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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.

4G iPhone for January rumors a little half-baked

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Look, we want the most awesome iPhone available to be on Verizon’s network ASAP.  But the rumor today about the 4G iPhone waiting in stockpiles isn’t realistic at all.

Remember how Apple’s original iPhone was EDGE at a time when most new phones were coming out with the new 3G technology?  The reasons: Cost, complexity, size, battery life and benefit to the user.

Every single one of those factors also applies to 4G.  The chips aren’t mature, the network is just being rolled out, and the battery life will take a hit.  Have you seen how long an EVO 4G battery lasts with 4G on?  How big it is?

Besides, one of the big benefits of 4G is use as a hotspot, something no un-jailbroken iPhone can do yet.

So iPhone 4G?  Yes!  January?  No.
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Toshiba and Apple working on a display plant

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Reuters reports that Apple and Toshiba are working together on a plant to make displays for iOS devices.

Toshiba Corp will spend about 100 billion yen ($1.19 billion) to build a factory for making small LCD panels, mainly to supply to Apple Inc’s iPhones, the Nikkei business daily said.The company’s wholly owned unit, Toshiba Mobile Display Co, will construct the facility in Ishikawa prefecture and the plant will churn out low-temperature polysilicon LCD panels, which allow for high-resolution images, the paper said.Work on the plant will start by early next year, with the production due to begin in the second half of 2011, Nikkei said.Toshiba Mobile Display already makes low-temperature polysilicon LCD panels at a facility in the prefecture and its monthly production capacity of 8.55 million units is projected to more than double with the new factory, the daily said.  Apple will invest in a portion of the investment for the factory, the Nikkei said.

What’s interesting is that current LCD display leaders from Korea,Samsung and LG (maker of the Retina Display), are not only competing with Apple but also selling products that go into Apple products to others.  For instance, Apple CEO Steve Jobs told the WWDC audience that he thought that Apple would have the lead in displays for years with the Retina, yet Sharp and other manufacturers released Android devices with the same LG display within months of the iPhone.  LG also had a display deal with Apple and gave Apple a few month head start on those awesome 27″ panels before giving them to Dell as well.

Samsung, who make the A4 CPU and RAM for Apple’s iOS products, has been severely constrained with its high end Super-AMOLED display that powers its Galaxy S phones.  Those phones have been the primary high-end Android competition for the iPhone.

Perhaps Apple is trying to move away from doing business with its hardware competitors.

The bad news in this regard is that Toshiba also has just started to make Android devices.

Has Apple turned off MobileMe users with short passwords?

Word is coming in from Europe that Apple is forcing users with under eight characters and without both a number and a letter to reset their passwords today.  The mandate is an invisible one and some users who don’t meet the criteria are just getting empty login failures.  The fix is easy.  Just head over to the MobileMe and reset your password to one with the appropriate strength.

IMAP Mail and other native applications will not have been affected.

In a possibly related note (and/or some unfortunate timing), Apple Discussion Forums are down for some. If you look at the iPhone forums for example, you’ll see no posts after about 1 AM this morning. (image below)
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Apple Store: 'We don't price match the iPhone…period'

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A couple shows excitement as they buy their iP...
Image via Wikipedia

Remember how Best Buy is going to sell the iPhone 3GS free with a plan tomorrow?  I’m sure a few of you thought about heading over to the Apple Store and asking about one of their famous Price Match guarantees?  Forgetaboutit.

We just had a short discussion with an Apple Store employee who told us that they’ve been told by upper management to batten down the hatches tomorrow for the onslaght of customers looking for free (with plan) iPhone 3GS’s.

The official policy is:

‘We don’t price match the iPhone…period’

He added regarding Radio Shack’s trade-in policy:

We don’t do trade-ins either.


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#9to5macHolidayPromoCodes for free apps

So, we had a little idea. To celebrate the opening of promo codes globally, we thought it would be nice for developers to hook us up with codes to distribute to our Twitter followers.  The response was overwhelming with over 100 developers responding in just the first hour.  We’re not going to continue tweeting them (sorry Twitter followers, we underestimated the response) at the 9to5mac twitter account.

The Good News: If developers want to Tweet some codes for their Apps, please do it yourself with the following hashtag: #9to5macHolidayPromoCodes

iOS app users can follow #9to5macHolidayPromoCodes here for free promo codes for paid apps.  Hopefully we can get it trending and get some publicity for indy developers and at the same time get our readers some free quality apps.

So, just as a guideline developers, here’s what a good tweet will look like:

In the meantime, we’ll tweet a few more at @9to5toys.  Let’s keep it going all month long!
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MacUpdate Bundle: 1Password 3 and Nine More Apps for $49

9to5mac affiliate partner MacUpdate has just launched their $49 holiday bundle with 1Password headlining.  Other impressive apps include: MacFamilyTree, DEVONthink, Flux, Default Folder X, Art Text, Swift Publisher, Chronories, Interarchy and  Typinator. (Details below)

The first 10,000 buyers also get Mail.app stationary and Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast free.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-QrE_L6an4&w=640&h=385]

Details/Press release/Video follow:

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Google announces Chrome and ChromeOS updates

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At the ChromeOS event today, Google announced some significant improvements to the Chrome browser including their new Crankshaft Javascript rendering engine which should make it to Mac builds at some point soon.

Crankshaft uses adaptive compilation to improve both start-up time and peak performance. The idea is to heavily optimize code that is frequently executed and not waste time optimizing code that is not. Because of this, benchmarks that finish in just a few milliseconds, such as SunSpider, will show little improvement with Crankshaft. The more work an application does, the bigger the gains will be.

Also, Google announced that the Chrome browser is used by 120M users which is 300% increase over a year ago.

Most importantly, they announced their ChromeOS beta, which seems pretty impressive but won’t launch until the middle of next year.  Until then, they are passing out little unmarked 12-inch black notebooks to beta testers that will be on Verizon’s network.  Initial hardware partners (again, next year) will be Intel, Samsung and Acer with more to follow.


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Watch Dailymotion, Flickr Video, MegaVideo and Vimeo embeds on iOS, no jailbreak required

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A new iOS tool called iOSFlashVideo found on iSpazio allows you to view Flash embedded movies on iOS devices.  The bookmarklet allows videos from Dailymotion, Flickr Video, MegaVideo and Vimeo that are embedded Flash in websites to play using their backend H.264 video.  It is basically the same trick that Apple uses to allow embedded YouTube Flash video to be played without Flash.

We hope (expect?) Apple to make this available natively at some point in the future.

If you have any trouble installing the bookmarklet, MacStories has a great step-by-step.
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Case with Flip-Out Keyboard for iPhone 4 or 3GS: $40

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From the Toys section:

ThinkGeek.com offers this Case with Flip-Out Keyboard for iPhone 4 or 3GS, model no. TK-421, for $49.99. Coupon code “NEXTORDER” cuts it to $39.99. With around $5 for shipping, that’s the lowest total price we could find for this item anywhere. This case adds a flip-out keyboard to your iPhone, so you can text physically rather than virtually.


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Consumer Reports absolutely destroys AT&T

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The January 2011 edition of Consumer Reports comes out with an extremely negative view of AT&T carrier performance, likely just in time for the release of the Verizon iPhone.  The Houston Chronicle cut out the carrier reviews and it is a painful one for AT&T.  AT&T failed miserably in each and every category, rating the worst in every area except texting in which it was second to worst.  That being said, only regional carrier US Cellular had any significant “Better” notations with most carriers ranking in the middle.

In response to the Consumer Reports survey, an AT&T spokesperson e-mailed the following statement:
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