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Walk thru: NIN iPhone App

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While we’ve kinda fallen off of the NIN bandwagon since Pretty Hate Machine was popular (truth be told), we have to admire Trent Reznor as a pioneer of the digital music revolution.  He’s been at the forefront of selling his music online and DRM free for mixing/enjoyment since Napster was the preferred method of downloading tracks. 

His latest project is a new app that pledges to bring the NIN.com social networking experience to iPod touch and iPhone.  Here he is explaining the thought behind it (thanks Jonny) with a special guest appearance:

As of this writing the app is still not in the App Store.

WSJ: Jobs still in charge, working on netbook/tablet

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The WSJ this evening  said that Steve Jobs’ status is … status quo.  He’s running the ship from home these days making important decisions from the comfort of his own couch.  He’s expected back in, yep, June.  Exactly like the plan it seems.  That’s even true for operations inside Apple:

People inside the company, business partners and others who are familiar with the situation say life at the Cupertino, Calif., company remains much the same as it did before.

Those at other corporations who deal with the company also say their interactions with Apple haven’t changed. Mr. Cook, who had already been handling most of Apple’s day-to-day operations, has kept tight control over the company, say business partners and those inside Apple.

But the Journal does say that Apple’s board is communicating directly with Jobs’ doctors.  Whether that is perceived as lack of trust, or more likely, covering their own backsides in light of the current SEC probe into allegations that there were misleading statements regarding Jobs’ health, is uncertain.

More interestingly, they mention (or confirm) that there might be something shiny on the horizon:

Apple co-founder Mr. Jobs, who is considered the company’s creative leader, is also involved in the development of future projects, they say.  People privy to the company’s strategy say Apple is working on new iPhone models and a portable device that is smaller than its current laptop computers but bigger than the iPhone or iPod Touch.

Unsurprisingly, Jobs didn’t respond to requests for comment. Apple spokesman Steve Dowling said: "Steve continues to look forward to returning to Apple at the end of June". – That sounds very much like no WWDC.

The credibility of the story headed south from there with the Journal quoting infamously ill-informed Shaw Wu as saying he expected Jobs to recede into a chairman role and Tim Cook taking over as CEO in the long term.

D'oh! Record companies losing sales on $1.29 pricing

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…maybe not losing money overall, but losing sales, which drops them down the chart, which, in turn, loses more money.  Billboard, (via Giz) is reporting that songs that got jacked to $1.29 are seeing significant decrease in sales in just two days of higher prices.  At the moment, it appears that the price increases overshadow the loss of sales so there is still more money coming into the labels for $1.29 songs…but that’s just for now.  These things often spiral.

It isn’t all about music revenue for the artists.  They don’t always get paid based on sales revenues.  For the artists (some of them anyway), it’s about having a #1 hit or top 10 hit.  If the record companies decide to jack the price of an artist’s song by $.30, it appears that he or she has a much longer shot at getting there.  Their peers at $.99 are at a significant advantage.  This also affects the artists reputation and standing when negotiating future contracts.

This isn’t a minor blip either.  Take a look at the cart to the left furnished by Billboard.  $1.29 songs plummeted.   $.99 songs skyrocketed.

While two days of data might not a trend make, it certainly has to elicit pause.  If you are a record company exec, the decision to put the $1.29 bump on a song is a lot tougher knowing you are going to cost your artist a couple of rankings, maybe even the shot at a top seller.

Maybe Steve Jobs was right about keeping the $.99?  He’s got a pretty solid track record.

 

ZuneHD to take on iPod touch

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Engadget got a peek at what is likely the new ZuneHD.  So how will this thing compete with the iPod touch?  We’re assuming it will be cheaper than the iPod touch, it will likely have a higher pixel count.  It looks more 16:9ish than the iPod’s 3:2 ratio.  

The tablet space is hot lately with the Amazon Kindle rumored to be getting a bigger screen and the Crunkpad coming out soon.

The Zune, for what it is worth, will have a billion fewer apps sold at release than the iPod touch.

This is becoming frighteningly close to the ZunePhone FailWhale that we all fear.

VoiceOver Kit 1.01 for Shuffle released

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For those of you who jumped on the new Shuffle, you might want to hook yourself up with a Software Update.  Apple has released a 17MB VoiceOver update which fixes pronunciation and stability issues with your new Shuffle. 

Apple’s description of VoiceOver:

Musically speaking, the new iPod shuffle is brilliant, thanks to an exciting new feature called VoiceOver. Say you’re listening to a song and want to know the title or the artist. With the press of a button, VoiceOver tells you as the music dips down. It even announces the names of your playlists. And when your battery needs charging, VoiceOver tells you that, too. Learn more about VoiceOver

Via Macworld

 

When will Apple hit a billion apps?

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What are y’all doing on April 20th at 4:57am Eastern Standard Time?  Don’t say celebrating 4/20 because we know you guys don’t wake up that early. 

Us?  We’re going to be downloading a bunch of apps from the App Store.  Apple’s computers are going to decide who the winner is and if their algorithm stays the same, that will be the early hours of April 20th.  Some of our slightly OCD commenters told us so.  So we checked it out by moving our clock forward and getting a screen grab.  It seems legit.

…and daddy needs a new MacBook Pro.

Rules are here.

Timing.  The Promotion shall run from 12:01 a.m. EDT on April 10, 2009 and ends with the downloading of the 1 billionth app (“Promotion Period”). For purposes of the Promotion, the downloading of the 1 billionth app is considered to be either the downloading of the 1 billionth app from iTunes or the receipt of the non-purchase entry after the download of the 999,999,999th app, whichever comes first. Only entries submitted in this time period will be accepted. Sponsor’s computer is the official time keeping device for this promotion.

5. Sweepstakes. …The prize will be awarded for the entry (either through an app download or through the non-purchase online entry) sent immediately following the download of the 999,999,999th app.

3rd PC Hunters ad…

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Actually, the 11 year old kid in this one is so far the smartest of the three shoppers we’ve seen. Gamer? BluRay? Yep, PC.

Have fun carrying that thing around kid.   Oh, and homework doesn’t seem to be a huge priority.

Does Apple's pricing really need to be at $1.29 per song?

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A lot of you seem to be upset by the new iTunes music pricing scheme released today.  At first, we were kind of ambivalent but when we dug deeper we can see the point.

Why does Apple need to charge $1.29 when Amazon charges $.99 or even $.79 for the same track.  Both are high quality DRM free music files. Apple sells way more music and isn’t even trying to make a profit (or so it says) so it isn’t a scalability or a margin issue. 

Read on why (surprise) the recording industry isn’t playing fair with Apple.

News today was that Amazon’s prices would also start hitting $1.29  If you look at Amazon’s top 100 Music sales, you’ll see some prices at $.79 and some as high as $1.29.  (Taken at 11:30 PM EST on April 8th).

But these $1.29 songs are few and far between, while most of Apple’s top 100 are $1.29.

The number one song in both stores shows significantly different prices: the Amazon Store has the Black Eyed Peas’ Boom Boom Pow for $.99, while iTunes charges $1.29.

Amazon’s price above, vs. iTunes price below.

The #2 song on each chart, Poker Face, by Lady GaGa produced an even bigger discrepancy.  Amazon has it for only $.79 while iTunes charges $1.29.

Update: Amazon has raised Pokerface to $.99

More:

iPhone 3,1 to have Broadcom BCM4329, 802.11N/5GHz Wireless, FM transmitter/receiver

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According to the fine folks over at AI, the soon-to-be-released iPhone 2,1 references the Broadcom BCM4329 wireless chip in the boot script.  This is a significant upgrade over the current Broadcom BCM4325 for a number of reasons. As they pointed out, the component upgrade adds power savings and new support for 802.11n features, including the ability to find and join 5GHz networks. 

But they neglected to mention that it also adds the ability to receive and send (the previous model could only receive) information through FM radio signals which theoretically could be used to broadcast sound into car stereos..without external adapters.  It could also be used to pick up FM radio music, news and sports broadcasts on their iPhones and even, in August, on iPods.  Currently the FM reciever is only used to pick up communications from the Nike+ peripheral.

MobileDevDesign points out:

The BCM4329

April Fool's day around the Web

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April Fools is in high gear today around the technology world:

Apple is selling an album of silence

Google is not only the king of search but it is the undesputed leader in April Fool’s day gags.

Quallcom is putting wireless transmitters in birds.

Macworld UK is reporting Steve Jobs is in an ice skating contest.

Opera has face gesture recognition.

Gizmodo looks like it got taken over by a pre-teen alien conficker virus.

Reddit looks more like some other site.

ThinkGeek has some good stuff on their site today.

More below

TUAW is going back in time.

Even Microsoft has gotten into the act.  Sorta.

The Guardian is moving to Twitter.

Tivo is recording ahead of time now.

We’re sure there are many more.  Hook us up in the comments, we’ll post.

 

New iPhone SDK 9M2725 and iPhone OS 7A259g released…breaks Skype's AT&T access?

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We aren’t sure if we’ll be able to use Skype over 3G after installing this. Anyone want to test this for us before we commit to losing 3G VOIP?  More juicy details below.

Update: Skype over 3G and Tethering still work properly.

Along with the SDK, iPhone 3.0 Beta 2 Build: 7A259g is also released.  It comes in at 228 MB.

We are, as you can see, downloading them both now and will report on any improved snappieness™.

Skype for iPhone, it is official

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The rumors were true, Skype indeed will be landing on the iPhone this week.  CNet got a preview of the app and likes what they see.

As expected, calls can only be made over Wifi.  AT&T is simply too afraid of VOIP taking over their voice business (which it will anyway).   We look forward to the day when the mobile carriers are competing to sell us packets fast and cheap…but back to Skype on iPhone.

CNet said:

Skype’s screens are well organized and use the iPhone’s ability to add filters, for instance, to sort your contacts alphabetically, or by who’s online. There’s chatting as well, though Skype’s flagship feature is its VoIP calling that’s free to other Skype users and an inexpensive per-minute fee to landlines. Calls on Skype for iPhone work only if you’re in range of a Wi-Fi network, so your call quality will in part be at the mercy and strength of wireless networks nearby–calls will not work over the cell phone network on the iPhone (but chatting will.) Assuming your connection is solid, you can dial a number or quickly call a contacts stored in your address book. iPod Touch users will need earphones with an embedded mic to talk. During a call, you can mute the line, go on hold, or put the call on speakerphone. In the My Info window, you can follow a link to buy more SkypeOut credit online.

Taking a photo from within Skype to serve as your avatar image, or pulling a picture in from the camera roll are two iPhone-only features that makes use of the phone’s hardware attributes. Another imperfect, but still neat, feature is the ability to accept incoming conference calls. While you won’t be able to initiate a call, we’re told, you will be able to jump on one if a buddy invites you in. We hope the next version includes placing conference calls from the iPhone.

The downsides were:

Skype left a few more skills out of its maiden iPhone voyage. SMS, setting up a conference calling group, purchasing SkypeOut credit directly, and being able to field a second incoming Skype call are a few. File transferring and getting Skype voicemail native on the phone are two more. We expect to see at least two of these added in the next version, but we’ll hope for more.

We really  like what we see and especially like the fact that it will work on the second generation iPod touch.  We’ll let you know when it hits the app store.  IT is expected by Tuesday but could hit the customary App store delays.