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The devices that run the world’s most advanced mobile operating system

Check out our top stories on iOS Devices:

iOS devices refer to any of Apple’s hardware that runs the iOS mobile operating system which include iPhones, iPads, and iPods. Historically, Apple releases a new iOS version once a year, the current version is iOS 10. Here is the complete list of iOS 10 compatible devices.

World class iPhone orchestra performs live on December 9

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Given that the iPhone offers more processing power than the original iMac, this next story had to happen: December 9 will see a live performance by an orchestra, each and every one of whom will be using an iPhone to make the music happen.

Students at the University of Michigan are learning to design, build and play instruments on their Apple smartphones as part of a course called “Building a Mobile Phone Ensemble”. This course is taught by Georg Essl, a computer scientist and musician who has worked on developing mobile phones and musical instruments.

This class, believed to be the first formal course of its type in the world, merges engineering practices, mobile phone programming, and sound synthesis with new music performance, composition, and interactive media arts.

Students in the class program their iPhones to accept input from the devices’ multitude of input sensors, and to create sound based on that input.

The touch-screen, microphone, GPS, compass, wireless sensor, and accelerometer can all be transformed so that when a performer runs their finger across the display, blows air into the mic, tilts or shakes the phone, for example, different sounds emanate.

Students then compose for these new instruments and ultimately perform their works. Because the course brings together so many aspects of engineering, composition, and performance, the class demands a high degree of both creativity and technological savvy.

Several years ago, Essl and his colleagues were the first known to use the microphone as a wind sensor – a tactic that enables popular iPhone apps such as the Ocarina. Ocarina essentially turns the phone into an ancient type of flute.

Sports Illustrated's Tablet concept shows serious consideration

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Peter Kafka’s Media Memo has another media company’s take on the tablet computer.  This time, Time, Inc’s Sports Illustrated is given the tablet makeover.  Just like Wired’s concept, we’re huge fans of the new medium.  These concepts show that the media companies are serious about the tablet and that maybe…just maybe…Apple has given the word out to a few companies to gather their content up for a new medium.

Because, like it or not, it sounds like 2010 will be about the tablet.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntyXvLnxyXk&w=600&h=385]

At 2:18 we see a Mac OS X scroll bar, which could mean about anything (thanks commenter).

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZxXlqtg2rik&hl=en_US&fs=1&]

AT&T goes up against free Google Voicemail with $9.99/month option

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AT&T is enabling a $10/month option that you can tack onto your iPhone or other AT&T device which will transcode your voicemails using speech recognition and send them to your phone via email or SMS.  Sure, Google Voice has been doing this for awhile and doing it free, but AT&T’s version doesn’t force you to give your voicemeil over to Google who will probably index it and slip in ads at some point in the future.

Here’s how to enable Google Voicemail on your iPhone.  For the $9.99/month option, see AT&T’s plan details below.

From AT&T:


For just $9.99 per month, Voicemail to Text lets you:

  • Receive your voicemail messages as text messages, emails, or both
  • Respond how you want

Twitter360 Augmented reality for finding your Twitter friends

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w7EAz8-uwU&w=600&h=385]

Twitter360 (App Store $2.99 $.99)  was released earlier this week but we’ve just had a chance to play with it.  It does work- if your friends have been Twittering recently and have enabled Geotags on their tweets.  The Google Maps functionality is often more useful – especially if you have friends not in the neighborhood.

Augmented reality is geting pretty hot lately, no?

Lawsuits: AT&T- Verizon suits settled, Psystar stops selling OSX on its systems

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It looks like AT&T thought better of fighting Verizon in court over ads that AT&T itself admitted weren’t incorrect.  Verizon is also dropping the countersuit according to AllThingsD.

In other fun lawsuit news, Psystar has stopped selling OSX machines, currently listing them as sold out in response to yesterday’s news that they had settled their California case with Apple. They are still selling their Rebel EFI (for $0.00 +$49.99 for the authentication key) however, signalling the shift in their business model.

 

Apple set to release Point of Sale(PoS) iPod add-on as a commercial product?

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We reported on Twtter founder Jack Dorsey who is building an iPhone PoS system earlier today.  It turns out he might have some competition from Apple itself.

iFoApple Store reports that Apple may release the POS-iPod system it developed for its Apple Stores as a product aimed at retailers. 

Since the debut of the iPod POS , inquires have been coming from all directions, including from end-user small businesses, larger chains and system integrators. Until now, Apple

Steve Jobs allows video streaming app to enter App Store with undocumented API use

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Update: Wow, this is a buggy app.  We got it to work..just barely.  More below…

Knocking Live Video (app store link) hit the App Store today.  Its journey there was an unusual one however. The application is simply a peer to peer video streaming app.  IT allows people to connect via social media application Facebook.

The major roadblock was that Knocking Live Video uses undocumented (and therefore unusable APIs) to stream video from iPhone to iPhone.  Naturally, with the automated API checking tool, the app was rejected for this reason initially.

According to Ars, however, the developer sent an impassioned email to sjobs@apple.com….

But Meehan was convinced that his app was worth fighting for. “When it was rejected, I decided not to give up and reach out directly to Steve Jobs via e-mail,” he told Ars. “I reached out to Apple to reconsider our application due to its potential to culturally change how people share live moments phone-to-phone.”

He made his case “in a way that was not about me or our app, rather about being a life-long user of all Apple products, about how I believed in Apple and that I believed Jobs would respond,” Meehan said.

Meehan ended up composing a passionate plea to Apple’s CEO, explaining he has been frustrated and disheartened with the app approval process, which often leaves developers wondering and waiting with little or no response from Apple about any potential problems. He pointed out that there are other apps that had been approved using the same private API call

AT&T ranks dead last in Consumer Reports study

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Apple’s exclusive iPhone carrier, AT&T, ranked dead last in just about every category in this week’s Consumer Reports survey.  In 19 of 26 the cities surveyed, AT&T was ranked the worst.  Oh, FYI, last month Consumer Reports had the iPhone 3GS and 3G at  #1 & 2 in the smartphone category and we all know that MacBooks and iMacs are perennial top-of-listers. 

Perhaps it’s time for Apple and its #1 Consumer Reports brand to consider shopping the iPhone out to different carriers?  It seems a bit strange that Apple is asking its customers (who demand the highest quality of service in Apple products) to sign a two year pact with the worst carrier (by far) in the US.

thanks jason!

Fring adds video calling to iPhone

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50DkFGXi-QA&w=600&h=385]

Fring (App Store Link) has always been our favorite iPhone instant messaging app…by far.  Not only is it free, it was the first to allow Skype calls and SIP calls (including Google’s Gizmo5).  It was also one of the first to have Push Notifications and it works across many smartphone platforms.   

Today’s iPhone update allows video calling to Skype users via the iPhone‘s built in camera.  We misunderstood the video.  It looks like the app only pulls video from a Desktop Skype client, not from the iPhones camera like the Knocking application.  Screenshots below.

We’ll update when we have more information.

Update 1. We’ve triied making a few video calls.  It gives us the option on 3G and original iPhones – but they aren’t going through.

Update 2. We’ve managed to make a video call to a desktop Skype client.  They couldn’t see us but we could see them (screengrab below).  This needs some work obviously.

I Am T-Pain – over 10.2 million tunes shared

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 [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NkBHMl8zI0&w=560&h=340]

Smule has introduced an update to its popular I Am T-Pain app and has also published a few figures detailing quite how popular the app has become.

According to the developers, over 10.2 million Auto-Tunes recordings have been created using the software, which lets users sing along with a few T-Pain songs while that Auto-Tune effect is applied to their voice.

The new version 1.1 of the app now allows players to sing over any song in their iTunes music library.

It also includes six previously unreleased T-Pain original beats, and three holiday classics to usher in the holidays Santa-Pain style.

iPhone "3,1" moniker denotes major hardware change (PA Semi?) en route

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Today we learned that new iPhones were found using apps with tracking software in the San Francisco area.  The news is not surprising since the same thing has happened around this time of year for the past few years.  This is the traditional time that Apple starts testing new iPhone hardware for release in summer.

What is interesting about today’s information is that the new iPhone hardware is denoted as 3,1.

Former iPhones were labelled like this:

  • OG iPhone=  1,1
  • iPhone3G =   1,2
  • iPhone 3GS= 2,1
  • iPhone(PA Semi?) = 3,1

The iPhone 3G wasn’t a big upgrade from the original iPhone, hence only the point upgrade in the hardware code number.  While it did add a 3G radio and GPS, the processor was still the ARM 11-based Samsung chip that was also used in the original iPod Touches.  

The 3GS hardware upgrade was a different processor entirely.  While Samsung was still the supplier, it was now a ARM Cortex A8 based unit that provides the massive speed gains in the new iPhone 3GS hardware (and new iPod touches).

Will we see even more speed in the next iPhone?

The 3,1 moniker indicates that the new iPhone hardware is a significant upgrade from the iPhone 3GS -perhaps one with a processor from PA Semi.  Apple bought PA Semi two years ago.  Steve Jobs previously told the New York Times , “PA Semi is going to do system-on-chips for iPhones and iPods.”

64GB iPod Touch for $365…more

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It looks like Amazon is going for the jugular this year on Apple products.  They are matching or besting their MacMall/MacConnection/Clubmac brethren on Apple’s MacBooks, Minis, MacBook Pros and now iPod touches -without rebate or shipping hassles or charging tax (in many states).

Today, Amazon.com offers the new, 3rd-generation Apple iPod touch 64GB MP3 Player, model no. MC011LL/A, for $364.99. With free shipping, that’s the lowest total price we could find by $6. The new iPod touch models are now 50% faster, with support for Open GL | ES version 2.0.

Also, the  32GB touch is $275 and the 8GB version is $179.

Of note, pay with your Discover Card and Amazon drops another $10.

iPod nano radio tagging comes to the UK

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Some may recall the introduction of the all-new, camera-carrying iPod nano and its hot new feature – radio tagging of tracks played on its built-in FM radio for future purchase through iTunes.

This sounded great, but UK users had no radio channel offering support for the neat new feature – until now: Today, Absolute Radio became the first radio station in Europe to launch iTunes Tagging on the iPod Nano.

The new service was announced on the channel this morning, and will launch in London only via the station’s 105.8FM service, via a deal with Unique Interactive and Jump2Go.

How it works: When users hear a song they like on Absolute Radio on 105.8FM in London, they can simply tag it and then preview and purchase that song when they next sync to iTunes.

Simon Cole, CEO of UBC (the big brand behind the radio channel) said, “The use of radio as a prompt to purchase for music has been a vision of ours for the last three years. I’m really pleased to see much of the work we have put into developing IP in this area coming to fruition in our work with Absolute.  

“We are confident that tagging technologies are certain to be central to the broadcast model of the future. We are well positioned to benefit from this development.”

iPod nano

Forget Flash! Microsoft is building Silverlight for iPhone

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This one from BetaNews certainly caught us off guard.  If Apple is hesitant to let Flash come aboard the iPhone platform, they’d be insane to let Microsoft’s Silverlight aboard, right?

Interestingly, Apple and Microsoft have been working together, or at least communicating  on a iPhone port of Silverlight. 

“We did all the work…We just made sure Apple was comfortable with it.”

From the description of the concept, it doesn’t seem like Apple is actually changing much about the iPhone, nor the way it interacts with Web servers.  However, Microsoft, on their IIS servers is building a mechanism by which Silverlight video content, stored serverside, can be streamed along to the iPhone in a format that the iPhone can use.

In essence, they are just building a server-side workaround for video playback.  Much like Youtube videos, which show a link on the webpage then stream MP4 files to the iPhones video player.app  Microsoft User Experience Platform Manager Brian Goldfarb stated:

“We’re translating the content to support the MPEG2 v8 [decoder] format that the iPhone format; we’re moving it to their adaptive streaming format. So it’s the same IIS smooth streaming content, the same server, the same point of origin, but now I can get that content to play without any code changes, without any real work, on the iPhone. That’s the critical thing for our customers.”

While it might be easy just to blow this one off, we’d note that NetFlix is based on Silverlight and if what this Goldfarb character is saying is true, we could be mere months away from having a iPhone Netflix Mobile service.