ZooGue’s BinderPad: A unique take on an iPad 2 case

It’s the time of year when all the iPad case manufacturers are getting their products ready for the “back to school” rush, so I’ve been getting plenty of emails and writing a lot of reviews. It was refreshing to see something completely different from ZooGue — the BinderPad (US$29.99) — that takes the iPad 2 and puts it into a standard three-ring binder.

Design

The BinderPad is one of those ideas that you look at and say “Why didn’t anyone think of this before?” For students or managers who are carrying around schoolwork or project notebooks anyway, the BinderPad slips into a three-ring binder with your iPad 2 inside. It’s made out of a durable cloth in either black or dark grey, and encases the iPad 2 snugly.

Gallery: ZooGue Binderpad

If you need to take a photo or movie with the iPad 2 camera, just snap the BinderPad out of the binder and hold up your iPad 2. The BinderPad has a hole in the proper location for the rear-facing camera. All of the other ports and switches are easily accessible as well.

Functionality

What can I say? The BinderPad works as it should. It’s easy to put the iPad 2 into the case, and snapping it into a three-ring binder is, well, a snap. In the video that accompanies this post, there’s another idea — you can use the BinderPad as a wall mount for the iPad 2 as well. I was a bit reluctant to put the pricey Vogel’s RingO mount up on the glass tile backsplash in my kitchen, but I’d have no qualms at all about installing some inexpensive cup hooks under my cabinets to hang the BinderPad from. Brilliant!

Conclusion

The BinderPad is the brainchild of young entrepreneur Tim Angel, who also developed the versatile ZooGue Case Genius. That case is now available in an iPad 2 flavor, and I’ll be writing a full review of it in the very near future.

ZooGue makes innovative products that it sells at reasonable prices, and the BinderPad is yet another example. Whether you want a way to pop an iPad 2 into a binder that you’re going to be lugging around anyway or you just need an inexpensive wall mount, the ZooGue’s BinderPad is a good way to go.

ZooGue’s BinderPad: A unique take on an iPad 2 case originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple considers buying another $5 billion in patents

Bloomberg is reporting that Apple is considering buying InterDigital’s patent portfolio, which is worth up to US$5 billion. The patents cover a wide range of mobile technologies used to transfer information over high-speed mobile phone networks. Just last month, Apple was the leader of a consortium that bought Nortel’s patent portfolio for $4.5 billion.

The ownership of patents is becoming a key issue to smartphone manufacturers as sales skyrocket. Major tech companies all want a piece of the same pie and Apple isn’t alone in its interest of InterDigital’s patents. Bloomberg says that Samsung has also been invited to bid on InterDigital’s portfolio. Given that Samsung and Apple are locked up in patent lawsuits, it’s possible that this could turn into a heated bidding war, possibly inflating the estimated $5 billion price.

Apple considers buying another $5 billion in patents originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW TV Live: The TUAW / TiPB Joint International Commission on Apple Matters

I was trying to figure out a clever way to describe today’s TUAW TV Live episode with TiPB managing editor Rene Ritchie. I failed miserably… Well, it is a joint effort of TUAW and TiPB, Rene’s in Canada and I’m in the U.S., and we’ll be talking about Apple, so I guess the long title to this post could make a little sense.

All that silliness aside, today’s show should be a lot of fun. Rene’s the voice behind the TiPB iPad Live and iPhone Live podcasts and a fellow Apple blogger, which gives us a bunch to talk about.

Below, you’ll find a Ustream livestream viewer and a chat tool. The chat tool allows you to participate by asking questions or making comments.

If you’re driving somewhere and would like to watch TUAW TV Live while you’re stuck in traffic, please don’t — keep your eyes on the road! However, if someone else is doing the driving, you can watch the show on your iPhone and join the chat by downloading the free Ustream App. It’s a universal app and is useful on an iPad, both for viewing and participating in the chat.

We’ll start at about 5 PM ET, so if you’re seeing a prerecorded show, be sure to refresh your browser until you see the live stream. For those of you who are not able to join us for the live edition, you’ll be able to view it later this evening on our TUAW Video YouTube channel and as part of the TUAW TV Live podcast viewable in iTunes or on any of your Apple devices.

TUAW TV Live: The TUAW / TiPB Joint International Commission on Apple Matters originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 16:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW’s Daily iPad App: Wreck This App


Wreck This App is a creative iPad app based on the book series by Keri Smith. The app takes the fun of doodling and creative expression and brings it to your daily life. The black-and-white interface is child-like and simple, which adds to the allure of the app.

Wreck This App is arranged in pages and each page has a difference activity. Some require you to perform simple tasks like draw fat and skinny lines, while others instruct you to draw pictures of more complex objects. And it’s more than doodles, as sometimes the activities, like the one to document something boring or fill in a page when you are angry, make you think about what you are doing.

You have a set of standard drawing and writing tools at the bottom page and you can import images from your camera roll to include in your doodles. You don’t have to move sequentially through the app, you are free to jump from page to page and can complete each activity as you see fit. When you are done with an activity, you can share it on Facebook, Flickr or via email. You can even save it your photo roll.

Wreck This App is highly recommended. It has a pleasing interface and is whimsical and fun. In my humble opinion, it’s a great way to pass time, far better than playing Angry Birds or Plants vs. Zombies. Wreck this App is a universal app and is available for $4.99 in the iTunes App store.

Gallery: Wreck This App

TUAW’s Daily iPad App: Wreck This App originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Time Inc. will put all 21 US publications on tablets by the end of this year

Time, Inc. has announced its intention to put all of its publications on tablets during 2011. Once complete, the digital catalog will include Time, of course, and other favorites like Sports Illustrated, Fortune and People — all of which are already available in the App Store — and newcomers like Real Simple and Entertainment Weekly.

Maurice Edelson, EVP and a member of Time Inc.’s interim management committee, sees the explosion of tablet popularity as a opportunity for his company. “In the coming year, there will clearly be many more consumers using tablets, accelerating demand for content and driving advertiser interest. We are putting ourselves in a great position to take advantage of these opportunities.”

Print subscribers will have the option to add digital subscriptions at no cost. All the publications will be available on the iPad, Android tablets, and the HP Touchpad. A Time spokesperson told me that the company is following other publishers like Amazon and the Wall Street Journal and avoiding the high toll at the Apple app store. Other publishers like Hearst are selling magazines through the app store.

Time says its digital magazines and related apps have been downloaded more than 11 million times.

Time Inc. will put all 21 US publications on tablets by the end of this year originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW’s Daily Mac App: Solebon Solitaire

Solebon Solitaire for Mac

Card games have been our entertainment fall back for generations. Solebon Solitaire for the Mac brings the quality, small screen experience of Solebon Solitaire for iOS to your desktop screen.

Solebon Solitaire for Mac features 42 solitaire card games in one. You’ve got old favorites from Klondike, Yukon and Golf to original games such as Ambrose, Provisional and Honeybees — it’s one of the most comprehensive card game collections out there.

Smallware have taken the simplicity and clean look from their original iOS offering and brought it to the Mac. It offers a slick, well-animated interface that avoids the frivolous for ease of use. The cards are large, easy to read and look great while card movement animations, deals and transitions are fast and well done.

There are no cheats or hints in Solebon; it’s serious solitaire for serious players. Some games have options like reverse layouts, the ability to switch on auto play (which speeds up repetitive tasks like moving the cards to the stocks) and the option to disable undo. Speaking of undo, there’s unlimited undo available just in case you get stuck. Each game has full lifetime stats, scoring, move tracking and a timer. If you’re new to the game there’s a full rules sidebar available to get you going.

Solebon Solitaire is a well-executed, comprehensive collection of solitaire card games that are easy to play with a mouse or a trackpad. If you like playing cards in the real world, then Solebon is definitely worth checking out for US$4.99.

TUAW’s Daily Mac App: Solebon Solitaire originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Instagram users have uploaded over 150 million photos

Instagram‘s 4-person team has announced that the service’s users have posted over 150 million photos. Consider that the free, social photo-sharing service now receives about 1.3 million photos per day — that’s 15 shots per second — and you realize one thing: people really like sharing photos. Make that process easy and convenient, as Instagram has with its iPhone app, and you’ve got yourself a winner.

Kevin Systrom, one of the company’s founders, described the diversity he’s seen from users: “There are Instagram photos from major events like the World Series and the Grammys, and some Instagram photos have even made the national news. Artists and celebrities have begun to give fans a unique look into their lives.”

The app is simple and fun. Once you’ve created a free account, just launch Instagram as you would Apple’s own Camera app and start shooting. You can then apply one of several artistic filters or some tilt-shift blur; then share your shot with other Instagram users as well as your Twitter, Flickr and Facebook friends.

While you can’t view a user’s entire Instagram feed in your browser (although you can see individual images), there are plenty of options for interacting with your images without the iPhone app. For example, you can tweak Google+ for instant sharing. Several Mac apps are available, including Carousel (US$4.99, our feature here) and Instadesk ($1.99, our feature here). Finally, take the analog theme to the max with Instaprint, a wireless, location-based printer for Instagram. Imagine…paper pictures!

Congratulations to Kevin and the entire Instagram team on your ongoing success. Below you’ll see the official 150 millionth photo to be uploaded by Instagram user janefot.

Instagram users have uploaded over 150 million photos originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple reportedly readying Replay service for streaming iTunes purchase history

According to AppAdvice, Apple may be prepping a new re-downloading and streaming service called iTunes Replay. The service would let you re-download select movies and TV shows from iTunes and stream that content to a variety of iOS devices.

The Replay service will supposedly let you access shows that you purchased as for back as 2009 and will stream them to your Apple TV and iOS devices. Similar to Amazon Unbox, the number of downloads may vary from clip to clip and may be limited in number.

This isn’t the first time we’ve encountered this rumor; bits and pieces of it have been floating around since 2009. The only difference now is that with iCloud, Apple may have the underlying infrastructure in place to host such a streaming service.

Apple reportedly readying Replay service for streaming iTunes purchase history originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Syncplicity finally makes iOS debut

Syncplicity has introduced its free iOS app today, allowing users to access their accounts from the iPhone and iPad.

The app has a native interface that’s optimized for the iPhone and allows you to browse and open any file in your account, including shared folders. This includes full access to any previously saved versions of the file on Syncplicity. A news feed keeps you up to date on when a file has been updated and by who, and you can share any file via text, email or by copying a secure web URL from the iOS client. The Syncplicity app will also let you open stored files in other apps like Documents to Go.

We first reported on Syncplicity when it extended its cloud storage system to OS X in 2009, and like then, it’s trying to make a niche in a Dropbox-oriented world. The lack of an iOS app was a hindrance when compared to competitors, so it’s past time that Synplicity hit Apple’s mobile devices.

Syncplicity finally makes iOS debut originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 14:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Griffin Stompbox — a pedalboard for your virtual effects pedals

You wouldn’t necessarily associate Griffin Technology with the latest and greatest in music technology, but having teamed up with Frontier Design Group — developers of the iShred LIVE virtual guitar effects appGriffin has released one of the first accessory pedalboards to complete your virtual guitar effects setup. With the advent of virtual guitar effects on mobile devices, it was only a matter of time before a foot controller pedalboard arrived (logically imitating the traditional setup), allowing your feet to do the effects switching and leaving your hands on the guitar to get on with the business of playing.

Before I jump into the review of the Griffin Stompbox (US$99.99), allow me to briefly explain how a traditional electric guitar setup works for those of you who aren’t guitarists. First, you have your electric guitar. This guitar is plugged into an amplifier. However, many guitarists enjoy, love, desire and lust after guitar effects that improve and alter the tone and sound of their guitar. These effects come in the shape of digital and analogue pedal effects, or more effectionately referred to as pedals or stomp boxes. They are called pedals because they are turned on and off using your feet — naturally, your hands are too busy playing the guitar.

Traditionally, these pedals are expensive, and when many are used together, they are placed on a “pedalboard.” Because many guitarists love to have as many pedals as they can get their hands on, these pedalboards are heavy and rather large. That’s where devices like the iPad and iPhone come in. Virtual guitar pedal effects apps have been developed to mimic these traditional pedals, at a fraction of the cost and physical space and weight of traditional pedal effects. However, one problem with these virtual pedals has been that they are, well … virtual. You’ve had to use your fingers to turn on and off these effects when traditionally you’d use your feet. You can’t stomp your iPad with your feet! As a result, users of virtual effects have had to stop playing their guitars to change their virtual pedal effects — this is a bad thing for guitarists. That’s where Griffin’s Stompbox comes in.

Design

The Stompbox itself feels sturdy and well constructed. It rests solidly on the floor and is easily pushed around, but it stays in place when you’re using it as intended. It’s plastic feel doesn’t imbue a sense of high quality, but neither does it feel cheap or like it’s about to fall apart. I have no doubt that it will be able to handle its fair share of knocks, drops and bumps. The four foot switches are metal and pleasing enough to push, but they don’t click in or out. It’s just a downward compression that pops straight back up again. Four accompanying LEDs light up brightly and clearly to indicate when a switch is activated. A 1-meter cable leads from the Stompbox to connect to your iPad’s dock connector (I used an iPad for my review, but of course you can use a compatible iPhone or iPod touch). The cable is durable and strong. On the back of the Stompbox is 1/4” input socket for a volume or expression pedal.

Accompanying the Stompbox is Griffin’s GuitarConnect cable ($29.99), used to connect your guitar to your iPad’s headphone socket. A nice touch on the GuitarConnect cable is that the output socket, for an amp or headphones, is at the guitar end, not the iPad end. Meaning you have less wires crossing over your guitar, particularly if you’re using headphones.

Performance

Connecting the Stompbox and GuitarConnect cable to my iPad and guitar was easy enough. However, straight away I noticed two problems. First, while the GuitarConnect cable solidly plugged into my iPad, if I knocked it or moved it just a bit it produced an unsavory crack and pop in my speakers, suggesting that perhaps something wasn’t as tightly wired as it could be. However, this could be a one-off problem that just happened to be in my review unit. That aside, I didn’t notice any undue hum or buzz. Overall, everything sounded very clear and full-sounding.

The second problem I encountered is that you can only use iShred Live (the app designed to work with the Stompbox) in portrait mode. It doesn’t work in landscape mode. Thinking of using the Stompbox in a musical setting, I immediately went to place my iPad on a music stand in landscape mode. You can imagine my disappointment when I realised it didn’t work. And obviously, the iPad won’t rest upright in portrait mode with a rather large dock connector cable plugged into the bottom of it. So that leaves two options, place the iPad on a flat surface like a table or the floor (not ideal) or buy the Griffin (or other brand) iPad mic stand mount. (Editor’s note — the IKMultimedia iKlip for iPad/iPad 2 ($39.99) attaches the iPad securely to a mic or music stand.) It’s not a huge problem, but surely when most other apps work in both portrait and landscape mode — including other virtual guitar effects apps — you’d expect iShred Live to be able to do the same.

That aside, the StompBox performed well in conjunction with the iShred Live app. With four banks each containing four channels, totalling 16 fully customizable presets, I had no difficulty working my way round iShred Live’s selection of effects, metronome, tuner, recorder and song selector using my feet. There was a short learning curve involved.

To activate a bank, simply hold down the respective foot switch. To turn on or off a channel, simply tap the respective foot switch. To exit a bank, hold down the foot switch for the bank you wish to enter next. Just make sure you tap that foot switch dead on and with a consistant pressure. I found that the Stompbox was quite particular about activating a foot switch. A light tap won’t do it; you need to be firm and precise, which is probably a good thing.

One thing that I wasn’t expecting was the intelligent use of the Stompbox’s LEDs, which was a pleasant surprise. Of course, they light up when you activate a channel or bank, but enter something like the tuner and those lights become a whole lot more significant. With the tuner turned on, the LEDs indicate if a string is flat or sharp by only lighting up on the left or right side of the Stompbox, and the two center LEDs shine consistantly together to indicate that you’ve hit the right pitch.

Once I got my head around the Stompbox, I’m pleased to say my attention focused on playing the guitar, with the Stompbox simply getting the job done with no distractions.

While the Stompbox draws its power from the iPad’s battery, I’m happy to say I noticed no dramatic increase in the loss of battery charge. However, with the Stompbox plugged into the iPad, there is no way to charge the iPad. If you’re planning a day long rehearsal, it goes without saying that you should make sure your device is fully charged.

Other Applications

Griffin’s website says that the Stompbox will work with other Stompbox compatible apps. However, it doesn’t say what these apps are. I know that the Stompbox is compatible with QScript, a text prompter app, but aside from that, I’ve not seen anything else. I’d love to see the Stompbox working with other virtual guitar effects apps, but whether that will happen is anyone’s guess. It would be disappointing to see each major music software developer introduce their own unique pedalboard accessory, tying the users pedalboard to a specific app.

Conclusion

At $99,99, the Griffin Stompbox isn’t particularly expensive — in fact, it’s one of the cheapest virtual effects foot controllers out there — but when users are paying less than a dollar to buy a pedal effect on their iDevice, it’s a big jump to fork out a hundred bucks for an accessory. But then again, the Stompbox does complete the guitar setup circle, bringing pedal effects back to your feet where they should be.

Is the Stompbox worth getting? I think if you’re a guitarist who has invested in the virtual effects setup on your iDevice, you’ll be extremely pleased with what the Stompbox has to offer. If you’re a guitarist running a traditional setup and have been holding off getting involved with the mobile device effects scene while waiting for a pedalboard like the Stompbox, I think you’ll be intrigued by the Stompbox. You might want to hold off and investigate the next generation of pedalboards to come.

For more information on Griffin”s StompBox, visit the Griffin website here. For more information on iShred Live app, click here.

Griffin Stompbox — a pedalboard for your virtual effects pedals originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s training site back online, Lion certifications due this fall

For the past couple of weeks (since shortly before the Lion introduction, I believe) Apple’s professional training and certification site at training.apple.com has been under renovation. Today it’s back with a new Lion-esque look and previews of new training courses and certifications for Apple-centric IT professionals.

The three new tracks/certs are for Lion (no surprise), Final Cut Pro X and Mac Integration Basics 10.7. None of the certification exams for those tracks are ready yet, nor are most of the course materials — only the MIB class has full documentation available right now. Lion certification testing is due to start up in the fall, and FCP X certifications are “coming soon.”

The Snow Leopard 10.6 certification courses/testing suite is still available, and according to Apple’s internal sales web site it will remain on offer until January 2012. Snow Leopard certification will not expire when the Lion exams come online, so if you get certified now you’re still considered up to date well into 2012.

Thanks, Wheat!

Apple’s training site back online, Lion certifications due this fall originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 13:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW TV Live at 5 PM EDT: Special guest Rene Ritchie of TiPB

One of the nicest guys you’ll ever meet in the Apple blogosphere is Rene Ritchie, managing editor of The iPhone Blog (AKA TiPB.com). As you’ll recall, during last week’s show TUAW TV Live chat room regular Uri Kelman suggested having Rene on the show. After one quick email, Rene accepted the invitation and today we’ll be talking about everything under the Apple sun on TUAW TV Live.

As usual, I’ll be starting the show at 5 PM EDT (2 PM PDT / 10 PM BST) sharp, and we’ll take a few minutes to chat before the demos start. To join in on the chat and watch the live streaming video, drop by TUAW about five minutes before the start time to get your instructions on how to participate. If you’re unable to join us for the show, remember that you can always subscribe to the video podcast and watch the show at your leisure in iTunes or any other favorite podcatching app. The past shows are also available on the TUAW YouTube channel.

TUAW TV Live at 5 PM EDT: Special guest Rene Ritchie of TiPB originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ukranian Defense Chief seemingly plagiarizes Steve Jobs’ graduation speech

Raisa Bogatyrev, the Ukrainian Secretary of National Security and Defense, is causing a stir with her recent graduation speech at Kiev-Mohyla Academy. According to transcripts, her speech was eerily similar to a commencement address delivered by Steve Jobs to the 2005 graduating class at Stanford University. Jobs’ candid speech focuses on pursuing your dreams despite setbacks in life, including illnesses that bring you face-to-face with death.

According to the Ukrainian sources, some of Jobs’ most memorable quotes from his speech were echoed by Bogatyrev in her address. The National Security Council responded to this accusation by pointing the finger at Bogatyrev who is the one responsible for the content of the speech. They claim she did not lift the speech but is inspired by a variety of sources, one of which may be Steve Jobs.

Ukranian Defense Chief seemingly plagiarizes Steve Jobs’ graduation speech originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Twitter rolling out HTML5 version for iPads

Apple fans who want to use Twitter know that they have their choice of tools. There are not only dozens of Twitter clients available on the various App Stores, but Twitter also has its own web version and apps for Mac, iPhone and iPad. Now the company is rolling out a new mobile HTML5-based web app for those iPad users who want yet another way of getting their daily ration of tweets.

The new site is being slowly rolled out this week and is full HTML5, giving it a look and feel similar to the HTML5 client for iPhone. The web app features a two column view (see screenshot from TechCrunch above), and supports touch gestures. It’s expected that the HTML5 web app will make it out to all iPad users by the end of the week.

Note to Facebook — we’re still waiting for an HTML5-based mobile site or iPad client…

Twitter rolling out HTML5 version for iPads originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boot Camp in Lion requires Windows 7

Apple’s latest version of OS X 10.7 Lion ships with Boot Camp 4 which, according to an Apple support document, only runs Windows 7. Previous versions of Windows like Vista and XP are no longer supported. There’s no reason for this change, but Apple, like Microsoft, is likely increasing its focus on the newer OS and lessening it on legacy versions.

Mac users that must run an older version of Windows will either have to keep Boot Camp 3 if they wish to upgrade to Lion or use a third-party virtualization solution from VMWare or Parallels.

[Via Macworld]

Boot Camp in Lion requires Windows 7 originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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