Apple Announcement Roundup: iPhone 5, New iPod Touch, iPod Nano, EarPods

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Apple’s conference was full of small and big announcements and very dense. Between the announcements of the iPhone 5 and the updated iPod line-up, it is hard to keep track of all the details. It is now time to look back and read our coverage of what Apple showed to the press today.

The iPhone 5

Of course, the biggest announcement was the unveiling of the iPhone 5. The rumors were true — the device sports a 4-inch display, comes with a new dock connector called Lightning (adapters are available), LTE and 802.11n dual-channel 5GHz Wi-Fi and a nano-SIM slot.

It will be available on September 21 for $199 for 16GB, $299 for 32GB or $399 for 64GB — pre-orders open on Friday. Previous iPhone models will be sold at $99 or even given away with a two-year contract. Read the hands-on and watch Apple’s video.

New iPod Touch

The iPod Touch was updated as well to keep the device on par with the latest iPhone. It uses the same 4-inch screen and powerful system on a chip but is at the same time the thinnest and lightest iPod Touch ever produced. Like the iPod Nano, the device now comes with several color options — grey, black, blue, green, and red. Read all the details and the hands-on.

New iPod nano

The iPod nano was updated as well with a bigger screen. Once again, the iPod nano is Apple’s playground for testing new designs. They are not afraid of changing everything with each generation. Read all the information and our hands-on.

EarPods

EarPods are the new Apple earbuds. An update was highly overdue and it’s available now. If you want to know how they sound, read our first impressions after trying them.

Software

iOS 6 will be available for iPhone and iPod Touch owners on September 19. Even though we already knew a lot about the new operating system, new features were announced, such as panoramic photos and time-shifted GameCenter. But the most important changes are under the hood. Unoptimized apps will run letterboxed. Read about Facebook integration.

On the desktop, iTunes will be completely redesigned with iCloud built-in and Ping was quietly killed.

Numbers

As with every keynote, Apple gave us a few impressive numbers to make the company shine. It sold 84 million iPads, 400 million iOS devices and more laptops than any other manufacturer. 83 million people visited at least one of the 380 Apple retail stores in the world. 700,000 apps are now available in the App Store. Even more important, 90 percent of them are downloaded every month.

But don’t take our word for it and watch the video of the event and see what Jim Dalrymple, John Gruber and others had to say.


Ezbob Launches Microfinancing Service For UK Online Sellers To Compete With Iwoca

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Ezbob is a new microfinancing company for online merchants which launches this week in the UK. It makes working credit of up to £20,000 available instantly to eBay and Amazon Marketplace sellers through automated underwriting. In this space there is Iwoca in the UK, but they only cater to ebay sellers. Ezbob covers both eBay and Amazon, a more more difficult ‘nut’ to crack. In the US, Ezbob would be similar to Kabbage, which has yet to scale internationally.

Founded by two Israeli entrepreneurs in 2011, Ezbob is the trading name of Orange Money, a privately-held UK company, which received angel funding last year and recently completed its Series A funding round. In the seed round, Ezbob raised £450,000 from Extreme Credit Systems. The Series A round raised £1.5 million from Keren Hagshama and £500,000 from high net worth individuals.

CEO and Co-founder, Tomer Guriel says Ezbob is aimed at small e-retailers typically with under £1 million in annual turnover, for whom securing funding from traditional sources can be challenging. According to IMRG (Interactive Media in Retail Group) UK e-retail sales in 2012 are estimated to reach £77billion, and e-retail now accounts for 17 per cent of the total UK retail market.


Apple’s New Lightning Connector: What It Does And Doesn’t Change

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Apple changed its long-standing 30-pin dock connector out for an 8-pin new standard called Lightning. But what does that actually mean for users? Well the advantages are mostly passed on through hardware design — not necessarily around performance.

Here’s the skinny: Apple made claims on-stage about improved speed and reliability, thanks to an “eight-signal, all-digital” hardware design. The speed could be better, but this is still based on USB 2.0 specs, not 3.0 or Thunderbolt. That means gains will be modest, not magical. And given that Apple recently made sure that its latest notebooks all have USB 3.0, that seems strange.

But it isn’t that bizarre, really. Apple would have had to do significant redesigns on the inside of the iPhone itself to make that change, and that would have cost more money and affected margins. Engadget senior columnist and long-time mobile industry analyst Ross Rubin told me via email that, while USB 3.0 seems like a logical way to go, that likely won’t happen for a while yet, but is probably an easy switch in terms of the tech in the cabling itself.

“Particularly with the iPad being used as a video storage device and the growing video resolutions of cameras on the iPhone, a speed bump in throughput would have been welcome,” he offered via email. “The USB 2.0 speeds are likely a limitation of the iPhone 5 and not Lightning per se as it’s unlikely Apple would launch an architecture that would lock us to that speed for the next few years.”

Durability also seems like an advantage to Lightning, Apple says, since it has a design with much less of a ridge where cable meets connector, a common breakage point on 30-pin cables. But overall, this isn’t about delivering a better sync or charge experience for users, it’s about the same thing the nano-SIM is: saving space inside the case to allow for thinner, more lightweight designs and larger batteries. In fact, as Apple SVP Phil Schiller told AllThingsD, making an iPhone this thin with the existing dock connector wasn’t physically possible.

Before now, the iPhone’s design has been limited quite a bit by the 30-pin connector architecture. Now design decisions can be dictated by other factors, which obviously has benefits for consumers. For instance the horizontal size of the 30-pin dock connector is at least three or four times the width of the new connector. In a game where millimeters count for a lot, that’s a huge amount of extra room to play with.

Another thing Apple talked about was that the connector works no matter how you plug it in, so there’s definitely some upside in terms of usability. And there are downsides, like the fact that the dock adapter doesn’t support either video or iPod Out, according to Apple’s official specs (Lightning itself does support the same kind of media I/O as the 30-pin connector, however).

Lightning has a trade name that evokes its speedier, low-latency cousin Thunderbolt, but it’s a necessary step based on design decisions, not something designed to push the envelope on user experience. That said, the tangential benefits it makes possible are considerable in themselves, so the short-term disadvantages in terms of ecosystem obsolescence are ultimately probably not a bad trade-off. And Schiller indicated to AllThingsD that it’s not going anywhere anytime soon, so at least we’ll have time to recover from the extreme trauma of the shift this time around.


30 Rock Becomes The Latest Example To “Go Google”

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The “Go Google” campaign is aimed at companies who want to adopt collaborative software on the cloud in their work environments. Basically, to get away from installing software like Microsoft Word and the like. I’m a fan of the Hall and Oates one.

There have been a few fun videos to demo the capabilities of collaborative Google Apps, but this one is pretty darn good. It uses the show “30 Rock” as an example, and it certainly makes a case for “Going Google”:

With recent additions like Hangout integration for Calendars, you can set up a weekly meeting with no need to do anything other than click “Join Hangout.” These are tools that Google has been using internally for years, and it’s safe to say that it’s well dog-fooded for the rest of us.

Do you use Google in the workplace? What have your experiences been like? For me, personally, I can’t imagine ever installing a piece of professional software again.

[Photo Credit: Flickr]


Shiny New iPhone > Impending Military Conflict

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Our national fixation with shiny new Apple gadgets has overshadowed impending military action in Libya for the killing of an American diplomat. If CNN’s public “news pulse” is any indication, iPhone 5 news was more than twice as popular as an international crisis that has our Commander-in-Chief sending two Navy destroyers armed with Tomahawk missiles off the coast of Libya. “It is a sad, sad commentary on our nation when #apple is trending higher than #libya,” tweeted army officer and author Jessica Scott.

Apple mania has also buried the fact that House of Representatives has approved “Sweeping, Warrantless Electronic Spy Powers,” extending the controversial post-9/11 Bush wiretapping law that allows federal authorities to listen in on Americans without a warrant. Senator Ron Wyden, an early opponent of the Stop Online Piracy Act, has put a hold on a matching bill in the Senate against the wishes of President Obama.

House passed extension of FISA bit.ly/LgvhIT Hey, tech press: what’s > important: new #iPhone5 or govt ability to tap it w/o warrant?

— Alex Howard (@digiphile) September 12, 2012

So, we might be embroiled in another foreign conflict without 4th Amendment privacy protections. But, hey, the new iPhone has a 4-inch screen. Oh, the iPhone also works over the blazing-fast LTE network. Wait…what country were we talking about again?


Don’t Take Our Word For It: Watch Apple’s Whole iPhone 5/iPod Event Yourself

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There’s little question that Apple knows how to put on a show, and barring some minor omissions (iPad mini, anyone?), Apple’s iPhone/iPod event was one for the books.

That said, only journalists and Apple’s own people were able to attend, but Apple has just posted the full video of its recently wrapped event so you too can see exactly what happened on-stage.

I feel a warning is in order though — you should make sure to block off a solid chunk of free time first. As usual, the video can be streamed from Apple’s events page, and there doesn’t appear to be any way to actually download it just yet. No worries though, it’s only a matter of time before the entire thing winds up on YouTube, at which point you’ll be able to use your preferred tool to save the file as needed. Until then, grab some popcorn and settle in — you’re in for a bit of a ride. And hey, if you’re really hard up for Apple-related video to watch after that, there’s always that nifty iPhone 5 introduction video to loop endlessly too.


Pick1 Raises $1 Million For Opinions Database

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Pick1 has raised $1 million from private investors for its opinions database and automated market research platform that serves as an open graph for opinions.

The investment is what the founders say represents a bridge round for future funding. It includes a $535,000 investment led by ChileGlobal Angels that brings the aggregated investment raised to date to $1 million. Among the investors are Oliver Flogel, former CEO of Telefonica Chile; Jordi Ferrer, former head of digital at TNS Global; Wilson Pais, head of innovation of Microsoft and Gonzalo Begazo, former Finance Manager of Google. The company is based in San Francisco but the founders, both from Italy, participated in StartupChile in the past year.

Pick1 has built a service that gives people the capability to get people’s opinions from Facebook and other sites to ask questions, get insights and take actions. In many respects it is a big data play that provides a way to query people on social networks and online. Company executives call it a “new undiscovered data set uniquely positioning itself as the “sweet spot” between market research and advertising.”

Pick1 makes it easy for companies to post questions. For instance, a customer can use a Facebook mobile app that includes a module for asking questions. Responses are real-time.

The real opportunity for Pick1 seems to be its ability to build an opinions database. The Pick1 technology makes it simple to see what preferences people have for any variety of topics. Customers are now starting to purchase data related to those topics. One of the possibilities is to sell data to media agencies that Pick1 collects.

Customers pay for the data they collect. Pricing starts as low as 5 cents per question.

Competitors that Pick1 face include Peanut Labs and Ask Your Target Market.

Pick1′s biggest challenge is staying a step ahead of big data analytics companies that can provide similar forms of analysis. There are lots of companies vying in the analytics space. Several have significant investments.


The Loop’s Jim Dalrymple On Ecosystem: “Apple Got A Decade Head Start On Most People”

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Right after the Apple press conference, an all-star panel took the stage at TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco. Jim Dalrymple (The Loop), John Gruber (Daring Fireball), Tim Stevens (Engadget), MG Siegler (TechCrunch columnist) and Jason Snell (Macworld) told Darrell Etherington and the audience their first impressions of the new iPhone. Among the famous Apple writers, The Loop’s Dalrymple compared the situation of the new iPhone with competitors.

Even though Amazon may provide a good offer if or when they release a phone, Dalrymple said that “Apple got a decade head start on most people.”

In particular, when it comes to content, Apple has quietly built a big ecosystem for music, movies, apps and TV shows since the release of the first iPod and the launch of the iTunes Music Store.

John Gruber noted that “Amazon’s media ecosystem is almost completely U.S. only and a little bit in the U.K. whereas Apple has deals in around 100 countries.”

Apple is now capitalizing on its market advantage and is very careful with its most valuable product. In one of Apple’s promotional videos, Jony Ive said something interesting according to MG Siegler. Siegler summarized it by saying that “Apple can’t change things too drastically.”

When it comes to competing with the iPhone, many companies focus on hardware instead of software. Putting Android on a phone is often not enough when users want to buy music and movies. Google Play is an answer to those requests, but building a global integrated ecosystem takes years.

Click to view slideshow.


CloudFlare’s Exploding Growth: Half A Trillion Pageviews All-Time, 70B Monthlies, 600M Uniques

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CloudFlare, a San Francisco-based company that helps businesses protect their websites from security threats and boost their load times, got its start at TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2010, where it was a runner-up to Qwiki in the Startup Battlefield. Today, two years later, CloudFlare CEO and co-founder Matthew Prince took the stage again at Disrupt to give the crowd a status update.

Prince said that at Disrupt 2010, the judges had been concerned about whether or not the startup would be able to scale effectively — something that can be hard to demonstrate in a demo at a startup pitch competition. In spite of the early skepticism, CloudFlare has been able to hit scale pretty quickly. Prince said that CloudFlare is today providing security and speedy rendering for half a trillion pageviews — not an insignificant number.

To date, the company has raised $22 million in outside funding from New Enterprise Associates, Venrock and Pelion Venture Partners. They’ve also assisted the U.S. government formulate its Internet policy and has grown its base of websites to 500K+. Collectively, the startup now sees 70B pageviews per month and 600M uniques — more traffic per month than Instagram, eBay, Amazon, Aol, Apple and many more, combined.

And last we heard, this growth was all organic — good ole word of mouth. CloudFlare didn’t have a dedicated sales force. I mean it seems like BS marketing, but it really doesn’t get better than this, and it’s nice to see a company growing based on the fact that it actually solves a real problem.

Prince told Fred back in June that a number of escort services in Turkey had been the victims of cyberattack, so one switched to CloudFlare to help protect from those attacks. After that, “virtually the whole industry switched to using the company’s systems.”

Mike Arrington may have called CloudFlare unsexy when it demoed at TC Disrupt — “like a muffler for the Internet” — but that kind of security and speedy rendering is pretty hot.

Updating


JavaScript Tops Latest Programming Language Popularity Ranking From RedMonk

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Industry analyst firm RedMonk published today its latest quarterly programming language popularity ranking. JavaScript came out on top, followed closely by Java, PHP, and Python.

The rankings are based on data collected from the open source project host GitHub and the programming questions and answer site StackOverflow, a measurement invented by Drew Conway and John Myles White in 2010.

As I’ve written elsewhere, it’s difficult to determine the popularity of programming languages, but getting some idea of what developers actually like to use is one of many considerations for companies who need to hire developers.

No ranking system is perfect, but the RedMonk system has a nice advantage in that they draw on two separate sources of data that correlate nicely and map out into multiple tiers. The graph is pretty hard to read, so RedMonk co-founder and analyst Stephen O’Grady broke it down into a list:

  1. JavaScript
  2. Java
  3. PHP
  4. Python
  5. Ruby
  6. C#
  7. C++
  8. C
  9. Objective-C
  10. Shell
  11. Perl
  12. Scala
  13. Haskell
  14. ASP
  15. Assembly
  16. ActionScript
  17. R
  18. Visual Basic
  19. CoffeeScript
  20. Groovy

O’Grady notes that Scala, a Java Virtual Machine language used by companies like Twitter and Foursquare, has been slowly muscling its way to the top of the second tier. He also points out that Go, a language developed by Google, has made small but respectable gains in popularity since Conway and Myles first starting compiling this data.


For Amazon’s Tablet, the Second Time’s a Charm

Amazon’s new 7-inch Kindle Fire HD. What a difference ten months makes. Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

When the Kindle Fire first arrived last September, it was in a class all its own. There were plenty of other 7-inch tablets running Android, but none of them were as successful. Sure, Amazon’s tablet did most of the same things as competing offerings. Some of those things it did ably, some it did sloppily — but it did them all for $200, less than half the price of the cheapest iPad.

It turns out “cheap” was quite the trump card, and despite its many quirks, the Fire was a huge smash. But things are different now, and other manufacturers have come out with devices that hit (or come close to) that magic price point. Most notably, there’s Google’s own Nexus 7, a consumer favorite that’s set new expectations for how a $200 tablet should look and perform.

Competitive pressure is usually a good thing, and after using the newly updated 7-inch version of the Kindle Fire HD for close to a week, I can say that the changes Amazon has made in order to stay at the head of the budget tablet pack have produced a machine that’s just plain better all around.

The changes Amazon has made in order to stay at the head of the budget tablet pack have produced a machine that’s just plain better all around.

The Fire’s user interface has been improved, and is now smoother and more polished. The hardware is more elegant, too, with a better screen, a smarter set of controls, and a redesigned shell that no longer looks like a BlackBerry PlayBook. Enhancements to the Kindle Fire’s core functions — reading books and watching movies purchased from Amazon’s vast content store — have make consuming media on the tablet more enjoyable than before.

The depth of the hardware improvements can’t be overemphasized. The very first thing I noticed when I picked up the Fire HD was how the new rounded edges nestled into my hands more naturally than the chunky, square edges of the original Fire. While the screen is still 7 inches, the face of Fire HD is larger than that of its predecessor: it’s 2 millimeters taller and 17 millimeters wider. But what the Fire HD has gained in 2-D real estate, it’s lost in height and weight, measuring 1 millimeter slimmer and 18 grams lighter. That might not sound like a lot, but the device is noticeably lighter.

The original Fire oddly lacked external volume controls, so you had to tap through the menus just to raise or lower the sound. This super-annoying quirk has been corrected, and volume buttons now sit flush along the tablet’s tapered edge, next to the sleep button. The old protruding sleep button is gone, too. It’s now recessed, so it’s much harder to accidentally press it by placing the tablet on a table or in a cradle while holding it in portrait mode. Goodbye, inadvertent sleeping.

Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

The new display is much nicer, a 1,280 x 800 IPS panel with a pixel density of 216 ppi. When viewed next to the Nexus 7, the Kindle Fire HD’s display is clearly crisper and has better contrast, though neither can compete with the latest iPad’s Retina display. The Fire HD’s display is also notable for its glare protection. It won’t eliminate glare entirely, but it does have less glare than the iPad and Nexus 7, making it easier to use in less-than-optimal lighting situations.

Like the previous Kindle Fire, the HD model runs a version of Android that’s been dressed up and customized by Amazon — though the Fire now runs Android 4.0 instead of stale old 2.3, and performs much better because of it.

Amazon has removed the “bookshelf” from the Kindle’s interface, replacing it with a “favorites” drawer. You can access this personalized list of favorite items from within any app by tapping the star that resides near the home button. You can place whatever apps, albums, movies, websites (anything that appears in the main carousel) you want into the favorites drawer for quick access.

It’s a welcome addition, but the Favorites drawer can’t replace the power of a quick app switcher. If an item doesn’t reside in the Favorites drawer, you need to return to the Home screen and scroll through all your installed items to access it. This is a pain for power users who have become accustomed to quickly switching between apps on other devices.

Sony’s Latest E-Reader: Too Little, Too Late

Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

In the war for e-reader marketshare, Sony isn’t about to surrender quietly. The Japanese giant has been in the electronic-books game since 2006, releasing its first e-ink device a full year before Amazon’s Kindle debuted. Sony has refreshed its e-reader a few times over the years, with the latest update arriving this month. Newly armed, Sony charges into battle once again.

Unfortunately, it’s brought a knife to a gun fight.

The $130 Sony Reader (PRS-T2) is the company’s brand-new touchscreen e-ink device. It has a pleasing size and weight, a beautiful, responsive display and superior library integration. A year ago, those features alone would have given Sony a solid lead in the e-reader world.

But Barnes & Noble’s Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight introduced digital bookworms to late-night, accessory-free reading earlier this year. And later this month, the Kindle Paperwhite, Amazon’s new e-ink reader with a sharper screen and a built-in LED light, will ably brighten your pillows. Even though Sony’s new reader is priced in step with the new Nooks and Kindles, it doesn’t have a light. It stumbles in other places, too, like the menu system and the implementation of the e-ink technology. Altogether, I can’t recommend buying one. Competing devices simply give you more for your money.

The screen is its core strength. I placed the Reader next to the latest Nook Simple Touch and a fourth-generation (late 2011) Kindle, and Sony’s 6-inch screen is by far the best-looking. The crisp, high-contrast presentation makes text really pop. The sharpness and detail do wonders to combat eye strain, and the text on-screen more closely resembles the printed word. It’s just beautiful.

That is, until you start pressing buttons.

Releasing a brand new e-reader and not including a glowing screen isn’t just poor timing, it’s a huge missed opportunity.

Whenever you access the menu drawer at the bottom of the screen, dusty, ghost-like artifacts are left behind when you return to the book. All e-ink readers suffer from some artifacting, but you usually see things clean up whenever the next page turn happens. In many cases during my testing, however, these menu and navigation artifacts stuck around for a couple of page turns. On a device explicitly designed to foster concentration, it’s a big distraction. It’s also something that shouldn’t happen on a current-generation Pearl E-Ink screen.

The generation gap extends beyond screen refreshes. As I mentioned, the Sony Reader is lacking a built-in lighting feature for night reading. With Barnes & Noble and Amazon already offering this feature at a similar price, and with other e-reader manufacturers expected to follow suit, releasing a brand-new e-reader and not including a glowing screen isn’t just poor timing, it’s a huge missed opportunity.

The physical design of the Reader is also hit-and-miss. The dark bezel helps with screen contrast, but the thinness of said bezel on the left and right of the screen leads to not feeling like you have a good grip on the device while holding it from the side. There’s very little real estate for thumbs.

Sony’s Reader does have a large “chin” area beneath the screen for those who hold a book from the bottom. The company has also added page-flip buttons on the lower edge for the bottom-holders who can’t be bothered to swipe the touchscreen.

Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

The screen itself is responsive and fast enough for reading. Typing using the on-screen keyboard is a breeze, and words flow forth with little noticeable latency.

You’ll need to do a lot of touchscreen typing if you’re a frequent visitor to the public library. In addition to supporting the ePub open standard (something the Kindle doesn’t do) and OverDrive, the prevailing library lending system, the Reader goes one step further. It has a “Library” option in the main menu that launches a browser right there on the Reader’s screen for finding and downloading books from a public library. The Kindle and Nook require the use of a computer to browse and download library books.

The Reader also includes software from Evernote, and you can use the device to take notes that get added to your Evernote account. The feature doesn’t automatically fill your Reader with all the notes you’ve added over the years. Instead, it creates a Reader Notebook in Evernote. Any old notes will have to be moved to the new notebook if you want to access them. The Reader can be set as the default Notebook if you plan to use it all the time.

It’s a nice feature Evernote users will appreciate if they don’t already have a smartphone with the service installed — though I question whether such people even exist. Unfortunately, I had issues with syncing while attempting to load new notes. And, instead of the Evernote icon residing in the e-readers “Applications” menu, it’s placed in the “Bookshelves” area. A weird decision.

Even the Reader’s modest wins won’t help Sony when it comes time to visit the bookstore.

But there’s a much bigger problem here: the ecosystem. Even the Reader’s modest wins won’t help Sony when it comes time to visit the bookstore.

Sony simply can’t compete with Amazon’s catalog. The Reader Store has the best-sellers: A Game of Thrones, Fifty Shades of Grey, the James Patterson Books with the weird TV commercials. It also has freebies and periodicals. But it’s missing self-published works, an emerging market being spearheaded by Amazon. No author is clamoring to get their first novel on the Sony Reader Store. Of course, there’s a reason some of these new authors have had trouble securing a traditional publishing deal, and yes, if they publish as an ePub file, you can always side-load the book. But with its Kindle Singles program, Amazon has brought frictionless purchasing and monetization to the masses, and it’s opened the door to shorter-form experimentation by well-known authors like Stephen King and Nick Hornby. Throw textbooks into the mix, and the Reader Store starts to look pretty bare in comparison.

Furthermore, Kindle owners can borrow books, they can share books with friends, and they don’t have to create a new account beyond the Amazon account they’re already using to purchase socks, videogames, MP3s, batteries and diapers.

The current e-reader world is pretty cutthroat. And while the Sony Reader may have been one of the e-ink pioneers, it isn’t able to keep up with the current contenders.

WIRED Crisp, high-contrast screen. Excellent library integration. Use USB and microSD to side-load ePubs, PDFs, and text documents. Battery lasts forever (around two months).

TIRED E-ink artifacts are ugly and persistent. No lighting options, so you’ll need a case or clip-on accessory. Suffers from ecosystem envy. Wi-Fi only. Evernote integration is confusing for newbie note-takers.

Big 10-4 on the Niner

Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

All the reviews of the Jet 9 RDO start off with some cheap innuendo about how sexy the bike looks. I confess that I, too, was rolling Van Halen lyrics around in my head, trying to come up with a clever opening line about my college girlfriend or the neighbor’s wife. But the more time I spent with this sultry carbon looker, the more I realized my lust for the newest Niner is more than skin deep.

Despite all its flash and splash, the Jet 9 is more Boy Scout than supermodel. My time in the Scouts was impressively short, but I still remember the Boy Scout Law: A Scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful…. OK, I don’t remember it all. But during an amazing ride at Annadel State Park near Santa Rosa, California — three hours of rock gardens, rolling singletrack and whippy-fast doubletrack — the Jet 9 RDO was all of those things. It’s an obedient, point-me-in-the-direction-you-want-me-to-go kind of riding partner that simply will not let you down. Ever.

inside niner: big wheels, big payoff

The test bike Niner loaned me came loaded with top-shelf components. The Shimano XTR shifters, derailleurs and brakes were spot-on crisp, deftly registering every last-second shift and desperate death-grip squeeze of the levers. If you aren’t running the new Shimano XTR Shadow Plus derailleur technology, you’re missing a treat (and possibly a shift).

The American Classic MTB Race 29 tubeless wheels were wrapped with Schwalbe Racing Ralph tires. They rolled true and fast, with the Ralphs hooking up with greater frequency than guys on OKCupid. I’ve been slow to embrace the tubeless phenomenon, but these wheels had me rethinking my clincher allegiance. I put less and less air in the tires with every ride, and the less air I used, the better it rode. I never had a problem, regardless of the size of the rocks I attacked with this beast.

Other highlights of an impressive kit: The WTB Volt saddle admirably filled in for my favorite Specialized Toupe, and all of the bits bearing the Niner name (bars, stem, post, et cetera) were more than up to the job.

The suspension duties were taken care of by an SID XX World Cup up front and a Fox RP23 in the back, tailored to Niner’s patented CVA suspension design. Even as I was out on the trails flogging my Niner, the company launched the Jet 9 RDO V2, ostensibly making my loaner the Jet 9 RDO V1. The update includes a rear thru-axle, moving away from the long-held standard 135mm axle, and a carbon rocker that cuts weight while increasing stiffness. The price goes up, too: This new version of the Jet 9 is going to cost around $2,900 for the frame and carbon rocker.

Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

With 100 millimeters of travel at both ends and a respectable 24 pounds, Niner is positioning this bike as a full-on racer. However, the Jet 9 is far more versatile than that. You can go almost anywhere and do almost anything on this bike.

On my first ride, I ended up on a little piece of trail wondering where my four-plus inches of travel and full-face helmet were. I was seriously wondering if the Niner was up to the monster run ahead. But rather than curse myself for bringing the wrong tool for the job, I put my trust in the Niner. Come on, I was out here to test this beast after all. And of course, she didn’t let me down.

As long as I didn’t chicken out, the Niner did exactly what I asked of it.

This happened again and again on subsequent rides as I braved steep descents, rock gardens and tricky uphill pitches. As long as I didn’t chicken out, the Niner did exactly what I asked of it. Before long, I’d stopped trying to pick the perfect line and just pressed ahead, going up, over, down and around things I might have otherwise avoided. I noticed no negative pedaling effect, and the suspension remained predictable and efficacious in all situations.

Yeah, there are bikes that soak up more abuse, so if you’re into big hits and ripping gravity runs, look elsewhere. But my time on the “Orange Stallion” definitely caused my competitive nature to bubble up. It’s the perfect ride for tearing up fast, floaty singletrack, and I attacked plenty of it with my heart rate up and my head down, drool dribbling from my mouth. I even felt the urge to check the NCNVA website to see if there are any upcoming races in the area.

Oh, who am I kidding? My racing days are over. But if I ever feel the urge to hit the start line, I know, like a good Boy Scout, the Jet 9 RDO will be prepared.

WIRED Capable of hypersonic speed. 29ers: all the rage. Searing paint, sexy design. Wheeeee!

TIRED If you’re not interested in going fast, you’re better off with something cozier. Not as light as other race rigs, so weight weenies should give it a pass. Frame shape makes it hard to lean on, so you can’t really play peacock at the coffee shop.

Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

Cory Booker: “Mark Zuckerberg Is An American Hero”

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When discussing social media and how he uses it for his political work as Mayor of Newark, Cory Booker called out Facebook CEO Mark Zuckberg as an “American Hero” for his work on connecting the world.

As you might know, Booker worked with Zuckerberg to bring $100M in funds to schools that needed it in Newark, New Jersey. It was a pretty huge deal, and a step in the right direction for Zuckberberg in the public eye, as this came on the tail of the release of “The Social Network.”

The pair even went on Oprah to discuss the donation.

Zuckerberg follows a long line of tech CEOs that have started charitable campaigns, namely Bill Gates, who founded Microsoft.


Cory Booker Opens Video Service #Waywire In A Public Alpha

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#Waywire (yes, the name comes in hashtag format), the video news-sharing service co-created by Newark Mayor Cory Booker, just opened to everyone in a public alpha.

Booker made the announcement on-stage at TechCrunch Disrupt, where he pitched #waywire as a way to democratize the news and upend the “oligarchy” running the media. One of his money quotes: “The power of the people is more important than the people in power.”

The service allows people to shoot and publish their own news reports. TechCrunch previewed #waywire last month (at the time, we said the most disruptive feature was the database of raw footage from 60 content partners, including Reuters, which users can edit to edit together their own reports on breaking news) and also offered some early alpha invites, but this is the first time anyone can when anyone can go to the #waywire site and sign up.

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