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Rupert loves iPad, hates Google..thinks larger iPads are coming?

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Everyone’s favorite media mogul, Rupert Murdoch, had some kind words for Apple’s iPad and some harsh words for Google’s search engine (at the begining of the clip). Steve Jobs seems to have won him over as THE way to deliver all of Rupert’s glorious content.

He also seems to think bigger iPads are coming?   Maybe

“The iPad will be pretty small to start with [makes hand gestures to the size of the current iPad] , but there will be more iPads

Apple-Google rivalry detailed

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The New York Times has a four page report on the deterioration of the Google-Apple relationship and specifically the relationship of their leadership.  It was recently reported that Steve Jobs hates Google’s CEO, Eric Schmidt.  The article is a great read with a lot of details on the recent spats between the companies.

Many of those meetings turned confrontational, according to people familiar with the discussions, with Mr. Jobs often accusing Google of stealing iPhone features. Google executives said that Android

HP and Adobe showcase Flash on the Slate device

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HP has a new product called the Slate that will be released “sometime this year”.  Steve Ballmer briefly showcased the device at CES running the Kindle application.  It didn’t impress many people, and that was before the iPad was announced.

Clearly, the one obvious advantage that it has over the iPad is its ability to play Adobe Flash and Air media. This isn’t lost on HP or Adobe which have put together this video: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-p-RZAwQq0E&w=700&h=400] Here’s the HP Slate techno remix:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3MSjwUrxT0&w=700&h=400]

They couldn’t even get the gestures to work properly using CG.

HP via DF

Pundits question Apple's decision to sue HTC

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Not everyone in the Apple camp is happy with Apple’s decision to sue HTC.

Here’s Wil Shipley’s thoughtful Open Letter to Steve Jobs concerning the HTC lawsuit.  

John Gruber from Daring Fireball says: “If you can’t beat ’em, sue ’em”.  That applies to Nokia and it applies to Apple.

And below, here’s Steve Jobs back before he was surrounded by lawyers, who might have also disagreed with 2010 Apple:[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CW0DUg63lqU&w=700&h=500]

Why didn't Apple sue Google?

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Apple is using (and touting) too much of Google’s technology at the moment to sue Google by name.  By suing Google’s most prominent handset partner, they are isolating Android rather than Google as a whole.  Can you imagine Apple touting Google technologies in their presentations (They do it often) while there is a huge public lawsuit going on between the two companies at the same time?

Is Google too important for Apple to sue?  Maybe, but I have a feeling that Apple would like to have its own Maps applications sooner rather than later.

At the iPad event last month, Steve Jobs touted Google’s mapping back end as the heart of the iPad’s Maps application.  Also skip ahead to 23:00 for more Google Maps and Youtube luvin’.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tw8tljgZ30A&w=700&h=400]

Apple pressures labels to abandon Amazon Daily Deal

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Ed Christman at Billboard contends that Apple is pressuring the record labels not to deal with Amazon and their Daily Deal, which allows users to purchase the album at a reduced price one day before it is generally released (on iTunes).

“When that happened,” the executive says, “iTunes said, ‘Enough of that shit.’ “

Sources say that iTunes representatives have been urging labels to rethink their participation in the Amazon promotion and that they have backed up those warnings by withdrawing marketing support for certain releases featured as Daily Deals.

In response, label executives at Capitol, Capitol Nashville and Jive recently opted against participating in Daily Deal promotions they had been considering for Corinne Bailey Rae

Why doesn't Apple get Intel's best chips anymore?

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What happened to Intel and Apple?  Intel CEO Paul Otellini used to pop up at Apple presentations with his clean room suit and pal around with Steve Jobs like they were best buds. Apple was always the first one to get new Intel chips, often before they were even announced officially.  Heck, Intel even built a special low-power processor for the first MacBook Air that no PC vendor could ever get their hands on.  That was then, this is now.

Today, HP unveiled a glorified netbook with a Core i7 Processor.  It has a 12-inch screen and weighs 3 pounds.  Somehow they got a Core i7 in there but Apple is unable to release a Core i7 MacBook Pro.  Intel’s Core iX lineup is on mainstream PC laptops but not on even the highest end $2500 Apple MacBook Pros. 

And for workstations?  You can make a faster Mac Pro by buying an off-the-shelf Intel processor that Apple doesn’t offer even in the $10,000 configuration

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

Adobe to announce a new Creative Suite application at conference?

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Adobe might be launching a new product at a print production conference later this month:

Listed as an ‘Adobe Technology Preview’ by Noha Edell, business development manager for cross media publishing solutions at Adobe, the site for the Emerge conference in San Antonio on April 21-22 says that “Adobe will unveil a brand new application as part of its signature suite [CS5] of services. Be among the first to see why this is sure to surprise even the most

Mifi+iPad beats 3G iPad – here’s why

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What can we say about this?  Apple doesn’t seem to want to build in 3G to their laptops and AT&T won’t allow tethering on the iPhone or iPad (without some ‘modifications’).  So what’s a Mac user to do when they want Internet access on the road?

There are a few options out there, but I’ve been using a Verizon Mifi card for the last six months and think that this might be the way to go for Internet connectivity for all devices.  In fact, I think it was the most important new product introduced last yearDavid Pogue from the New York Times humbly agrees with me.

How it works: Basically it takes a 3G signal (in my case, a very reliable Verizon one but Sprint has a veeery interesting 4G Mifi-type device) and routes that into a Wifi access point that allows up to five connections.  The whole aparatus is the size of about 25 playing cards and lasts for about four hours continuously connected and about a day on standby (you can buy huge batteries or USB power adapters to make this almost infinite).  The cost is $40/month for 250MB of data or $60/month for 5GB (the device is free with a plan) –About $20 more/month than the iPad’s AT&T plans.

But, I’ll be able to connect my MacBook Pro and iPhone (for AT&T#FAIL) as well as my Wife’s/friends’/colleagues’ devices and only have to pay the carrier one time, where AT&T wants you to pay a seperate ‘unlimited’ fee for every device you use.

Now, Apple has introduced the iPad, and with it a seemingly-reasonable $15-$30 month AT&T plan.  But if you are already paying for 3G access on your MacBook and your iPhone, why would you want to pay for yet another wireless plan?

If you have a laptop and an iPad and want them both to use 3G, it is cost effective to get an Mifi…and it just got a bit better.

Novatel, who make the Wifi, have a new version coming out in a few months with GPS built-in.  This brings a few solutions to a few problems.  The iPad Wifi-only also doesn’t have a GPS unit built-in so this would make a great companion product for that, basically giving it all of the features of the iPad 3G — if Apple let’s the iPad interface with the Novatel GPS.

Additionally, I see this as a boon for camera enthusiasts who like tagging their photos with GPS coordinates and seeing them in iLife.  Camera manufacturers have been slow to adapt to GPS tagging but many have found the solution in the Eye-Fi SD card product.  This, along with automatically uploading pictures to many online services, tags photos with sometimes accurate GPS coordinates based on Wifi locations it detects when the shots are taken.  EyeFi is working with Novatel to allow the two products to work in concert to give accurate GPS tags and instant uploading of pictures (and video).  A very cool concept –especially for those who want to geotag professional shots on cameras with SD Cards like the Canon Rebel Ti1.

The Verizon Mifi also works with VoIP products like Skype and Google’s upcoming Google Voice with Gizmo5 integration, so technically I can finally dump my all-but-useless AT&T voice plan and go VoIP all over on a network with higher reliability.

So, before you plunk down for that 3G iPad, you might want to consider going Mifi instead (and getting your iPad a month earlier).

 

 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5wSgWFh2ug&w=700&h=400]

HP Slate to undercut iPad in price, Microsoft still working on Courier

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The WSJ has a quick roundup of the tablet space with some interesting tidbits.  One, HP let Steve Ballmer “show off” their Slate computer at CES but waited for Apple to announce pricing so they could  tweak their pricing to make their product competitive.  They compare to the $629 3G iPad model, so it is assumed that the HP device will have 3G.

Interestingly, since the device will be running Windows 7, it will need PC internals, probably those of a Netbook (Intel Atom Processor) which typically run at higher prices than the ARM chips that the iPad is based on.

The Journal also mentions that Microsoft is still hammering away at their “secret” Courier device which Gizmodo profiled last year in videos and still images of all sorts.

Dell skipped the big tablet space and is instead going after the “big iPod touch” space with its Mini 5 which will be running Android.

But with Apple’s iPad a month away and costing much less than anyone had anticipated,  Apple clearly has the upper hand.

Wired Tablet profiled, questions about iPad remain

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Wired today offers an update on their tablet work from their earlier concepts.  While they say that they are designing for the iPad and iPhone, they’ve created this product on Adobe Air from the same Adobe InDesign files they use to create their award-winning magazine.   If it isn’t obvious by now, Apple isn’t going to allow Adobe Air or Flash on the iPad.  They say:

Although the Wired Reader starts as an AIR app, Adobe has created tools that allow us to easily convert it for major tablet and mobile platforms. In Barcelona this week, Adobe announced that AIR would run on Android, and Adobe has already announced its Packager for iPhone tool that will allow Flash apps (including AIR) to run on Apple mobile platforms. And AIR already runs natively on Mac, Windows and Linux operating systems.

So is Adobe offering some magical Adobe Air to iPad conversion tool?  It isn’t out of the realm of possibility, since they’ve got a Flash CS5-> iPhone app exporter already in production.

http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9/56328629001?isVid=1&isUI=1&publisherID=1564549380