Tag Archives: MacWorld
Apple launches iTunes Match in the UK

Carrying around your entire music library just got a little bit easier for those of us in the UK, as Apple late Thursday began rolling out iTunes Match to countries beyond the United States and Brazil.
The music-matching and storage service was first teased at Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference in June before launching in mid-November for US users. At the time, Apple said that support for international users would come before the end of the year. Sure enough, Apple began rolling out the service on Tuesday to Brazil with the launch of the country’s iTunes Store.
via MacWorld UK
Apple iCloud Beta in Video

A developer has posted a helpful first look video outlining iCloud beta, released yesterday to devs.
As far as I can tell, most functionality is in and this beta is very close to the public release. The UI seamlessly blends elements of OS X Lion and iOS, using iOS-style alert pop-ups, but the look of Lion iCal for example. See the video for a sneak peek. Thanks to YouTube user helpfulmactips2010 for posting.
This is the new iCloud beta released by apple.
via MacWorld, MacRumors and iPhoneHacks
What does iCloud mean for MobileMe subscribers?
When Apple introduced its iCloud wireless data sync service Monday, many MobileMe subscribers were left scratching their heads, wondering what it would all mean for them.
Here are some of the facts—and, where clear answers don’t yet exist, educated guesses—you should know as a current MobileMe member.
- If you’re a MobileMe user, you probably know the various parts that make up the service. iCloud will offer some of the same features as MobileMe (contact, calendar, and e-mail sync), but not all, and it will add new features, as well. And yes, that means MobileMe will cease to exist.
- When the time comes, you’ll be able to convert your MobileMe account into an iCloud account. Apple’s MobileMe transition document says “When iCloud becomes available this fall, more details and instructions will be provided on how to make the move.” Although iCloud will be in full swing this fall (at the same time that iOS 5 ships) existing MobileMe services will continue to work until June 30, 2012.
- If you’ve recently purchased a boxed update and haven’t used the code yet, or have an unused code in your account, you may be eligible for a refund. Apple has posted a support doc detailing how the process works. You can also request a pro-rate refund for the remaining portion of your subscription. For everyone else, Apple has extended your MobileMe subscription until June 30, 2012—after which MobileMe becomes as extinct as iTools and .Mac before it.
- According to an e-mail Apple sent out on Monday, when you sign up for iCloud, you’ll be able to keep your MobileMe e-mail address. In addition, everyone eligible for iCloud is now eligible for a free e-mail address ending in @me.com.
- If you’re wondering what will happen to MobileMe features such as Galleries, iDisk, Backup, Back To My Mac, and Find My iPhone, it’s hard to say. When Apple talks about the future of MobileMe and iCloud, none of these features are mentioned. But as for Find My iPhone, earlier this year Apple made it free for owners of new iOS devices. Apple has recently updated Find My iPhone, so Apple clearly thinks it’s still worthwhile. We certainly expect it to stick around.
Live Update: WWDC 2011 keynote address
Steve Jobs takes the stage to kick off the 2011 Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday. And as always, the Macworld team will be on hand to report on all the Apple news and product announcements.
Follow along with our blow-by-blow account of the WWDC keynote in our live blog. Coverage begins at 10 a.m. PT on Monday, June 6.
From MacWorld
http://www.macworld.com/article/160229/2011/06/live_update.html?lsrc=newsalert
From AppleInsider
Apple releases Xcode 4
Now available in the Mac App Store
Apple has officially released version 4 of Xcode, the integrated development environment designed to help developers write apps for Mac OS X and iOS.
Xcode 4 was rewritten completely from scratch and features a significant number of changes from its predecessor, many of which are aimed at improving the workflow that developers use to program apps on the company’s two operating systems.
In another break with tradition, however, the company has chosen to also make the IDE available to the general public through the Mac App Store, where it can be purchased for the modest sum of £2.99. Xcode 4, which is a hefty 4.24GB download, requires Mac OS X 10.6.6.
via Macworld UK.
Apple "iPad 2" Video snuck out of CES 2011
The very first video of what an Apple iPad 2 will look like, based on the dummy iPad 2s given to accessory manufacturers, including a front facing camera, large speaker grill, thinner design and angled edges to the aluminium back.
via MacWorld UK
Windows 95 On An iPad, a sign of the apocalypse?
It’s one of the signs of the apocalypse.
In This Video, I Will Show How To Install Windows 95 And 3.1 On An iPad Using The Free Bochs Emulator. This Requires Jailbreak. Video Featured On TUAW Wired & Cult Of Mac! For Anybody Wondering, You Cannot Use This With Wi-Fi, There Is No Sound Driver Detected, And You Can’t Summon Up The Virtual Keyboard.
MSComputerVideos
Steve Jobs sending emails – and he’s not happy
Chelsea Isaacs’ (a journalism student at Long Island University) first email to Steve Jobs at 3.22pm (EDT) on Thursday 16 September with Isaacs’s first email to Jobs.
Subject: Re: Mr. Jobs – Student Journalist Concerned about Apple’s MediaRelations Dept.
Dear Mr. Jobs,”
As a college student, I can honestly say that Apple has treated me very well; my iPod is basically the lifeline that gets me through the day, and thanks to Apple’s Final Cut Pro, I aced last semester’s video editing project. I was planning to buy a new Apple computer to add to my list of Apple favorites. Because I have had such good experiences as a college student using Apple products, I was incredibly surprised to find Apple’s Media Relations Department to be absolutely unresponsive to my questions, which (as I had repeatedly told them in voicemail after voicemail) are vital to my academic grade as a student journalist.
For my journalism course, I am writing an article about the implementation of an iPad program at my school, the CW Post Campus of Long Island University.
The completion of this article is crucial to my grade in the class, and it may potentially get published in our university’s newspaper. I had 3 quick questions regarding iPads, and wanted to obtain answers from the most credible source: Apple’s Media Relations Department. I have called countless times throughout the week, leaving short, but detailed, messages which included my contact information and the date of my deadline. Today, I left my 6th message, which stressed the increasingly more urgent nature of the situation. It is now the end of the business day, and I have not received a call back. My deadline is tomorrow.
Mr. Jobs, I humbly ask why Apple is so wonderfully attentive to the needs of students, whether it be with the latest, greatest invention or the company’s helpful customer service line, and yet, ironically, the Media Relations Department fails to answer any of my questions which are, as I have repeatedly told them, essential to my academic performance.
For colleges nationwide, Apple is at the forefront of improving the way we function in the academic environment, increasing the efficiency of conducting academic research, as well as sharing and communicating with our college communities. With such an emphasis on advancing our education system, why, then, has Apple’s Media Relations team ignored my needs as a student journalist who is just trying to get a good grade?
In addition to the hypocrisy of ignoring student needs when they represent a company that does so much for our schools, the Media Relations reps are apparently, also failing to responsibly handle the inquiries of professional journalists on deadlines. Unfortunately, for a journalist in the professional world, lacking the answers they need on deadline day won’t just cost them a grade; it could cost them their job.
Thank you very much for your time and consideration.
Sincerely,
Chelsea Kate Isaacs, Senior, CW Post – Long Island University
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
The answer pings back at 16:19 (57 minutes later):
From: Steve Jobs [address and header confirmed - CA]
To: Chelsea Isaacs
Subject: Re: Mr. Jobs – Student Journalist Concerned about Apple’s Media Relations Dept.
Our goals do not include helping you get a good grade. Sorry.
Sent from my iPhone
Gathering herself, Chelsea emails back at 4.37 (she’s taken 18 minutes over this):
Thank you for your reply. I never said that your goal should be to “help me get a good grade.” Rather, I politely asked why your media relations team does not respond to emails, which consequently, decreases my chances of getting a good grade. But, forget about my individual situation; what about common courtesy, in general — if you get a message from a client or customer, as an employee, isn’t it your job to return the call? That’s what I always thought. But I guess that’s not one of your goals. Yes, you do have a creative approach, indeed.
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Is she slightly annoyed? Yes, I think that might be the case.
Back comes the response at 17.10 (33 minutes, if you’re counting)
From: Steve Jobs
To: Chelsea Isaacs
Subject: Re: Mr. Jobs – Student Journalist Concerned about Apple’s Media Relations Dept.
Nope. We have over 300 million users and we can’t respond to their requests unless they involve a problem of some kind. Sorry.
Sent from my iPhone
And at 5.32 (22 minutes later) Chelsea has her answer:
You’re absolutely right, and I do meet your criteria for being a customer who deserves a response:
1. I AM one of your 300 million users.
2. I DO have a problem; I need answers that only Apple Media Relations can answer.
Now, can they kindly respond to my request (my polite and friendly voice can be heard in the first 5 or 10 messages in their inbox). Please, I am on deadline.
I appreciate your help.
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Long pause. Perhaps he’s contacting the PR people, having realised that Isaacs only has three questions, that they’re about iPads, and that the media relations people might be able to sort it out.
Ya think?
At 18.27, just under an hour since Isaacs’s last email, comes the final reply:
From: Steve Jobs
To: Chelsea Isaacs
Subject: Re: Mr. Jobs – Student Journalist Concerned about Apple’s MediaRelations Dept.
Please leave us alone.
Sent from my iPhone
taken from Steve Jobs: not what you’d call helpful to a trainee journalist on MacWorld
Apple’s new developer terms: Flash is Back!
Apple says it doesn’t want more fart apps, but the iOS maker’s relaxing of developer rules could let previously blacklisted apps and services back onto the iPhone. Chief among the items that could be resurrected are apps such as GV Mobile, advertising platforms that compete with Apple’s iAds, and cross-development platform tools such as those made by Adobe and Oracle. Here’s a look at what might be headed back to the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch under Apple’s new iOS Developer License.
Google Voice: In (maybe)
Adobe Creative Suite 5: In (including App developed using Flash)
AdMob: In
(New) Fart Apps: Out
Porn Apps: Still Out
Satire: In (but no amateur hour)
read more on MacWorld UK
The Statement from Apple below
Statement by Apple on App Store Review Guidelines
The App Store℠ has revolutionized the way mobile applications are developed and distributed. With over 250,000 apps and 6.5 billion downloads, the App Store has become the world’s largest mobile application platform and App Store developers have earned over one billion dollars from the sales of their apps.
We are continually trying to make the App Store even better. We have listened to our developers and taken much of their feedback to heart. Based on their input, today we are making some important changes to our iOS Developer Program license in sections 3.3.1, 3.3.2 and 3.3.9 to relax some restrictions we put in place earlier this year.
In particular, we are relaxing all restrictions on the development tools used to create iOS apps, as long as the resulting apps do not download any code. This should give developers the flexibility they want, while preserving the security we need.
In addition, for the first time we are publishing the App Store Review Guidelines to help developers understand how we review submitted apps. We hope it will make us more transparent and help our developers create even more successful apps for the App Store.
The App Store is perhaps the most important milestone in the history of mobile software. Working together with our developers, we will continue to surprise and delight our users with innovative mobile apps.
