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Apple files Apple TV remote sensor patent

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Another day, another Apple patent, this time seemingly bound for a future incarnation of the Apple TV.

The patent describes a, “Remote Control System that can Distinguish Stray Light Sources” – think a Wii remote with built-in  understanding of ambient light conditions.

The focus of the patent  centres on a new transmitter component that sits under a display or television in communications with the Apple TV console. The entire system could also be incorporated into a television itself, states the patent.

“In one embodiment of the present invention, console 30 can communicate with remote control using cable and/or one or more wireless communication protocols known in the art or otherwise. Console 30 also can communicate with transmitter using cable and/or one or more wireless communication protocols.”

The transmitter could be a separate component from Apple TV or integrated into a display, projector system or television.

Other patents granted to Apple include one that covers the iTune’s “Season Pass” feature and another covering the iPhone’s touch based slide unlocking-mechanism interface, Patently Apple informs.

WSJ: Scrollmotion to handle textbooks for the iPad

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-hCOD3Lj6V0&w=700&h=400]

The Wall Street Journal tonight reports that Scrollmotion, a company we’ve profiled before and you can see at the WWDC 2009 event above, will be building eTextbooks for a number of publishers.

“People have been talking about the impact of technology on education for 25 years. It feels like it is really going to happen in 2010,” said Rik Kranenburg, group president of higher education for the education unit of McGraw-Hill Cos. and one of the publishers involved in the project. Other publishers include Houghton Mifflin Harcourt K-12, which is a unit of Education Media & Publishing Group Ltd.; Pearson PLC’s Pearson Education, and Washington Post Co.’s Kaplan Inc., known for its test-prep and study guides.

Scrollmotion has been involved with the App Store since its inception and has turned lots of big publishers’ books into apps.  You can see in the video above how their textbook software works.

It’s also unclear whether ScrollMotion will emerge as the leading applications provider, with many others in the works. A closely held New York-based firm, ScrollMotion has already developed applications for Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch. ScrollMotion takes digital files provided by publishers for the iPad, adapts them to fit on the device, and then adds enhancements such as a search function, dictionaries, glossaries, interactive quizzes and page numbers.

We had actually wondered if Apple had picked up Scrollmotion because their iBookstore looked very similar to Scrollmotion’s Iceberg reader.  The news is good for Apple and the book market as Apple doesn’t seem to need to be the only player.

Google's Nexus One gets multi-touch, Apple's patents be damned

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Ever since Google’s Android came on the scene, it hasn’t had true multi-touch.  A report by Venturebeat said that Apple had asked Google not to use multi-touch in its Android phones and Google had complied, rather than get into legal trouble.

Fast forward to today.  Google has sent out an update to its Nexus One phones enabling multi-touch on Maps, the Chrome Browser, Gallery and other applications.   Multi-touch will only be available on 2.0+ phones and the updates are coming throughout the week (assuming Droid is next here).

What happened?  Are the gloves coming off?  Palm has had multi-touch for awhile and nothing legal has come up yet.  Perhaps Google thinks (perhaps correctly) that Apple won’t try to protect its share of multi-touch patent ownership? The update also included Google Goggles, Night Driving for Navigator GPS and an update to the 3G.

 

In conflicting blog posts today, Adobe says/refutes that Flash is its future

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Kevin Lynch, CTO of Adobe penned a post on Adobe’s blog today defending Flash as the de-facto standard on the web for interactivity and video playing.  Lynch comes to Adobe from Macromedia where he was Chief Software Architect and obviously has been with Flash longer than even Adobe.  Therefore, it isn’t surprising to hear him say that he doesn’t believe HTML5 will replace Flash at anytime in the foreseeable future. 

Adobe supports HTML and its evolution and we look forward to adding more capabilities to our software around HTML as it evolves. If HTML could reliably do everything Flash does that would certainly save us a lot of effort, but that does not appear to be coming to pass. Even in the case of video, where Flash is enabling over 75% of video on the Web today, the coming HTML video implementations cannot agree on a common format across browsers, so users and content creators would be thrown back to the dark ages of video on the Web with incompatibility issues.The productivity and expressiveness of Flash remain advantages for the Web community even as HTML advances.

The Flash team will drive innovation over the coming years as they have over the past decade to enable experiences that aren’t otherwise possible. With the ability to update the majority of Web clients in less than a year, Flash can make this innovation available to our customers much more quickly than HTML across a variety of browsers.

The general consensus in the Apple community (including CEO Steve Jobs) is that Flash can die, the sooner the better. But does that mean Adobe has to die with it?  Adobe makes authoring tools which could be used to make HTML5 applications instead of Flash applications (though if Adobe Dreamweaver’s capability in the HTML world is any indication, they have a long way to go).

John Nack, Principal Project Manager for another Adobe product, Photoshop,  says precisely this:

Adobe isn’t in the Flash business. Seriously.  It isn’t in the Photoshop business, or the Acrobat business, or the [take-your-pick product name] business, either.  It’s in the helping people communicate business.  We’d all do well to remember that, because it means that the company’s fortunes are tied to building great tools for solving problems. If we do that well, we prosper; if we do it poorly, we fail. When we get too wrapped up in this technology or that, we lose touch with the problems that we (and more importantly our customers) are trying to solve.

The equation is simple. Adobe wants to make money selling tools, so it needs our customers’ clients to pay for work done with the tools. Clients won’t pay if their customers can’t see the work made with the tools. Therefore customers, clients, and by extension Adobe need a way to see the work, be that videos, interactive pieces, or anything else.

Just like the new Flash tools have the ability to export to moving GIF, flat HTML or even iPhone App, they could also be used to export to HTML5.  Here’s an example of video entirely done in HTML5.  Why can’t I take a video file on my computer and embed it as such?  Somewhere buried in the code on that page there is a MP4 just like the ones on my computer.  

Don’t worry.  There will soon be tools to embed your HTML5 video into your websites.  In fact, I’d be surprised if YouTube and the other video sharing sites don’t have a “Embed HTML5” code spitter-outter this year.  It is clear that Adobe, if they want to stay relevant, will start building tools like this.

 

iPhone OS 3.1.3 is out on the town

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Hit iTunes for your fresh copy of iPhone 3.1.3 (Build 7E18) which weighs in a 228.1MB.  The update “Improves accuracy of reported battery level on iPhone 3GS” and “Resolves issue where third-party apps would not launch in some instances”.

Update: We’ve found that Apple has updated the Modem Firmware from version 5.11.07 to 5.12.01 on the iPhone 3G.  

That means there is likely some more stuff going on behind the scenes – as per usual. Therefore, Jailbreakers are advising not to do the update.

Has anyone out there found any undocumented features/snappiness

iPad has camera holes?

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Two interesting pictures have crossed our desks today.  First we got a still image of Steve Jobs showing off the iPad with what looks like a small camera type hole on it.  I was at the event and the iPads I played with didn’t have holes for cameras (I really looked closely).  I wasn’t close enough to see the one Jobs was using either, but from other professional photos of the event, there wasn’t a camera on that iPad.

That being said, would it surprise anyone if Apple came in late and put in a camera on the high-end models?  Maybe the $130 extra for a 3G radio also includes a camera in the bargain?  Computerworld recently remarked that it was ridiculous to charge $130 for 3G+GPS  parts that were worth $10-$20.  A camera would close that gap some in many minds.

Note that Apple didn’t reveal the glass screen on the iPhone until five months after the initial announcement with a press release.

Next, Mission repair (via Macrumors), reports that they got a iPad frame (not unibody huh?) from somewhere and low a behold, it has a camera hole the exact same size as a MacBook camera.  They’ve even put a MacBook camera in there and it fits perfectly.  Remember though, that prototype iPods with camera holes and iPod frames were spotted last year before Apple released a camera-less iPod touch.


Top: iPad frame, Center: Camera, Bottom: MacBook Frame

HardMac has been receiving identical parts with identical camera holes.  Below.

 

And finally, a bonus picture from a Travis Kelland who really wants there to be a camera on that iPad.

TechCrunch: Mac-based large tablet coming this year, running Intel

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Amid lots of words of bet hedging, MG Siegler manages to mention that he’s heard from second hand sources that Apple is planning a bigger, Mac-based tablet launch within a year, and perhaps we might know more as early as WWDC.  The “MacPad” in question would be running an Intel chip and would come in a screen as big as 15-inches, according to Siegler.

We are more inclined to believe the 22-inch touch iMac story from Chinese-language Commercial Times reported earlier this year.  This would probably be  similar to the current iMac with a capacitive touch screen which could sit on an angle similar to a draftsman’s table.  It would run a special touch-enabled version of MacOS 10.7 (which we’ve seen running around our logs) and run on high end Intel portable hardware (Core i5, i3?).

Any product like this would likely be an evolution rather than a revolution, as Apple doesn’t release huge new product lines twice in one year.  

Below is Trolltouch’s Touch enabled iMac:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRrWEZXaqH4&w=700&h=400]

SAI: iPad still coming to Verizon

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According to Silicon Alley Insider, those with dreams of a Verizon iPad need not despair after last week’s announcement that the iPad would be carried by AT&T in the US.  They tell us that their Verizon sources say that a deal is still forthcoming. 

Apple is working with Verizon on a version of its iPad tablet, despite Apple only announcing an AT&T partnership, according to Fox News Channel’s Clayton Morris, who just spoke with a Verizon source.

Clayton Morris wasn’t particulary acurate in his predictions for the iPad event. 

Previously, Computerworld got:

“The tablet will be supported by multiple [mobile] carriers,” said Brian Marshall of Broadpoint AmTech, citing unnamed sources he said were close to the situation. “Verizon and others,” he continued. “Definitely Verizon. I’ve been told that’s a certainty.”

TheStreet.com’s Scott Moritz wrote, “This discrete little fact would confirm that Apple has chosen Verizon as its telco partner, says Northeast Securities analyst Ashok Kumar.”

All we need now is a joint press release from Steve Jobs and Ivan Seidenberg. 

Apple joining social media mediums, Twitter next?

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We reported last week that Apple had gotten its own Youtube Channel and started to populate it with videos of the iPad presentation and the iPad introduction video.  Apple already Twitters its Quicktime Trailers but doesn’t have an official corporate feed.

Today we find out that someone has had the twitter.com/apple squatter evicted.  Only last week, the account was being used by someone (apple.twitter@gmail.com) who put out a solitary tweet almost a year ago.  Now the page redirects to a 404 – page doesn’t exist error.

This week:

Last Week:

Keep an eye on this space!

Using your iPhone or iPod touch as a FREE multitouch cordless mouse/keyboard? There's another app for that…

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lV6HWoPnfu8&w=695&h=400]

Wouldn’t it be nice to use your iPhone, iPod touch or (future) iPad as a multitouch-enabled mouse/keyboard controller for your Mac or PC? Guess what, you can for free, thanks to Logitech

The peripherals maker has just introduced an iPhone application called Touch Mouse, which lets you use your device as that controller. Use it, for example, when you have your Mac plugged into your television, or just as a different interface to rest parts of your wrist and eyes.
Touch Mouse requires installation of server software on your PC, as well as an App download on your iPhone. It works over Wi-Fi, so you can use it anywhere in your house.

Just like an iPhone, you can see what you