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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.

If you are considering buying a song from iTunes, maybe tonight would be a good time.

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It looks like we are getting pretty close to 10 billion songs downloaded from the iTunes Music Store. The winner will probably buy his/her song tonight. 

We don’t have to remind you that each and every person on earth could have downloaded a song and Apple would still have 3 billion songs left over.  10 billion is a lot of music.

That’s not to say all of it has been paid for.  There have been a few counterfeit iTunes cards as well as many promotions to give out free music.  Speaking of which, number 10 Billion gets a $10,000 iTunes gift card.

Update: 10 billion song downloaded about 4:30 PM ET:

New App Store 'Explicit' category: For stuff too hardcore for 17 year olds

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(Thanks Tomas who develops Nightstand Weather Clock for the image) 

Apple appears to be addressing the “skin apps” controversy by adding another category, ‘explicit’, to the lineup.  The category is not yet in the App Store but it is likely a way to keep some of those “racy” apps in the store without disturbing parents and (17 year old) kids.

Apple currently has a 17+ year old category for apps that were before labeled as controversial.  Like dictionaries.

First reported by Cult of Mac last night.

 

Apple must be messing with us on iPad camera clues

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Tonight, we’ve been piecing together what appears to be an iPad video recording and still camera application.  For a device that has no camera?

We have found video recording indicators, ‘take video’ buttons, take still photo buttons, video editing toggles, video playback icons, etc.  The list goes on and on.  Also, in these files are little new tidbits such as a rotate image button and an icon for importing images.

Additionally if this camera is real it was auto-focus according to other images within the iPad SDK. Another feature that will cause some excitement is the addition of cropping photos. There are two images indicating photo cropping.

 

Notes from Tim Cook’s Goldman Sachs talk (Updated with transcript)

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Apple COO Tim Cook spent an hour this afternoon answering analyst questions about Apple.

You can hear the audio here.

Update: We’ve pasted the full text of Cook’s Q&A below:

From SAI

4:08 Clapton’s “Change the World” is playing leading up the presentation. Now “Sunny Came Home.”

4:09 Getting underway. Tim Cook reads disclosure.

4:10 Q&A begins. Steve Jobs was very clear about leadership in mobile devices. Is that how we should think about Apple at this point? Tim Cook: Yes. Let me elaborate. If you look at Dec. quarter results, which included revenues of almost $15.7 billion, as we compared ourselves to every other company in the world, including Sony and Nokia and Samsung, which now have huge mobile device businesses, we found out we were the largest in the world, measured by revenues.

4:11 How are you channeling resources differently? Transition to mobile devices began in 1991 with first introduction of portable product for Apple with introduction of the TFT screen. During that time, the Mac business has become a predominantly mobile device business. Huge difference between us and the balance of the industry in portable share.

4:12 Ah, a history lesson. Going through all the mobile devices Apple has ever launched. Vast majority of Apple’s revenue now comes from mobile devices and content purchased for those devices. Believe we’re well positioned to do extremely well because we can seamlessly offer software and hardware.

4:13 Who are biggest competitors and who are biggest partners? Tim Cook: I wish the world were that simple. Many people you can’t cleanly put in one or another. Take Microsoft. In Microsoft, we love the Mac Office division. They do a great product and we partner with them and work with them very tightly. Most of the balance of Microsoft we compete vigorously against, in OS, in mobile OS, etc. If you look at Google, I would say Google is similar in that respect. We partner with them in maps, in search for most of our products, but we also compete with them in the mobile OS space and now in the hardware phone space. So, it’s difficult to put people in one camp or the other always. There are some companies like the media companies where we partnered with so well that Apple is now selling billions of dollars of digital content.

4:15 Also companies like carriers where we partnered with to bring iPhone to in 86 countries. Ones that draw the most attention are the ones that are more complex, where we’re both competitors and partners.

4:16 Apple TV is still a hobby. We’ve been very clear about that. The reason that we call it a hobby… if you look at the other businesses we’re in, these businesses are all in huge markets. The unit volumes in these things is huge. Apple TV is in a market that’s very small. Today. Apple TV did grow in the quarter we just finished by 35% in a unit basis year-over-year.

4:17 No interest in going into the TV market. But still think there’s something there. So we continue to invest in this as a hobby.

4:18 iMac is very key, will continue to be very key. I think people will continue to want a very gorgeous large screen, all-in-one, simple to use, very elegant machine, we’re going to continue to deliver it.

4:19 Where growth coming from going forward? Here’s the exciting thing. If you take a look at the Mac, the Mac has outgrown the market 20 of the last 21 quarters. 5 years in a row. Has outgrown the market. And in many of those quarters, outgrew it by multiple. The PC industry is over 300 million units per year. Last fiscal year, Mac did over 10 million units. Ceiling is far above. Continue to invest in enormous amount of energy and talent in the Mac. Doesn’t take Market growth. 50% of customers in Apple store are from Windows.

4:20 iPod touch has been a runaway hit, and it helps the platform that you’re talking about. If you look at the iPod touch, it grew 100% last fiscal year. 55% y/y last quarter. Each fuels more app sales, more developers. iPad? Haven’t sold one yet. A lot of interest in it. I’ve been using one for 6 months or so, I’ll tell you the experience is just absolutely incredible. Can’t wait to start shipping it.

4:21 iPhone, I feel we’ve just gotten started.

4:22 Over 3 billion downloads on app store, over 140,000 apps for sale, these are incredible numbers. Who would have dreamed of these? I see opportunity all over the place.

4:23 The word “complete” is not in our dictionary. We’re all about innovation. Many times that means we’re all about obsoleting ourselves. Going to continue to make things better and going to continue to innovate. I’d say the ecosystem is really good, the platform is really good. Certainly all the foundation is in place. Will it get better? Clearly yes. But great now.

4:24 iPad new use case or replacement for netbooks? We haven’t sold one. I’m a paranoid guy by nature, but I’m not losing any sleep over cannibalization, to be honest with you. Who would buy it? I’ve been very clear about my view of netbooks. I think they are an experience that most people will not want to continue to have. People were interested in the price and they got it home and used it and went ‘Why did I buy this?’ so I think when somebody looks at iPad and compares it to a netbook, I find it hard to believe that people are going to buy netbooks. Not everyone will make the comparison so I’m not suggesting that. But I think what I’d rather do with this question is report back to you.

4:26 iPad will launch in direct channel first, and indirect channels where we have assisted sales, such as store-in-store at Best Buy, and Internationally, Apple Premium Resellers. Initially, it will be around places with really great assisted sales. Over time, it will expand. Where it goes and how fast it goes, we’ll see.

4:27 Why so cheap? We didn’t want to leave pricing umbrella for competition. For those who haven’t focused on this, it has best browsing experience you could ever imagine. Very anxious to start getting it out.

4:28 Extended key partnership with AT&T. Can you talk about advantages and disadvantages of having exclusive agreement? The primary advantages on a single carrier model, and I’ll talk about the iPhone, is simplicity and in some cases, we’re able to innovate along with the carrier and provide a feature it would be difficult to work with multiple carriers and provide. We brought visual voicemail to market, which took innovation from Apple and carrier partner. On a multi-carrier model, the question is, can you sell more units? And so what that gets at is, in some countries, carriers have very sticky relationships with their countries, so having more carriers and more distribution allows you to sell more units. If you look where are from the end of our Q1 in December, if you looked at top 10 iPhone countries, 5 were single carrier countries. 3 of those we had a contractual exclusivity, 2 we can add carriers when we desire. Across 2009, we added carriers in France, UK, Singapore, several Scandinavian countries. A great deal of our work on distribution side was expanding carriers in existing countries. Pleasantly surprised that in every single country, our units increased significantly, and our share with it. Feel like we made really good decisions. Not saying we would do it in every country. But that was our experience with the ones we did it in 2009. We do it on country by country basis.

4:32 Would another carrier need to match pricing on iPad to become carrier for it? I think AT&T’s pricing is revolutionary. (Unlimi

ted data for $30/month, 250 MB for $15/month.)

4:33 Talked a little before about virtuous cycle we have with devs. How do you protect user experience as developers go out and develop products? This is the privilege and curse of technology. Same as you’d see in PC world; at some point, if you include every hardware you’ve ever shipped, you stifle innovation. Because we’ve done this for so long, I feel like we’ve come to a really intelligent conclusion on these each time. I think that’s part of our knowledge and heritage as a platform provider.

4:35 Which way is OS market moving? I don’t see it as this or that — iPhone vs. Mac — or this over that. I think there is a place for both. What you’re seeing for Apple is that the Mac OS is very scalable. Huge competitive advantage for Apple. Use the Mac OS in a lot of products. Don’t think there’s another company that can use the foundation of their OS that way. Move at a fast speed with many fewer people than it would take if we were geographically north. (Slap at Microsoft.)

4:36 Our surveys indicate Mac and iPhone are attracting significant interest in enterprise. What are you doing?

4:36 For the iPhone, 70% of Fortune 100 companies in US are either deploying iPhone or currently testing for deployment. 50% of the FT 100 are doing the same thing. Huge uplift in interest as we went to iPhone 2.0 software and then 3.0 because we put a number of enterprise features in the software. We clearly see this continuing. On Mac side, amazing how many CIOs are now visiting Apple and are interested in the Mac. We haven’t put on a huge channel, and don’t have a huge sales force, but many CIOs that once thought standardization was the most important thing in life, they now look at salaries of people and the importance of having peoples’ creativity at peak, and are increasingly allowing employees to decide. This helps Apple immensely.

4:39 I think people in general and they think enterprise is bigger than consumer. But it’s not. In PCs, it’s 10%, which is sizable, but consumers are over 50%. Our heart and soul and DNA is in consumer. It just so happens there are consumers working in enterprises who want to use these products.

4:41 People are looking at this differently. At least the people with a lot of vision are.

4:41 Just short of 300 stores. Ron Johnson has built a retail team Bar None. We went into retail not as a test, not as pilot, but to sell to consumers, because many wanted it. We knew we’d never have enough stores to cover the world. So after we got going, we set a range of 25-50, reasonable range we could execute really well. Made a strategic call in 2008, we thought we’d see many more opportunities — some top properties would come on the market with better economics. And guess what? Now, there’s a lot of great properties on the market. So we’re going to do about 50 this year. We’ve always had the team to do 50. It’s not easy to do, it’s very hard to do. But we’re going to do it. We didn’t lower the bar at all. These stores are among the best we’ve ever done. If you haven’t been to NYC Upper West Side store, it will make your jaw drop. Next time you’re in Paris, go to the Louvre; it’s just amazing. Another store in China in Shanghai in the summer that is mind blowing. Another one in London that will also drop your jaw.

4:45 New chip. Apple has been in silicon design business for years. Not new to us to be in silicon design business. As we looked at some of the products that we are doing like the iPad, and some we will do in the future, we felt that we had the best knowledge of what we wanted the silicon to do. And were in the best ability to deliver that ourselves versus going out to somebody else and buying something that wasn’t exactly what they wanted.

4:47 Acquisition strategy: Historically, we have acquired companies for technology and talent. And they have been on the small size. We’ve looked at large companies, but we have not had a large company pass a strategic and a financial test. We don’t let our money burn a hole in our pocket. Unless we find something that really makes sense for Apple shareholders, we’re not going to do it. The small ones have been incredibly valuable for us, mainly from the talent POV, but also from technology. If we find a large one, we won’t be shy about it. But we won’t do it to do it. We have never been about being the biggest, we’ve always been about making the best products. Not having highest market share or most revenue. Acquiring something that makes our revenue go higher wouldn’t be a reason why we’d buy a company.

4:49 How do you stop hubris from creeping in? Executive team in the company spends a lot of time thinking and discussing how to retain and recruit the best talent in the world. At the end of the day, I know it’s a cliche, but people are our most important asset in the world by far. It’s people who deliver innovation. We are the most focused company that I know of or have read of or have any knowledge of. We say no to good ideas every day. We say no to great ideas in order to keep the amount of things we focus on very small in number so that we can put enormous energy behind the ones we do choose. The table each of you are sitting at today, you could probably put every product on it that Apple makes, yet Apple’s revenue last year was $40 billion. I think any other company that could say that is an oil company. That’s not just saying yes to the right products, it’s saying no to many products that are good ideas, but just not nearly as good as the other ones. I think this is so ingrained in our company that this hubris you talk about that happens to companies that are successful and sole role in life is to get bigger, I can tell you the management team at Apple would never let that happen. That’s not what we’re about. Small list of things to focus on.

Apple updates "supplier responsibility" page

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Apple today updated their “supplier responsibility” page to its website in response to repeated questions about its suppliers facilities and treatment of workers in China.

Apple is committed to ensuring the highest standards of social responsibility wherever our products are made. We insist that our suppliers provide safe working conditions, treat workers with dignity and respect, and use environmentally responsible manufacturing processes.  Apple

Ngmoco receives $25 million in funding, buys Freeverse

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Techcrunch reports that ngmoco:), the popular iPhone App development company behind such App Store hits as Rolando and Eliminate Pro, has purchased Freeverse. Freeverse is another popular iPhone Development company with App Store favorites Skee-Ball and Motochaser. 

ngmoco was one of the beneficiaries of the Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers iFund. 

Earlier this year the extremely prolific gamemaker made a bold move by making their most popular games free and relying on ads and in app purchases for income. It looks like that gamble paid off. ngmoco will do the same with all the apps they have acquired from Freeverse.

So far ngmoco has raised over $40 million from investors and seems that CEO Neil Young is putting it to great use. Young also today announced that the company plans to release an SDK so other developers can use their popular in-game scoring and messaging service.

NYTimes: Chips like Apple's A4 cost $1 Billion to produce from scratch

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Ashlee Vance of the NYTimes puts the cost of developing an ARM-based chip at around a billion dollars for companies like NVidia, Qualcomm and Apple.  And that’s without the fabrication process to actually produce the chip.  

That’s quite an investment for Apple and something that smaller companies like Palm wouldn’t be able to fund.  Apple got a head start on their A4 chip production by purchasing PA Semi for $278 million two years ago, but has likely been spending liberally ever since.  Still, many dispute this high cost.

Until the iPhone “platform” was unveiled in 2007, ARM designs weren’t considered for processors that could power “actual computers.”  That is unless you consider that the ancestors to the current ARM designs were use in the Acorn desktop computers popular in Europe 25 years ago.

Video Chat coming in future iPhones/iPads?

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Some interesting information has come to light this evening that may indicate a future direction of Apple’s iPhone OS products.  Below is some pretty definitive evidence that future iPhones and iPads will have video chatting capability.

These icons were found in the 3.2 SDK which seem to indicate that there will be video calling on a future iPxxx device.

But Wait!  That’s not all.  If you click below, hidden in some of the underlying iPad telephony apps are some VideoChat strings that are equally, if not more, telling evidence of future VideoChatting capabilities.

Video chat likely means front facing camera on these devices as well.  We’ll know more soon.  Also, we’ve found some references to “iChat”.

While it is possible that Apple brought code over from its Mac telephony products, it is unlikely that they also built icons and compressed them into the iPad SDK for such a product if it weren’t being built for future release.

Thanks again @sonny788 for your help!

Is Apple taking the PG apps too far?

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We’ve somehow been steering clear of this one for the last few days but now it is getting a bit comical so here we go.  Apple, for some reason just went “anti-sexual content” in their App Store approval process, killing some 5,000 current applications that had some sort of bouncing (covered) boobs or tight pants or something that App Store guys/gals deemed sexually inappropriate.

So one of the guys at the center of this, jonaeu from Chilifresh who got their Wobble app pulled, spoke to an Apple representative who laid out the new rules which, we have to say, made us chuckle:

1. No images of women in bikinis (Ice skating tights are not OK either)

2. No images of men in bikinis! (I didn

iPad pre-orders to start next week?

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AppAdvice is forecasting that iPad pre-orders will begin on February 25th in the US-only for Wifi iPads.  Their source vaguely says:

According to a reliable source of ours familiar with the matter, Apple will be starting the presale of the iPad as soon as February 25th.

Apple has traditionally launched its new iPhones and iPods on Fridays, both without pre-orders recently (though AT&T has offered pre-orders on iPhones).  With that in mind, March 26th has been thrown around as the actual launch date.

Norwegian Apple resellers recently had to stop taking unofficial pre-orders because of overwhelming demand.  

Google iPhone App update adds Voice Search on iPod Touch and several fixes

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Google this morning dropped an update to their Popular Mobile iPhone App, including a feature that many people with iPod touches wanted:

  • Use the voice search function on iPod touch models that shipped with earphones that include the remote and microphone
  • Improved Voice Search stability
  • Fixes crashes on certain search queries such as searching “@”
  • Fixes a bug which gave you a hard time when you needed to paste something in the search field
  • Improved voice search completion detection

The iPod experience wouldn’t necessarily be seamless. Users would need to carry around their earphones and whenever they needed to voice search they would have to plug them in and put them on. 

That, or buy a $1 iPod touch mic.

Or, $60 if you are a “professional”.

New iPad Tidbits

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We have compiled a bunch of new iPad tidbits with screenshots for your viewing pleasure below:

Lots of settings pop up if you know where to look:

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YouTube Videos can play in HTML5 (this looks really good btw, not sure if a dedicated Youtube App is necessary):

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Optional Battery Percentage Indicator: 

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File Sharing (will this find its way to iPhone OS 4?):

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Lock screen media controls:

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Photo frame access from lock screen:

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Playing Quicktime audio in Safari: 

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Built-in Google Suggestions:

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Handwriting for Chinese character input:

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Square Home Screen Web Clip icons:

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Did we miss anything?

Thank You @sonny788 for your help. 

Apple changes iPhone developer agreement to seemingly allow gambling applications?

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Mike Rose posts this interesting change in the iPhone developer agreement:

3.3.17 Your Application may include promotional sweepstake or contest functionality provided that You are the sole sponsor of the promotion and that You and Your Application comply with any applicable laws.

Apple is certainly going to frown on straight casino gambling apps but there is a whole lot of gray area in there between roulette and sweepstakes and contests which could be exploited by developers who perhaps want to make apps with cash/prize rewards.  

For instance, how about an ad supported sweepstakes app?  Or a bingo app?  Or a March Madness app with winner getting the proceeds?  It’s all for charity!

Since laws in the US are on a state by state basis, it would be hard to allow/disallow download of the application by jurisdiction as Apple states.  Currently, Apps are parsed by country and there doesn’t seem to be a mechanism coming to change that.

Perhaps developers could rely on the iPhone’s Internet connection location to determine if they are eligible for certain contests.

It will be interesting to see how this develops.

 

Hulu may come to iPad as a pay-for service

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One of the seemingly perfect applications for the iPad is as an Internet TV.  Apple is down with this, but they’d like you to buy those TV shows from iTunes, albeit at half the $2/show rate they are currently charging.  But just about everyone else in the US is enjoying their TV for free from Hulu with *gasp* advertising thrown in at regular intervals.  These “commercials”, as we’ll call them, seem to have made Hulu a success while at the same time, funding the people who make the TV shows to continue making great shows.  Where did they come up with this model?!

So, it is with great wonder that we read that Hulu wants to go to a pay-per-view model on the iPad.  Not only because the built-in, Apple iTunes is already sitting there waiting with a pay-per-view model that would kill it before it was even born, but also because Hulu makes money as a commercial-based service on computers. Now.  Why mess with a good thing?

If Hulu wanted to, they could have an HTML 5 version of their site, ready to go on the iPad on day one.  There are no shortage of smart people working there and they’ve built a great site.

You browse the video selection in Safari and play the videos (with commercials) in Quicktime using the same H.264 codec videos that the current site wraps in Flash.  They would sell a boatload of commercials and have an instant success to the iPad audience plus the 50 million or so iPod and iPhone users who’d also have access to the site.

Or, they could also submit an app to the App Store for more interactive functionality, if Apple’d let them.

It is literally a no-brainer.

But instead, if you want to watch the Daily Show on your iPad you’ll have to pay $2 (maybe $1 if Apple gets its way) to watch it or head to the torrent sites and jump through a bunch of hoops and skip any commercials.

Clearly, the networks haven’t a clue.

Alpha-numeric Passcode on your iPhone and iPod touch

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Today we’ve got something interesting for you security-minded folks with iPhones or iPod touches.  You know how Apple only lets you use four numbers as your passcode to unlock your device?  That’s as weak as banks PINs and school lockers.  Everyone knows you need at least six characters and alpha-numeric at that.

We have your answer.  We’ve built a profile from Apple’s corporate developement kit that allows alphanumeric passcodes.  All you have to do is open this link (On your iDevice only!) and you will be prompted to pick a new passcode. You will be required to make a passcode with a mix of letters and numbers and you cannot put numbers in a consecutive order. For example you cannot choose “max1234” you would have to do something such as “max2746.” If you ever want to remove this feature simply go to Settings/General/Profiles/9to5mac/ then click remove and confirm.  Then change your code back to something numeric.

We aren’t responsible for you forgetting your passcode and locking yourself out of your iPhone.  Or anything else.  Use at your own risk.

If you want to know how to do this yourself, iClarified coincidentally has a good tutorial this morning.

 

Apple brings App Store to 13 new countries

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Apple today announced the addition of 13 new App Stores to the world according to a note posted in the Apple iPhone Developer announcements.  If you are in Armenia, Botswana, Bulgaria, Jordan, Kenya, Macedonia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritius, Niger, Senegal, Tunisia, or Uganda you are in luck.

iPhone OS developers are encouraged to update their App selling preferences in iTunes Connect so their apps could be sold there. If your apps already have the “sell in new territories” option checked, you are ready to rumble in those new countries.