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Avatar for Seth Weintraub

Seth Weintraub

Founder, Publisher and Editorial Director of the 9to5/Electrek/DroneDJ sites.

Seth Weintraub is an award-winning journalist and blogger who won back to back Neal Awards during his three plus years  covering Apple and Google at IDG’s Computerworld from 20072010.  Weintraub next covered all things Google for Fortune Magazine from 2010-2011 amassing a thick rolodex of Google contacts and love for Silicon Valley tech culture.

It turns out that his hobby 9to5Mac blog was always his favorite and in 2011 he went full time adding his Fortune Google followers to 9to5Google and adding the style and commerce component 9to5Toys gear and deals site. In 2013, Weintraub bought one of the Tesla’s first Model S EVs off the assembly line and so began his love affair with the Electric Vehicle and green energy which in 2014 turned into electrek.

In 2018, DroneDJ was born to cover the burgeoning world of drones and UAV’s led by China’s DJI.

From 1997-2007, Weintraub was a Global IT director and Web Developer for a number of companies with stints at multimedia and branding agencies in Paris, Los Angeles, New York, Sydney, Hong Kong, Madrid and London before becoming a publisher/blogger.

Seth received a bachelors degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering from the University of Southern California with a minor in Multimedia and Creative Technology in 1997. In 2004, he received a Masters from NYU’s Tisch School of the Art’s ITP program.

Hobbies: Weintraub is a licensed single engine private pilot, certified open water scuba diver and spent over a year traveling to 60 cities in 23 countries. Whatever free time exists is now guaranteed to his lovely wife and two amazing sons.

More at About.me. BI 2014 profile.

Tips: seth@9to5mac.com, or llsethj on Wickr/Skype or link at top of page.

Steve Jobs is stuck in 2009

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As we reported earlier, Steve Jobs has personally responded to an e-mail in regards to their newly implemented cross-platform development clause. This clause caused a backlash earlier this week as it states, iPhone OS apps developed on the Flash platform would not be accepted to the App Store. We looked into the header information on Jobs’ reply and it turns out the hippest CEO on the planet is stuck in 2009. He uses Mac OSX 10.5 Leopard! This on top of him rocking iPhone OS 3.1.2 (up until Thursday maybe) leads us to conclude he needs to ride the DeLorean and get with the times.  See the evidence below

Video Chat Moderators, Chat Room, Encryption found in iPhone OS 4, Apple hosted service

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Video conferencing seems to be a lock for the next iPhone at this point as more and more evidence from the SDK continues to mount.  What we found in the 3.1 SDK (which was subsequently removed) pales in comparison to the truckloads of information in the 4.0 betas:

We’ve found references to moderators, chat rooms, encrypted video conferences and other features which could be even be used by developers in the future to add video chat to gaming applications, perhaps with ties to Gamecenter.  

First, we have the conference.framework folder which shows the sounds that will be used to alert an iPhone 4.0 user about an incoming Video Chat Request. We’ve played them and they are the same sounds as the iChat Mac application. 

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In the CoreLocalizable.strings below you can see  Video/Chat Room/Moderator/Encryption strings:

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This Property List within an Apple Private Framework displays the default calls the iChat App will need to make. There are some strings within this Plist which are unique to the iPhone OS and aren’t found in iChat for Mac. Most notably, Chat Rooms and Moderation.  Our Speculation? Think the upcoming Game Center. Imagine being able to video/audio chat with the people you are playing the game with. How cool would that be?

If Apple is going to be hosting Chat Rooms, they’ll need to be some moderation to fit the needs of Apple and its wholesome brand. Apple would never tolerate a ChatRoulette type of experience their network.

At the moment, this is a private framework. This is something that Apple is using themselves in their native applications, and is something developers won’t be able to access.

However, this chat framework could very well become public in the future of iPhone OS. For Example, In-App SMS is a framework Apple has been privately using since 1.0, now in 4.0 developers can publicly use it. If/When this Chat Framework goes public, there could be an influx of Chat-related apps in the App Store (probably including thousands of Chatroulette clones).

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The above strings indicate what video conferencing on an iPhone will include: One-on-One video chats and video conference calling (multiple people).

Apple is also testing Apple iPhone video conferencing services and already has an external server which is open for external testing. 

Since the 4.0 firmware only somewhat supports it, we don’t know how to operate it or the syntax, but one module that is up and running on the server is what kicks off the process, the VCInit module, here: https://17.254.3.138/WebObjects/VCInit.woa/wa/  (expect it to be taken down shortly after this goes public)

Apple is also testing the Video Chat on three different servers on their private intranet, but that is obviously not accessible from the outside world.

Finally, we’ve heard separately that the iPad and likely the iPod touch will receive video camera updates in the Fall when the 4.x OS goes Universal.  The timing would make sense for the normal iPod touch yearly updates.  The iPad, until then won’t have access to these camera strings, so it won’t have much use for a camera.  Apple’s secrecy in building the iPad likely kept the iChat group out of the loop.  Without them, there was no need for a camera on the first iPad.

Thanks for the help Will!


Apple testing Video Conferencing on external server?

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Apple iPhone video conferencing software is being ramped up.  Apple already has an external server on which they are testing video conferencing. 

Since the 4.0 firmware only somewhat supports it, we don’t know how operate it or the syntax, but one module that is up and running on the server is what kicks off the process, the VCInit module, here: https://17.254.3.138/WebObjects/VCInit.woa/wa/

Without the knowledge of thier protocol, it’s kind of useless. You can look at the IP though and tell that it’s an Apple server. they are also testing it on three different servers on their private intranet, but that is obviously not accessible from the outside world.

 

Thanks Will!

iPad, HACKED (Updated)

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Update: If Verbose mode wasn’t impressive, how about Cydia and Blackra1n installed?  Also, it looks like Geohot is looking for a house on Zillow.

Geohot has the iPad booting in verbose mode, it would seem from this tweet.  

For those of you following along at home…

Keys for the 3.2 iPad firmware

iBoot.k48ap.RELEASE.img3
KEY: 1E3A1CA2F45D15452B16B9FE0A2C214A0AF897F09EE269F8E5967FC74B1022AC
IV: 36E1BCD042AC193F7305C8E6077D3DF7

018-7226-009.dmg
KEY: 31E7ECD9C364414205A8FA0092CC80C0D67EAE40E75FFA27B37048C42335A106
IV: 9C051576DDD94F48C324CF7AC3197FE1

And of course, the bootrom:
SecureROM for s5l8930xsi, Copyright 2009, Apple Inc.
03203A4EBC24BD2488EFDAAA19F0C9589496011F

Advice for Adobe: Build HTML5 tools

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Adobe is warning investors that it may take a hit on its profitability because customers are moving away from Flash.  That trend is almost entirely due to Apple’s crusade to avoid Flash in its iProducts.  Yesterday’s announcement that Apple would no longer accepting iPhone applications generated from 3rd party development products (Flash) made the situation all that more dire for Adobe.

But why does Adobe have to build exclusively for Flash/Air?  They already have a product, Dreamweaver, that spits out HTML.  They have products that export to open standard image, sound and video as well.

Adobe doesn’t make a penny on its Flash or Air players.  They make all of their money in the authoring tools.  If they could make a Flash->iPhoneOS conversion tool (no small feat), would it be that much harder to make a basic Flash5->HTML5 tool?  Sure, they’d likely start with a small subset of Flash capabilities, but this is a young standard and one they could take the lead in building.  

Video would be the obvious first step.

They could start with a video embedding application that encodes both Ogg (Firefox, Opera, Chrome) and H.264 (Safari, Chrome) videos.  If the user is using something like IE6, it could also embed a legacy Flash version as well.  Based on the browser detection, the web page could output the code for the best video format.  There would be no shortage of corporate need for this.  Automate (batch processing) it and it becomes all that more valuable.

Or, if you want to be a real pioneering money maker: Make iAds tools!

From that success they can start working on interactivity and server side capabilities of Flash.  With HTML5’s Database capabilities, they could even build offline applications that they currently run with Air.  It would take a lot of work, but it’d be worth it for all parties involved.

Perhaps Adobe is working on these types of tools behind closed doors, I don’t know.  It would be a significant risk, as they stated in their 10K, not to.

Skype still won't work over 3G?

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During the iPhone OS 4 presentation yesterday, Skype demonstrated its app working in the background on the iPhone OS 4 platform.  We were all set to forgive Skype for making us wait for “Push Notifications” when they had something bigger planned.  

But, Skype might not giving us the whole VoIP on iPhone experience.  Wired talked to Skype who’ve indicated that it still won’t be activated on 3G

'Rethink Possible'

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Update: Woops. This means they are only going to go away from advertising rollovers.  AT&T has confirmed that it will continue to offer rollover minutes.

AT&T is about to unleash a new global brand strategy at the Master’s golf tournament this weekend according to Adage.  Most of the changes are just very expensive and distracting window dressing. ( Do you like their new motto: ‘Rethink Possible’? )

Whatever.  This is all just taking money and focus away from building a better network, frankly

Brooklyn Borough President makes silly video asking for Apple Store

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAe5SrYY0kM&w=700&h=400]

Brooklyn has been a rumored destination for an Apple Store for years but one has never materialized.  So Marty Markowitz, the Borough President, made a video plea directly to Steve Jobs to get one done.  (Steve Jobs’ response?)

One could argue that an Apple Store is just a short subway ride away in Manhattan

Apple isn't masking its video chatting intentions very well

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It used to be difficult to find clues of video chatting in the iPhone OS.  Apple even tried to hide the video-chtting files at one point.  No more.  In iPhone OS 4.0, the iChat Agent is right out there in front for everyone to see running on the iPhone OS 4.  

In fact, this is so blatant that we’re wondering if Apple’s using it as a stealth marketing move, just so that the tech-savvy don’t get tempted by competing phones with video chat capabilities being released in the coming months.

Webkit2 adds separate process-per-tab, just like Chrome

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Apple’s Webkit team today announced Webkit2.  The major new feature in this new product is that each tab will house a separate process, much like Google’s Chrome except now the ‘separate process’ architecture is now built into the framework.   If a process hangs, it doesn’t take out the whole browser.  

I just tried the latest build of Webkit and that functionality isn’t yet there.  Curious time for a webkit announcement.

Via Ars