Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Apple announces iPad


Apple announces iPad

New tablet splits difference between smartphones, laptops.

Today Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the iPad, the company's much-rumored tablet device.



Steve Jobs shows off Apple’s iPad on Wednesday.Demonstrating the iPad at an event in San Francisco, Jobs showed how it could be used for e-mail and Web browsing, viewing photos, managing calendars and contacts, listening to music, viewing video, and more. Senior Vice President Phil Schiller showed off a new version of iWork, specifically designed for the new device.
When the iPad begins shipping at the end of March, it will come in three sizes: A 16GB model for $499, a 32GB for $599, and a 64GB for $699. You'll be able to add 3G connectivity to each of them for $130 more.
The iPad looks like a supersized iPhone. It's a half-inch thick, weighs 1.5 pounds, and has a 9.7-inch LCD screen. It will use a custom-made 1GHz CPU and flash storage and, Jobs claimed, will get up to 10 hours of battery life.
For connectivity, in addition to the optional 3G, it has 802.11n, WiFi, and Bluetooth 2.1; it syncs to a Mac via USB. To feed those 3G connections, Jobs also announced two new cellular data plans from AT&T: $14.99 a month for 250MB of data, $29.99 a month for unlimited data; both are prepaid, neither requires a contract.
In addition to demoing the iPad's calendar, Web, and e-mail clients, Jobs also introduced a new app, called iBooks, which will manage e-books on the iPad. While crediting Amazon for its pioneering efforts with the Kindle, he announced that Apple was opening its own e-book store for the iPad. He said that Penguin, Harper-Collins, Hachette, Simon & Schuster, and other publishers were already signed up to supply titles. Those titles will use the ePub format—an open e-book standard.
Tthe iPad will also run third-party software. Senior Vice President Scott Forstall said that the tablet will run most existing iPhone apps unmodified, right out of the box. Those apps can run at their existing size in a black box or can be doubled to run in full-screen mode. Apple is also making a software development kit available to developers, to help create apps specifically for the new device. To demonstrate what vendors could do with those tools, Forstall introduced representatives from Gameloft, Electronic Arts, the New York Times, and MLB.com to show off iPad apps they'd already built.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Check out the new App for the Iphone and Itouch

Today, MobileMe introduced a new Gallery app for iPhone and iPod touch. The app features iPhone- and iPod touch-optimized controls and beautiful gallery displays that make browsing photos and videos easier and more interactive than ever before. The Gallery app is free for MobileMe members and available now on the App Store in iTunes.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Top 10 Must Have Gadgets

1.Apple IPOD Touch: Though the updates are subtle, the third-generation iPod Touch leaves its competitors in the dust.
2. Asus Eee PC 1005HA: Asus hits nearly all the marks in the 1005HA, the latest version of its iconic Eee PC, highlighted by a 6-hour-plus battery life.
3. Flip Untra HD: The Flip Video UltraHD may not be the sexiest mini camcorder out there, but it offers a respectable feature set and some of the best video we've seen from this type of cheap, YouTube-friendly camcorder.
4. HTC Hero: While it could use a boost in the performance department, the HTC Hero is the most feature-packed Google Android device to date, bringing some notable improvements and a highly customizable interface.
5. LG enV Touch: The LG enV Touch's combination of great design and top-notch features makes it one of the top Verizon Wireless phones we've ever seen.
6. Logitech Harmony One: While it's missing an RF option, Logitech's Harmony One is one of the best--if not the best--universal remote we've ever tested.
7. Logitech Squeezebox Boom: The Logitech Squeezebox Boom is the best all-in-one tabletop Wi-Fi radio we've seen to date.
8. Monster Terbine Pro In-Ear Speaker:  The Monster Turbine Pro earphones offer a sleek and stylish design and plenty of deep, thumping bass. If you have money to burn, these are a nice choice.
9. Nitendo DSi: While not all previous DS owners should upgrade, the DSi is an ambitious and solidly designed portable gaming system.
10. Panasonic TC-P50G10: With excellent picture quality marred by only a couple of flaws, the Panasonic TC-PG10 series sits near the head of the class of 2009.

Safari vs. Chrome


I’ve been following the news and reviews of Google’s new web browser, Chrome.
Chrome is actually based on the same browsing engine that powers Safari, an open source project called WebKit. WebKit isn't a complete browser; it’s a rendering engine used by popular browser applications, including Safari, KHTML, and now Chrome.
Chrome looks to be an excellent browser, one I may very well use as my default browser in Windows once it exits beta testing. One thing I noticed right off was that Google has tweaked the JavaScript engine used in Chrome to produce incredibly speedy results from web sites that use JavaScript. Google wants fast JavaScript capabilities because it wants Chrome to be the browser for choice for individuals who use Google-based services, which use a lot of JavaScript.
Handling JavaScript-heavy web sites is one area where Safari could use a good tuneup. So I decided to test Safari against Chrome on Google's JavaScript test site. This site only tests how quickly a browser can run Google's JavaScript tests; it's not indicative of how fast a browser actually performs. Still, it was an interesting comparison. The JavaScript test site uses five tests to check various types of JavaScript performance.
Here are the results of my test of Safari 3.1.2 and Chrome, on a 2.4 GHz IMac.
  • Overall score: 1592/3719
  • Richards: 3272/3914
  • DeltaBlue: 1880/3914
  • Crypto: 2590/3144
  • RayTrace: 2665/5789
  • EarleyBoyer: 2469/6655
  • RegExp: 857/972
  • Splay: 289/5657
As you can see, Chrome, which is heavily optimized for JavaScript, left Safari in the dust, at least when it comes to running JavaScript. Most banking sites and many online services, such as web-based email and other web-based applications, use JavaScript.

All I can say is I hope Apple decides to give Safari a JavaScript tuneup in the near future.