you’re a regular reader of Mac|Life, you know that every January we look at the fanciful future of Apple, ranging from the prototype cars to the VR goggles that might emerge from Cupertino one not-so-soon day. This is not that story. This story is about real tech that genuinely works--it’s visible on the horizon, and it could be in your Apple gear in a year or three. Think of this story as a preview of the near future.Of course, we can’t say for sure that all this technology will end up in future products (we’re good, but we’re not psychic). Some of it may never leave the lab. What you can rely on is that old standards will hit their technical limits, and progress will march on. But for a reasonable-guess preview of how Macs, iPhones, iPads, iPods, and other tech will grow, evolve, and improve in the coming years, continue reading.The Display's the ThingSince the original Macintosh, our screens have been passive windodws into Apple's machines. That's about to change.3D in Your HomeThree-dimensional TV has been a glimmer in the eye of television and movie studios since House of Wax and other 3D features first popped out at audiences in the 1950s. But the gimmick never caught on, thanks in large part to clunky technology that sacrificed picture quality. As James Cameron would be happy to explain to you, times and tech have changed, and in 2010, 3D is making the jump from the big screen into our homes…and hands.Despite technological advances, the principles behind 3D haven’t changed much in 60 years. When a 3D image is displayed, two pictures of the same scene taken from different perspectives are shown. Those spiffy glasses make sure each is sent to only one eye, then our brain combines the two images into one, complete with the illusion of depth. A more mysterious part of the brain is responsible for deciding if it’s worth paying 10 bucks for popcorn at the multiplex.But really, we can’t picture Steve wearing those dorky glasses at the introduction of the iMac 3D (but when we do, it always puts us in a good mood). Simplicity is Apple’s mantra, and what’s simpler than 3D screens that do the filtering for you, providing a 3D picture while eliminating the need for special eyewear? Such screens--called autostereoscopic displays--exist today. Some are peppered by tiny lenses that direct images to each eye; others use a layer of fine slits to split the display’s light in two. One of these technologies is about to get a boost from Apple’s biggest mobile-gaming rival, Nintendo. Announced this March and due for release in spring 2011, the Nintendo 3DS will be nothing less than a shot from the House That Mario Built across Cupertino’s bow. This next-gen upgrade to the popular DS handheld will sport sophisticated dual touchscreens, motion control, and--mamma mia!--autostereoscopic 3D.Competition is another Apple mantra, and it’s no secret that Apple sees games as a big part of the success of its Multi Touch devices. Steve won’t sit still if competitors like Nintendo can gain an advantage that draws gamers away from Apple and back to the Mushroom Kingdom. If Cupertino can improve on the 3D experience offered by Nintendo’s next handheld, you can bet that App Store games--and maybe even the iPhone and iPad OS--will enter the third dimension too.OLEDs...So Pretty!Today we watch videos everywhere from the living room to the hotel room on our HD TVs, MacBooks, and iPads. As great as those devices are, couldn’t they all stand to have even thinner, brighter, and more energy efficient screens? Trick question--of course they could. The good news is they will, thanks to OLEDs, an acronym for organic light-emitting diodes.OLED screens aren’t grass-fed, free-range displays sold at Whole Foods, but they do use organic material (that is, material derived from the element carbon) to produce a picture. Unlike traditional LCD screens that require power-hogging backlights to project their images, OLEDs generate their own light when electricity passes through the organic polymers sandwiched between layers of film in the display. Because those layers are only about 500 nanometers thick (that’s even skinnier than a human hair) and don’t require much else besides a power source to work, OLED screens can be dramatically slimmer and lighter than conventional displays now on the market.Better still, large OLED displays are relatively easier to make than LCDs, and their gorgeous picture makes your spiffy plasma TV look like a 1950s Zenith. That’s because there’s no need to grow sheets of fragile crystals. Instead, organic molecules are sprayed onto film in a process much like inkjet printing, and that film can be transparent, flexible, or even foldable. An OLED screen’s flexibility and toughness make it suitable for use in a wide range of gadgets, most of which haven’t been invented yet. From giant HDTVs and miniaturized smartphones to futuristic heads-up displays in cars, OLEDs can potentially be incorporated into almost anything--potentially even woven into clothing. And because of their brightness, vibrant colors, and wide viewing angles, you’ll always look great in your 720p iSweatshirt Pro.But don’t camp out in front of your local Apple Store for certified-organic MacBooks or casual wear just yet. While OLED screens are popping up in more and more devices (perhaps most famously in Google’s Nexus One smartphone), the technology’s best days are yet to come. Manufacturing OLED screens is still an expensive proposition, leading to high prices and tepid consumer interest. But as OLED’s momentum builds and costs drop, expect to see a gradual shift in the computer and electronics world away from LCDs, much like the transition that phased out bulky, inefficient CRTs. And expect to see Apple jump on the OLED bandwagon when the time and money are right. With its combination of energy efficiency, size, and image quality, we think OLED has a bright future in Apple’s Macs and its growing line of sleek mobile devices.E-Papers, PleasePopularized by e-readers like the Kindle, e-paper has plenty to offer a company focused on mobile devices. Its slim design is durable, lightweight, and legible in bright sunlight. The secret lies between the sheets--plastic sheets holding tiny wells filled with black and white particles suspended in liquid. When the wells are charged, the particles move to the screen to appear as text. No backlight is required, and because electricity is only used once to draw the contents of each page, e-paper sips power compared to the LCDs in Apple’s portable lineup. Color e-paper is so hot, you gotta wear gloves. Metaphorically speaking, that is. Photo: LG.Phillips LCD., LTD.But while e-paper does monochrome well, most of today’s e-readers use filters to colorize their black and white text with pictures--and they simply can’t compare to LCDs. That will change. Philips is working on new technology using colored particles in a process much like blending ink dots in traditional print. The results should finally make good on e-paper’s promise, but they’re still years away.Even then, will Steve subscribe to e-paper? The iPad’s LCD screen would seem to be the last word on the subject, but Apple could always use multiple displays in its devices. For instance, e-paper battery monitors could offer much more information than the little green lights they use today.The Wireless WarIf you’re like us, your living room entertainment setup is the second most precious collection of gear in your home (next to your beloved Mac, of course). Every night, you’re on the couch with a bowl of popcorn in front of an HD screen complete with a Blu-Ray player and 7.1 sound. Trouble is, that sweet setup means fistfuls of wire to fuss with. But those knots may not stay tangled much longer.As home entertainment setups get more complex, something has to give. If two competing wireless standards--WirelessHD and Wireless Home Digital Interface (WHDI)--have anything to say about it, that something will be our HDMI, DVI, and other AV cables. Both standards promise something like Wi-Fi for multimedia. Compatible devices (laptops, game consoles, and mobile phones) will use them to find your HDTV automagically over the air in a system that “just works”--and the whole idea of ditching all those cords works in a big way for us.WirelessHD devices may be available from Panasonic, LG, Vizio, and other manufacturers by the time you read this. WirelessHD delivers uncompressed video up to 1080p, multichannel audio, and other data--including Hollywood-approved DRM--at speeds up to 4Gbps, with a theoretical ceiling of 25Gbps. That’s a lot of data, but WirelessHD will only carry it up to 33 feet. The WHDI standard will move your movies as far as 100 feet, but at only up to 3Gbps. You’ll be able to compare how the two standards fare against each other when WHDI devices hit stores late this summer or early fall. Only time will tell which of these standards will be a hit with consumers or whether Apple will adopt one or play a waiting game. Let’s hope we’re not kept waiting for the release of Avatar 2 before we can stream movies, games, and more from our iPads to our televisions.» Future Apple Devices: iPad 3, iMac 3D, Cinema Display» Expected Arrival Date: 2013» You'll Also See It In: HDTVs, handheld game consoles, displays» Future Awesomeness Rating: Deeply AwesomeNext page: Printers and Processors >>Powerful PrintsYes, print and printers have a future in our networked world. No, they won't be like anything you've seen before.Fab It YourselfTeleporters and matter replicators may be the stuff of science fiction, but with 3D printers, you can create physical objects with your Mac out of thin air (and a lot of plastic). Apple hasn’t sold printers since 1997, but if anything could get them back into the game, 3D printing is it.For decades, 3D printers have been used to create “rapid prototypes” for manufacturers and architects. The idea is much the same as conventional printing--you design something on your computer, and the printer produces a hard copy. But these hard copies need time to cool. 3D printers take designs built in 3D modeling programs and melt plastic to “print” them with thin strands built up layer by layer into a finished product. The idea is about to get a big boost from HP, which will begin selling 3D printers this year at “bargain” prices expected to start under $15,000. So much for 3D printing for the rest of us, right?The MakerBot prints...in 3D! Want.Not quite! If you have a techie DIY streak, 3D printing can be yours today for under $1,000. MakerBot’s compact Cupcake printer is available as a kit that, once assembled, lets you manufacture objects up to 4x4x6 inches using Lego-quality ABS plastic. The idea is catching on, and other low-cost 3D printers (like the RepRap and Desktop Factory) are poised to slowly do what HP’s high-end offerings probably won’t--make 3D printing the desktop publishing of the next decade.Of course, it will take a while for 3D printing to catch on, but if it does, expect Apple to take note. After all, our Macs have helped us make things since 1984. There’s no reason to stop now.An Inkless Job, But Someone Has to Do ItLet’s face it, next to Mafia Wars and Farmville, printing is one of the biggest energy hogs in an office. The paper and toner cartridges required by today’s printers consume a lot of energy to use and recycle. But greener workplaces may be one step closer to reality thanks to two new inkless, reusable printing technologies that are poised to send old-fashioned hard copies sailing on a one-way trip into the wastebasket of history.Late last year, Japan’s Sanwa Newtec company introduced the PrePeat 3100 II, a compact black-and-white printer that prints using heat instead of ink. The secret’s in the “paper”--flexible, waterproof, recycled plastic that reacts to the PrePeat’s thermal mechanism. Best of all, when you don’t need a page any longer, you can just feed it back into the PrePeat to erase it or print a new document as many as 1,000 times per page. Right now this green new world will cost you (the PrePeat retails for $5,600), but expect prices to drop if the technology becomes more widely adopted.Meanwhile, researchers at Xerox are using ultraviolet light to develop a technology called Erasable Paper. The process hits specially coated paper with a specific wavelength of UV rays to print your document to the page, and you can erase and reuse a sheet whenever you need to. If that sounds like a tanning bed for interoffice communications, you’re more right than you know. Like a tan, these printouts fade away over time, and within 24 hours, a UV-printed page will be blank again. While self-destructing Mission: Impossible documents are cool (and well-suited to sharing data with short lifespans), the limitation is one reason Erasable Paper is still being refined in Xerox laboratories.» Future Apple Devices: iLife '13» Expected Arrival Date: 2013» You'll Also See It In: iLife '13» Future Awesomeness Rating: Fit To PrintDueling ProcessorsCurrent technology can only take CPUs so far. But don't worry--tomorrow's breakthroughs are being designed today.More Cores for Your BuckSmaller processors offer greater speed and improved energy efficiency, but engineers racing to make the best chips possible are running afoul of the laws of physics. Conventional manufacturing methods can only make circuits so small, and even the power of Steve’s reality-distortion field can’t change that. But some amazing new technologies might.For years, multi-core technology has given us Apple chips that pack the power of multiple CPUs into a single chip. Intel’s Xeon, Core i7, and venerable Core 2 Duo processors deliver up to six cores, and eight-core machines are coming soon. We hate to break it to those processors, but a new prototype from Intel unveiled late last year promises that a lot more muscle is on the way to the Mac.Intel calls it the single-chip cloud computer (SCC), and it boasts a whopping 48 cores on one processor…with room to grow to over 100. Computers derived from the SCC will bring the brawn of today’s massive data centers (the “cloud” of the chip’s name) to desktop-sized machines, paving the way for smaller, greener clusters. Initially, Intel is planning to build only 100 of these experimental chips so engineers can figure out what to do with all that power before it lands on the market. Intel is just one of the companies now developing “many core” processors, but given its relationship with Apple, it’s a good bet that the first Mac with the power of the cloud will have Intel inside.DNA ProcessorsMeanwhile, another company is taking a radically different approach to building tomorrow’s processors. Last year, researchers at IBM announced a chipmaking breakthrough that uses something called “DNA origami,” and it’s as cool as it sounds. The process arranges strands of DNA into shapes used as scaffolding for carbon nanotubes and silicon nanowires, the tiny structures that could one day move data through really, really small processors.DNA origami is a “bottom-up” approach to chipmaking that builds the chip’s circuits, as opposed to more conventional “top-down” methods that carve silicon away, and it has a promising future. DNA designs could potentially deliver chip circuits as small as 6 nanometers--that’s just dozens of atoms wide! So Apple has good reason to keep an eye on how its story unfolds. They’ll have to be patient. The technology is still evolving and likely won’t produce commercial chips for another five years at the soonest.» Future Apple Devices: MacPro Extreme» Expected Arrival Date: 2015» You'll Also See It In: Windows PCs, Skynet» Future Awesomeness Rating: Sheer GeniusNext page: New Wires and New Storage >>Magic BusesOur future gadgets will do more wirelessly than ever before. But they'll be able to do even more with wires.It's USB's World, We Just Live HereOnce an upstart newcomer, USB has become an elder statesman in the electronics world with a presence in almost every device on Earth. But USB’s data-transfer speeds, last boosted by USB 2.0’s introduction in 2001, haven’t aged gracefully. Thankfully, USB 3.0 is here to breathe new life into an old favorite.USB 3.0 cables definitely lose the beauty contest to Light Peak (below).At first glance, USB 3.0 (a.k.a. SuperSpeed USB) doesn’t seem like a radical departure from its predecessor, and that’s a good thing. It’s backward-compatible with USB 2.0 and even uses the same rectangular port we all know and love, so your old devices will work just fine with the new standard. So don’t worry, you won’t have to buy a new USB beverage warmer for your cubicle.But USB 3.0 brings two new tricks to the table. The first is speed--its transfer rates reach up to 5Gbps, or 10 times USB 2.0’s performance. The second is improved power management, which means reduced power consumption and more juice for devices that need it. USB 3.0 gear is already on the market, so it’s only a matter of time before Cupertino rolls out the first Macs with the SuperSpeed standard. We hope they come soon--we’ve got HD video to import!One Wire to Rule Them AllFiber optic cables, long used by telephone companies to connect landline phone calls, have numerous advantages over traditional copper wires. So why haven’t they made it to the desktop yet? Intel hopes to put that question to rest with a new technology called Light Peak.Light Peak is Intel’s answer to…well, just about every cable in use today. From HDMI to USB, if it carries data, Light Peak can replace it. That’s because Light Peak’s bandwidth starts at 10Gbps, and its theoretical ceiling is a whopping 100Gbps. And since Light Peak’s flexible fiber optic cables transmit light, not electricity, they can carry data up to 100 meters without a hitch. That’s plenty more meters than we need, but some room to grow can’t hurt, right?Light Peak brings fiber optic speed to computing. And pretty colors, too.However, despite a planned 2011 rollout, don’t expect to sync your 5G iPhone with Light Peak. Intel is still working out ways to combine power with Light Peak to charge devices while beaming data at warp speed. One thing’s for sure, though--when Light Peak finally strikes, it’ll be fast.» Future Apple Devices: Almost all of 'em» Expected Arrival Date: 2011» You'll Also See It In: Every gadget on Earth» Future Awesomeness Rating: Blazing HotReading, Writing, RevolutionarySay goodbye to your old drives. Say hello to a new world of speedy storage.It's RAM! It's a Hard Drive! It's Both!There’s nothing New Age about “universal memory,” but it could usher in a new age of computers and electronic devices. Universal memory is any next-gen storage that combines the speed and affordability of today’s DRAM with the permanence and capacity of flash memory. Two technologies are fighting to rewrite the rules, and the winner may be coming to the Mac sooner than you think.Phase-change memory (PCM) gets our vote, if only for its cool name, which is derived from the use of chalcogenide glass that changes from a crystalline to an amorphous state with heat. It’s the same material used to make rewritable optical discs, but in PCM, the two states represent different electrical charges, or a zero and a one. PCM represents a major leap in durability over flash memory, and can be written to up to 100 million times versus flash’s upper limit of just 100,000 read-write cycles. Samsung has already begun producing 512MB PCM modules for use in mobile phones, but 1GB modules are still on the way. Looks like phase-change doesn’t happen overnight.The race for better memory is run on a tiny field, though, and IBM’s racetrack memory may have the inside track. It uses something called spintronics--don’t you want to hear Steve say that at a keynote?--to manipulate electrons into moving magnetic bits down nanoscopic, U-shaped “racetracks” to read and write data at blazing speed. Yet racetrack memory’s biggest asset may be its scalability, theoretically allowing HDD-size capacity to be squeezed into a much smaller area than competing technologies allow. But until racetrack memory is ready to leave IBM’s labs, this dark-horse contender will be one to watch, not buy.Kind of BluSteve famously quipped that bringing Blu-Ray to the Mac was “a bag of hurt,” but Sony’s multimedia power-platter is still rolling along after years of Cupertino’s cold shoulder. Movie lovers--and anyone who wants to share giant files--can take comfort that when Blu-Ray finally arrives on Macs, it’ll be better than ever. Having long shed its 25GB limit, Blu now boasts capacities of up to 400GB, and 1TB discs are coming in just a few years. The promise of this year’s 3D Blu-Ray players is just one more feature that will keep Mac fans gazing longingly--sigh--at Big Blu’s bag of tricks.» Future Apple Devices: MacBook nano, Apple TV Blu» Expected Arrival Date: 2013» You'll Also See It In: Smartphones, PCs» Future Awesomeness Rating: Memorably CoolNext page: Networking, Power, and Interaction >>Network It OutTomorrow's wireless communications will be more important than ever. Good thing our networks will be able to keep up.4G or Not 4G?Poor AT&T. Just as it’s getting the hang of supporting the iPhone on its 3G network, 4G networks will begin popping up from Sprint this year and from archrival Verizon in 2011. What does that mean for us, besides catty PR fights among the carriers? A blazing fast mobile internet with enough bandwidth for HD movies, video chats, and--we hope--fewer dropped calls.Like 3G wireless networks, 4G isn’t a single new technology. It’s a blanket term for a range of technologies and specifications that add up to the same thing: speed. Current 3G offers downloads of roughly 1.4Mbps. Compare that to 4G’s promised bandwidth of at least 100Mbps, and you’ll see what the fuss is about. 4G works its magic in part by using MIMO (Multiple In Multiple Out) technology to broadcast using several antennas simultaneously on multiple frequencies.4G’s strengths make its eventual adoption by Apple a no-brainer, no matter which carrier has the iPhone next year. Apple is serious about establishing the iPad as a mobile media device, and it’ll want a big pipe to carry movies and music to cellular customers. That’s just what 4G provides. As for the iPhone, who knows? Steve may decide to stick with AT&T and its 4G network expected to roll out alongside Verizon’s in 2011.Crank Up the 802.11ACCloser to home, we’ll use 802.11n Wi-Fi, but at faster speeds than we’ve seen before. Apple has sold 802.11n devices since 2007, but the protocol’s final standard was only approved in 2009. Happily, that means the business of making Wi-Fi as fast as possible can begin in earnest. Like 4G, 802.11n uses MIMO to improve performance, but manufacturers couldn’t take full advantage of the technology before the protocol was complete. Now that it is, devices can officially support maximum speeds between 400 and 600Mbps…if your hardware has the antennas to deliver the boost. Expect that hardware to start arriving in stores later this year.But the Mac life is never a simple march of progress, and there’s always something new on the horizon. Sweet! Work drafting the next Wi-Fi protocol, 802.11ac, has already begun. Devices supporting the new standard aren’t expected until 2012 at the earliest, but they’ll boast speeds of up to 1Gbps when they’re available. At press time, Ethernet’s agent was unavailable for comment.» Future Apple Devices: 2G iPad, Airport Express Plus» Expected Arrival Date: 2011» You'll Also See It In: Smartphones, netbooks» Future Awesomeness Rating: Wildly WirelessMore Power to YouApple is going power mad. Its future devices will charge up almost anywhere.Powered by the SunSolar power is overdue for a makeover, and if anyone can do it, it’s Apple. In 2008, it applied for a patent to slip solar cells beneath a device’s LCD screen, and early this year, it applied for another patent to cover portable devices with solar collectors.Solar-powered MacBooks? Yes please!Wilder still, a March 2010 patent describes a MacBook with a solar panel that folds to collect sunlight or even to illuminate the LCD screen without drawing power from the battery. We’re still waiting for these designs to see the light of day--ha!--but it’s clear someone at Apple has spent a lot of time looking at the sun.Go WirelessBesides flying cars, wireless electricity is the ultimate in futuristic convenience. Today’s charging mats come close, but the magnetic induction they use keeps devices tethered to one spot. That’s why we hope Apple adopts WiTricity’s technology for truly wireless power up to several feet away from the base station. The science involved would baffle the DHARMA Initiative, but it involves something called sharply resonant strong coupling to generate an oscillating magnetic field that’s captured and converted to electricity by a sensor in your device. Or it will, anyway, when WiTricity-powered gear reaches stores sometime in the future.Wireless power? As in, electricity beamed through the air? Shocking.» Future Apple Devices: iPod solar, ElectroMagneto MacPro» Expected Arrival Date: 2015» You'll Also See It In: Nice weather, mad scientists' lairs» Future Awesomeness Rating: Simply ElectrifyingYour Valuable InputNo matter how cool Apple’s upcoming products are, they’ll only be as good as what we can do with them. Here’s how we’ll interact with the future.Touchier MiceThe mouse has plenty of life left, at least according to Microsoft. It’s produced some stellar mice over the years, but Redmond’s recent Multi Touch prototypes could be the best yet. The FTIR (Frustrated Total Internal Reflection) Mouse’s high-res camera tracks finger gestures through a curved piece of clear acrylic so you can scroll, swipe, and pinch around on the acrylic in order to manipulate onscreen objects. The Orb Mouse works on much the same principle, but offers a whole hemisphere to interact with in your hand.The shrunken Side Mouse looks more like a wrist rest than a traditional rodent--its tiny camera tracks your fingers as they move across your desk or whatever surface you happen to be working on. Best of all, these mice incorporate the Multi Touch equivalent of keyboard shortcuts to perform zooms and other common commands quickly. Cupertino, start your copiers!Microsoft's FTIR Mouse makes magic out of a high-res camera and a piece of acrylic that together create Multi Touch-style input.But the coolest input technology on the horizon for Apple’s gear lies in--big surprise--touchscreens. Future Multi Touch devices will sport haptic feedback, or the sort of physical response you’ve gotten for years from vibrating gamepads and cell phones, to help make input feel more natural. In 2011, Artificial Muscle is bringing to market its EPAM (Electroactive Polymer Artificial Muscle) technology, which tenses and relaxes touchscreens in response to input. That sounds pretty fascinating all by its lonesome, but Apple’s recent patent applications show it has something more subtle in mind--a layer inside the touchscreen that delivers vibrating feedback localized to specific onscreen buttons and switches. That level of fine-tuned feedback would make typing on the iPad’s large screen even more satisfying and could pave the way for MacBooks without physical keyboards.» Future Apple Devices: Majestic Mouse, MacBook Touch» Expected Arrival Date: 2012» You'll Also See It In: Microsoft's mice» Future Awesomeness Rating: Terrifically TactileNext page: Too Wild for Apple? >>Too Wild for Apple?Some of these technologies may seem out there even for Apple, but yes--chuckles aside--they’re real. Besides, today’s head-scratchers could be tomorrow’s game-changers. Maybe.Huff and Puff into the MicYou’ve finally gotten your mind around Multi Touch, but are you ready for Multi Puff? Zyxio’s Sensawaft technology lets you control a mouse cursor, scroll through text, or do just about anything else with your electronic devices using only your breath. The assistive possibilities for disabled users are obvious and awesome, but breath control could have other, less practical uses, too. Imagine blowing into your earbuds’ microphone to control music playback, skipping an annoying voicemail with a hiss, or puffing on your iPhone to zoom in for a kill while playing your favorite shooter. Apple’s engineers could do so much with this, it’s breathtaking.Keep Your Finger on the PulseAn iPhone fingerprint scanner makes a lot of sense, especially considering that Apple has so many intriguing patents out on the idea. Sure, a fingerprint-savvy screen would simplify security--and make “slide to unlock” really mean something--but we like to think about the possibilities for everyday iPhone control hinted at in Apple’s patents. With the iPhone of tomorrow, specific fingers could be used for certain functions, letting you change settings without even looking at the screen. You could use your thumbprint to play a song, your index-finger print to rewind, and your middle-finger print to...er…emphatically skip a song for those tunes so bad that a one-star rating just doesn’t cut it.You might not be able to remember a passcode that unlocks your iPhone, but we're betting you'll be able to remember your fingerprint.Project Your IdeasPico projectors--low-power, handheld projectors--are handy for quickie presentations or impromptu slideshows with the family. Some of them even project with RGB lasers instead of white light for a picture that’s always in focus. But the image of these mini projectors will really improve if Apple ever makes good on recent patents to integrate them into MacBooks and iPhones. Sure, you could strike up a Keynote presentation on the go with a MacBook Pico, but throwing up movies, music, iTunes visualizations, and photo albums anywhere sounds like a lot more fun.Wii Want Our Apple TVMotion control brought gamers flocking to the Nintendo Wii, but can it do the same for Apple TV? Someone in Cupertino must think so, judging by a patent for a Wii-like motion-controlled remote to go with Cupertino’s set-top box. Sounds good to us. Apple’s Remote iPhone app is great, but it’s always seemed very “un-Apple” to require another device to deliver a satisfying Apple TV experience. Motion control--especially with the enhanced precision and reliability brought by the floating magnetic compass noted in Apple’s patent--would be a slick solution, and not just for easier navigation. Apple’s patent also describes using the remote to draw on the screen and manipulate photos with the flick of a wrist. That could give Steve’s favorite hobby product some much-needed pizzazz to help it catch the public’s eye. After all, the day will come when Cupertino will update the Apple TV again, and when it finally does, you may not even recognize it. What can we say? We want to see the little guy make good.Next page: Patently Awesome >>Patently AwesomeApple’s patents are tea leaves that portend what technology’s cutting edge will look like for years to come. Here are some of tomorrow’s ideas Cupertino thinks are worth protecting today.Nine Lives, Three DimensionsOS X is the big cat that makes Cupertino’s products tick, but it’s Apple’s hardware that usually captures the public’s attention. That oversight will finally be corrected if a patent for 3D OS X becomes a reality.The 3D in question depends on parallax, the effect by which objects appear to change their position relative to each other as a viewer’s perspective changes. By keeping tabs on your position (likely with a head tracking iSight camera), this “OS parallaX” would alter the appearance of onscreen objects to form a simulated 3D space in which you could interact with files, study 3D objects, and more. While this could open up exciting new ways to use your Mac, it would also require complex new hardware and software, so don’t count on peeking behind alert boxes anytime soon.An iPhone GamepadJudging by a recent patent, the iPhone and iPod touch might have more than just high-tech improvements in their future. Thanks to a unique accessory, someday soon we may be gaming old-school--with a twist--on our Multi Touch devices.In a few years, near field communication will let your iPhone be the boss of your videogame console, TV, and even your sprinkler.We love playing games on the iPhone, but sometimes we pine for the 20th century simplicity of physical controls. Call Apple’s potential solution the “GameFrame,” a shell that fits around your iPhone to add a D-pad, buttons, and other handy moving parts to the iPhone experience. Too old-fashioned for you? The device could also communicate wirelessly with HDTVs, opening the door to big-screen App Store gaming on the go. Hero of Sparta 3 on a 40-inch flatscreen? We’re so there!"Home Screen" Gets a New MeaningThe iPhone’s superpowers seem to be growing by the day, but you haven’t seen anything yet. In the future, you won’t think twice about using it to lock the door, turn on the lights, and even water the lawn of your personal fortress of solitude.Apple’s recent home-control patent hinges on a technology called near field communication (NFC), a short-range wireless technology that’s slower than Bluetooth while offering a much quicker pairing time. That’s just the thing to control the Xbox, DVD player, and garden-sprinkler system shown in the patent application. Unfortunately, this remote-control magic requires NFC-enabled devices that are, like the iPhone that will interact with them, years away.Slice the Mac into PiecesTo create, sometimes you must destroy, and the most intriguing Apple patent we’ve come across yet takes apart the familiar Mac we’ve used for decades and scatters it into…well, something else. We’re not sure if what it describes is a portable computer, a desktop machine, or something in between, but we call it the “MultiMac.” And we want one.The "MultiMac" splits a Mac into its component parts, which live where you'll use them.If it was built today, MultiMac’s components--a projector display, input devices, and a CPU--would be separate components, each powered wirelessly and communicating with each other over the air from wherever you wanted them to be. You could tuck the CPU on a bookshelf, surf from the couch, and project a movie on the wall as if using one device. Apple’s focus (pardon the pun) seems to be on the projector, which would do more than just show vacation pictures. The patent describes it as a networked device with multiple sensors controlling focus, color, or even built-in cameras. What are the chances those cameras could power a 3D OS X? Hey, we can dream.Will MultiMac be a novel new computer that ties together exciting new technology, a sophisticated Keynote presentation system, or a hub to synchronize a home full of mobile devices? We’re not sure, but that’s half the fun of being a Mac fan. Only Apple knows what’s coming next, and they’re not telling…yet.

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