MacJournal

Google snubs Adobe with non-Flash Pac-Man tribute that’s playable on iPhone, iPad

“Google dealt a snub to Adobe on Friday with a tribute to the 30th anniversary of Pac-Man,” Electronista reports.

“Despite sharing stage time with Adobe just this week, a playable version of Pac-Man on the page works with both the iPad and iPhone – revealing that it’s not using Flash,” Electronista reports. “Apple’s phones and other touchscreen devices instead use swipe gestures to steer the classic arcade game.”

Electronista reports, “Although it goes without a plugin, it still includes most features of the Namco original.”

Full article here.

May 23, 2010   No Comments

Netbook Killer: Apple’s revolutionary iPad destroying the netbook business

“There’s an interesting chart in a report to clients issued early Thursday morning by Morgan Stanley’s Katy Huberty,” Philip Elmer-DeWitt reports for Fortune.

“What caught my eye, however, was what her proprietary research shows about the impact of the iPad and other tablets on the broader gadget market, starting with netbooks. As her chart shows, sales growth of these low-cost, low-powered computing devices peaked last summer at an astonishing 641% year-over-year growth rate,” Elmer-DeWitt reports. “It fell off a cliff in January and shrank again in April — collateral damage, according to Huberty, from the January introduction and April launch of the iPad.”

Source: MacDailyNews

May 7, 2010   No Comments

64GB Apple iPad 3G microwaved for 18 minutes (with video)

dOvetastic Microwave Theater thought it would be a good idea to microwave a brand new iPad Wi-Fi + 3G 64GB unit, vidoetape it, and post it on YouTube.

For your viewing pleasure:

Direct link to video via YouTube here.

May 6, 2010   No Comments

Bill Gates on Apple iPad: ‘It’s okay’

Phil Bronstein sat down with Bill gates for an interview for The San Francisco Chronicle. One question and answer caught our attention:

Bronstein: You once said Steve Jobs could see the next big thing. Do you like the iPad?

Gates: It’s okay. The scenarios aren’t that clear. But it’s good looking. [Steve Jobs] does good design, and [the iPad] is absolutely a good example of that.

Full article, mainly about Facebook and Twitter, here.

April 22, 2010   No Comments

In first 10 days, Apple iPad online usage share approaches BlackBerry, Android

“In its first 10 days, Apple’s iPad has captured almost as much online usage share as the BlackBerry or Google’s Android operating system, a Web metrics firm said,” Gregg Keizer reports for IDG News Service.

“According to data from Aliso Viejo, Calif.-based NetApplications.com, the iPad’s share has averaged 0.03% since April 3, the day Apple started selling the media tablet,” Keizer reports. “Research In Motion’s BlackBerry, for example, had a usage share of 0.04% for the month of March. Android, meanwhile, accounted for the same figure, split evenly between Android 1.5 and Android 1.6, NetApplications said.”

Keizer reports, “But the iPad can’t hold a candle to Apple’s older mobile siblings. By NetApplications’ count, Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch devices have a combined share of 0.6%, about 20 times larger than the iPad’s.”

Full article here.

Source: MacDailyNews

April 16, 2010   No Comments

T3 reviews iPad: Apple has just redefined computing, making it accessible for everyone

“Before you get stuck into our review, consider these questions: how many people do you know that are still confused by computers, and what do you think the majority of the population actually use a computer for?” Luke Peters asks for T3.

“Apple’s new 1GHz A4 processor allows apps, multimedia and screen transitions to fly. Playing back a HD episode of Doctor Who, downloaded from iTunes, motion is fast, without judder and free of lag or distortion when rotating the screen. With its superb, LED-backlit, richly coloured screen, it’s a slicker, quicker experience than the iPod Touch or iPhone,” Peters reports. “It feels like a computer, not a phone or PMP.”

“Reading books, papers and magazines on the iPad is an enjoyable experience. The brightness and colour of the screen can be adjusted to suit your preference, and it’s definitely easier on the eyes than we initially feared,” Peters reports. “Typing on the iPad is better than expected – in fact this entire review was written on it. Lie the device flat, rotate the screen to landscape and you’ll be able to rattle off text very quickly.”

Peters reports, “What most people use computers for is to communicate, browse the web and view photos, videos and literature. The iPad lets anyone – you, your kids, your mum and dad – do all that. Although there’s no news on UK pricing yet, it’s eminently affordable ($499 in the US for the 16GB version) incredibly easy to use and has a size, heft and quality that set it apart from the netbooks, smartphones and PMPs it superficially resembles. In our opinion, Apple hasn’t just created the first home tablet worth having. It’s actually redefined computing, boiling it down to essentials and making it accessible for everyone.”

Full review here.

Source: MacDailyNews

April 14, 2010   No Comments

Apple iPad flies through airport security

“The iPad, as Steve Jobs told us from his comfy leather chair at Macworld, represents a new computing form factor that falls squarely between the laptop and the smartphone,” Andy Greenberg reports for Forbes. “Which raises a curious problem for the Transportation Security Administration: Is the iPad a ‘laptop’ that must be taken out of a bag and put through a scanner separately? Or does it fall into some other, less bomb-like category of gadget that can slip through security hidden in your briefcase?”

“The answer, according to Altimeter Group technology analyst Charlene Li, seems to be another point in the iPad’s favor,” Greenberg reports. “As she wrote in her Twitter feed today, Li took a flight with her iPad in tow and discovered that she wasn’t required to pull it out of her bag in the security line.”

Greenberg reports, “The TSA seems to draw a fairly fuzzy line between what does and doesn’t qualify as a computer capable of hiding a bomb. Li says a Kindle doesn’t count, but a netbook does, and so does an XBOX… Given these shades of semantics, we’ve put in a call to the TSA for the whole story about the iPad’s airport security status.”

Full article here.

Source: MacDailyNews

April 6, 2010   No Comments

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