We’re Looking for Writers!

Do you love iPhone apps? Are you always on the look-out for the latest and greatest iOS software to work faster, be more productive, and enjoy your free time? You sound like the type of iPhone expert that we’d love to have on our team!

We’re always on the look out for fantastic new writers across the AppStorm network, but we’re particularly wanting to find a few new contributors to iPhone.AppStorm over the next few days. All our writing positions are paid, and we’ll work with you to choose apps to review and suggest article ideas.

If you’re interested, we’d love to hear from you. Register your interest here, and we’ll be in touch!

Play Ball: MLB At Bat 11

It’s considered to be a purely American sport, and yet people all around the world love to watch and play baseball. Here in the States, the MLB is known as the big leagues, and it’s where the best of the best play professional ball.

Last year, the MLB released MLB At Bat, and it received mixed reviews. But with its latest release, MLB At Bat 11, we’ve got the app that baseball fans need to get. Why? Let’s talk it out after the break.

What’s Recommended

Let’s get this out of the way: Although it’s not required, MLB At Bat 11 is substantially improved with the purchase of an MLB.tv subscription. This service gives you access the the MLB.tv website, which lets you live stream games to your Mac or PC, and also lets you stream games to your iPhone or iPad.

Catch your favorite team's stats right when you open the app.

Catch your favorite team's stats right when you open the app.

The plans break down currently at $79.99 for the premium pack which includes the iOS apps, $59.99 for the basic package (also with iOS apps) and $29.99 for the iPhone and iPad subscriptions only. The prices dip as the season goes on, so if you don’t care about the first part of the season you can save some cash long term by just waiting a month or two.

This is a controversial aspect to the app, because let’s face it, not everyone wants to pay to watch baseball. I bought the subscription at the beginning of the season, and at the time there was no iPhone/iPad option. Were that the case now, that’s probably the way I’d go because I don’t watch many games on my AppleTV, even though I have that option.

What It Is

MLB At Bat 11 is a true homescreen app for any baseball fan. Since they know the game better than anyone else, the MLB knows that fans don’t care about following every team, they want their own team’s info right away. To do this, you tell the app what your favorite team is, and then the next time you turn on the app it will display your team’s info first. You get stats, the scoreboard, the next/current game and viewing or listening options right away, without touching a thing.

Watch videos and check the standings.

Watch videos and check the standings.

This home screen is your portal to everywhere else you can go. Below the box score or ticket display for the next game are a little television, headphones or an MLB logo. The television takes you to the game, the headphones let you listen to the game if you can’t watch the video and the MLB logo takes you to MLB Gameday.

Pick your favorite team and set your notifications.

Pick your favorite team and set your notifications.

I’m not a huge fan of the Gameday feature, but I know some people who swear by it. Basically, you see a generic image of a player and it shows you where each pitch goes in the strike zone, plus all of your favorite stats. It’s a good way to watch a game if you can’t actively watch it live.

Additional Features

For me, the killer point of this app is the notification system. MLB At Bat 11 can notify you when a game starts, when it ends and a condensed game review and when a video highlight pops up. I’ve got a lot of things going on, but I find it nice to work with the Red Sox playing in the background. By getting a push notification when the game starts, I can load up the app and watch it right then and there.

There's also social aspects to the app too.

There's also social aspects to the app too.

In another cool twist, the app also has a check in system similar to 4Square. Whenever you’re at a game, check in at the ballpark to show that not only you were there, but get access to expanded highlights as well. The more parks you visit, the bigger the bragging rights among your friends. You can share this info via Twitter, too.

Live Games

The true gem here is the ability to watch live games, wherever you are. I know I’ve streamed games over both 3G and Wi-Fi, and although it can pixelate on 3G occasionally, it’s usually a very clear picture.

Check out box scores as the game goes on.

Check out box scores as the game goes on.

While the game is streaming, you can see scores from across the league if you want, just by touching the box icon in the corner. You can also see the current box score for the game, which displays in a semi-opaque box across the screen.

Choose your feed.

Choose your feed.

When you’re watching a game on national TV, you get generic announcers that don’t have any particular bias. With MLB At Bat 11, you can choose to watch the feed from either team’s local station. This gives you consistency as you watch more games, and it can be a bit entertaining if you like the announcing team. For me, as a Boston Red Sox fan, it’s great to hear that Boston accent and feel like I’m sitting back in Framingham watching a game.

In Summation

So what’s the downside to the app? Not every game is available for live streaming. At first, this seems like a deal breaker, because that’s the entire point of paying for the service. But often, the games that aren’t allowed are playing nationally on a major network, so you can catch it there instead. Besides, there are over 100 games in a season, missing one or two isn’t a deal breaker to me.

During the season, I move this app right to my homescreen. I can now quickly and easily see how my Sox are doing in the season, and watch a game whenever or wherever I want. It’s easily something that I use every day, and I’d say it’s in my top 5 for most used.

But this is for baseball fans. For me, it’s not worth the price without an MLB.tv subscription, because I don’t want to pay $10 to watch highlights and see box scores. Sure, it’s a bit expensive when combined with the plan, but for a real fan, it’s well worth it.

iControlPad Brings Dual Sticks And More To Your iPhone Games [VIDEOS]

When Apple released its iPod touch media player and all round mobile computer, the tagline of ‘the funnest iPod ever’ not only made any self-respecting grammar Nazi froth at the mouth, but also heralded a new approach to gaming for both Apple and the gaming industry.

Years later, the iPhone, iPod touch and now the iPad, are all selling like gangbusters, and the success of the App Store has been even more impressive than the staunch Apple supporter could ever have hoped.

This success, we’d wager, is in no small part related to the explosion of iOS games that both independent developers and large software houses have created over the last couple of years.

With huge success stories like Angry Birds under its belt, iOS has proven to be a real gaming powerhouse in an industry that has historically been dominated by one of the big console companies.

Despite the huge success of gaming on iOS, there is still one issue that just isn’t going to go away – controls.

With iDevices obviously not sporting any hardware buttons, it’s been left to third-party inventors to come up with a solution – and one such solution is the ‘iControlPad’.

Sporting a Bluetooth connection to an iPhone, the device is what we oldies would call a ‘control pad’. What this offers is a selection of buttons, perfect for those games where a touch screen just doesn’t quite cut the mustard.

The iControlPad even offers an attachment that can slot into the main body of the unit, and then offer a place to slide your iPhone, making the iPhone+iControlPad combo a one piece of kit affair.

Problem is, the iControlPad pairs to the iPhone using Bluetooth, something that makes it impossible for App Store apps to support the control unit’s ever-so-useful analog sticks. All this means that if you want to take full advantage of the iControlPad, you’ll need to be of the jailbreaking persuasion beforehand.

Best of all, the glorious analog sticks! And…the first disappointment comes when you, iOS gamers, discover that they’re rendered unusable due to Apple’s restrictions on the type of Bluetooth devices that can interface with iOS.

Judging by these videos embedded below, we actually see a bright future of this add-on after all!

Here’s How Your Next iPhone Could Let You Purchase Apps Offline

It’s Apple patent time again, while watching the inventions and innovation coming out of Cupertino often proving to be a bit baffling – and almost impossible – job in itself.

The latest jewel to escape the US Patent Office’s metaphorical crown, relates to the offline storage of a payment method which, it is claimed, could be used to purchase content while not connected to the internet.

Currently, when we choose to buy something via iTunes, the App Store, or any other kind of online store for that matter, the transaction is handled by a third party, over the magic of the internet.

Apple’s patent would allow ‘credits’ to be stored on a local device, which would work perfectly with Apple’s current iTunes gift card model.

The idea then, would be that the credits would be synced with Apple’s servers once the iDevice is back online, via either 3G or a WiFi connection.

When a user later wishes to play back one of the media items, but the device cannot connect to a communications network to provide payment information for purchasing the media items, the electronic device can use pre-paid credits that were purchased and stored by the device when a communications network was available to complete the purchase.

Now, those following along will see one glaring problem with this plan: if a device is offline when trying to purchase content, how exactly is said content supposed to get onto that same device? Magic?

Well, yes, as it happens. Or at least, Apple’s own brand of magic.

Apple’s patent proposes a kind of caching system, whereby content is stored locally, but locked in order to prevent use.

The suggestion here is that, for example, the top 10 singles in iTunes could be cached to an iPod touch overnight, via Wi-Fi. Once there, they lay dormant until the users decides they want to buy one. Using the credits mentioned above, the track is unlocked and away they go.

Now, obviously that’s over-simplifying the situation, but we’re sure you get the drift.

The recommended items can be selected based on any suitable criteria, including for example the media items of the user’s library, recently played back media items, media item rankings, recently purchased or added media items, a preference profile defined by the user, or combinations of these. In some embodiments, the recommended media items can be selected based on playback or sale information provided by other users (e.g., the top selling media items in the media store, or the recently purchased media items by users in a local network).

The top 10 apps, movie rentals and more could also get the caching treatment, too.

As great as that all sounds, we can see storage becoming a problem pretty quickly due to increasing app sizes, unless Apple intends to make storage on the next iPhone and iPod touch hardware much more plentiful. Doing that and keeping the prices down though, isn’t an easy feat.

More Than 1 Million Copies Of Lion Were Downloaded From Mac App Store On First Day

OS X Lion, the newest version of Apple’s operating system targeted at Mac computers, has sold 1 million copies since it became available yesterday, Apple claims, making this release the fastest-selling version of Mac OS X in Apple’s history.


Unlike previous versions of Mac OS X, Lion is currently available exclusively as a 4 GB digital download from Apple’s Mac App Store, for as little as $29, unlike most previous releases which were available for as much as $129. This new distribution model, as well as the new price, have likely been the main contributors to the product’s success. Phil Schiller, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Worldwide Product Marketing, weighed in on the news, calling Lion “the best operating system ever made”:

Lion is off to a great start, user reviews and industry reaction have been fantastic, […] Lion is a huge step forward, it’s not only packed with innovative features but it’s incredibly easy for users to update their Macs to the best OS we’ve ever made.

In order to download Mac OS X Lion successfully, users must be running Mac OS X 10.6.8 which was released several weeks ago. The new system is available straight from the App Store and installable just like any other standard application: after downloading the standard executable, just run it and follow the on-screen instructions. No boot media is necessary.

For users without access to a broadband network, Apple unexpectedly announced yesterday that it plans to ship USB sticks with the Lion installer for over three times the cost as the standard license: $69. For those who wish to use this method instead, said thumb drives will be available in August.

OS X Lion is the latest version of Mac OS X, Apple’s operating system for its Mac lineup. The new system borrows some functionality and user interface paradigms from iOS in order to create a reliable and very touch-friendly operating system. Features like Mission Control allow all open windows, spaces and the dashboard to be visible from one single view, while Versions extends Time Machine, Mac OS X’s backup feature, in order to work from within apps, allowing users to restore previous versions of a document with just a few clicks of the mouse.

Judging by the results so far, Apple has every reason to be proud of the new Mac OS X. If you haven’t downloaded it already, what are you waiting for?

iSHSHit Updated To Support Saving Of SHSH Blobs Of iOS 4.3.4 / iOS 4.2.9. Here’s How To Use It

These days, in order to downgrade an iOS device to a previous version of iOS, you need to have an old SHSH blob of that version, and the only way to do that is to back it up ahead of time, that is, when Apple is still signing the firmware. iSHSHit is a tool that backs up the firmware’s blob for later use right on the device itself. The said app has now been updated to work with iOS 4.3.4 and 4.2.9 (for CDMA iPhones), which were both released to the public last week.

iSHSHit is really easy to use. After installing the app, it can be launched from the iOS Home Screen; from there, users simply have to choose what device and version of iOS they are using and click “Save”. After a few minutes, the blob will be saved within the app and can be accessed by heading over to the “Manage” tab within iSHSHit: from there, users can choose to export the blob by emailing it to themselves.

It’s important to note that this app won’t restore SHSH blobs, it will simply back them up. In order to build a custom signed IPSW with the blobs you’ve created, you can do so using a tool like iFaith, which we showcased earlier, on your computer. The same tool can be used to back up blobs, in case you’re not aware, but iSHSHit is the way to go for those who’d rather do it on from their own devices.

Backing up blobs has become a fairly regular maintenance practice these days, especially for those who might want to downgrade their devices in the future. iSHSHit is one of the best ways to go about it.

In order to get this tweak up and running, you can follow our step by step guide to jailbreak your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch on iOS 4.3.4 using Redsn0w or PwnageTool (iPhone, iPad, iPod touch), or iOS 4.3.3 using Redsn0w, PwnageTool, Sn0wbreeze or JailbreakMe (that last one being the easiest). If you’re already using iOS 5 beta, you can jailbreak it using tools like Redsn0w (for Mac and Windows), or Sn0wbreeze.

You Will Soon Be Able To Charge Your iPhone At A Bus Stop Near You [PHOTO]

One of the most interesting advertisement campaigns we’ve ever seen, Glacéau’s Vitaminwater Energy Bus Shelters let you give your iOS device (or other, supported devices) a juice-boost before you set off on your commute.

Discovered by Creativity Online, this very interesting ad campaign is running in several American states. The bus shelters are offering a 5-volt battery powered USB port that allows users to charge many different devices.

From Creativity Online:

Recharging on the go.

Vitaminwater is underlining its energy-boosting powers with interactive bus shelters that allow commuters to recharge electronic devices.

The bus shelters, installed on bus routes in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Boston, offer a 5-volt battery powered USB port that allows users to charge mobile phones, music players and gaming devices. They form part of the soft drink brand’s ‘You’re Up’ campaign, underlining its message that it is formulated to provide a quick boost when you are on the go.

This goes along with their theme of giving yourself a boost when your own body is running low on juice during a hectic workday.

It’s a fine piece of advertising, really. The folks behind Microsoft’s popular Laptop Hunters/I’m a PC and the famous Windows Phone 7 “Really?” ads came up with the abovementioned campaign – an advertising agency called Crispin Porter + Bogusky.

I personally don’t believe much in energy drinks or, you know, drinks that market themselves as energy boosters. The amount of sugar that these drinks contain is off the charts but people see the word Vitamin and go, “Oooooh! Vitaminsss! Ought to be great for my body, let’s chug down a two bottles of this”.

The campaign is currently running in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Boston, so if you come across an Energy Bus Shelter, be sure to say hi to HTC Thunderbolt owners from us!

Speaking of HTC Thunderbolts, am I the only one who thinks Android smartphone manufacturers need to stop working on creating more technically powerful ones and instead work on more efficient ones? The current crop of Android phones: the Samsung Galaxy S2, Google Nexus S, HTC Sensation, LG Optimus 2X etc don’t last past 24 hours with moderate use. This is in contrast to Apple’s iPhone 4 which has the longest-lasting battery life among current-gen smartphones, lasting over two days with moderate usage.

Delete Entire Words Quickly With ‘Delete Word’ For iPhone And iPad [Jailbreak Tweak]

The number one reason why people jailbreak their iOS device is for the experience-enhancing tweaks. From little tweaks like MultiIconMover to the big, game-changing ones like Winterboard, SBSettings etc; all tweaks help make iOS an even more powerful mobile OS.

We’ll be talking about a small but very useful tweak today, it’s called “Delete Word” and it makes deleting words an appreciably faster experience.

Delete Word is a jailbreak tweak developed by iSam. Its main and only objective is to make deleting words or backspacing a much more faster experience.

It does this by allowing you to delete entire words instead of deleting each character one by one.

Delete whole word instead of just one letter by holding Shift then tapping Delete on the keyboard. You can still delete normally without holding the Shift button

There will be no icons or settings for this tweak. Just install, and you will be able to use on the normal keyboard.

Since it is a small tweak, it does not add any icons or settings in the Settings.app. Once installed, you will be able to use it from the default keyboard. Delete Word basically adds a keyboard shortcut.

In order to go about this quick deletion, you have to tap Shift+Delete. Once pressed, the tweak will delete words instead of characters. If you want to delete only characters, tap Delete only.

We can speak from first-hand experience that this tweak does actually save time. It is highly, highly recommended for all iOS users. Besides, it is free, so you don’t have anything to lose!

To help you understand how Delete Word works, watch the short video embedded below shot by iPodTouchHelping:

You will, of course, need to have a jailbroken iOS device. You can follow our step by step guide to jailbreak your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch on iOS 4.3.4 using Redsn0w or PwnageTool (iPhone, iPad, iPod touch), or iOS 4.3.3 using Redsn0w, PwnageTool, Sn0wbreeze or JailbreakMe (that last one being the easiest). If you’re already using iOS 5 beta, you can jailbreak it using tools like Redsn0w (for Mac and Windows), or Sn0wbreeze.

Delete Word is available for free on Cydia under the BigBoss repository.

Install Google+ App On iPad And iPod touch [How To Tutorial]

After a long wait, the official Google+ app for iPhone was finally released yesterday. The native app, which is a giant leap forward from the web-only experience that was available up until now, only supports iPhone 3G, 3GS, and iPhone 4 running iOS 4.0 or later. Google for some odd reason has left out the support for iPads and iPod touches.

But now thanks to a workaround found by our reader Caleb Zierke, you can now install the official Google+ app for iPhone on your iPads and iPod touches by following this step by step tutorial.

 

Step 1: First, you will need to download iPhone Configuration Utility. The download links are given below for both Mac and Windows:

  • iPhone Configuration Utility for Windows
  • iPhone Configuration Utility for Mac
  • Step 2: Once you have downloaded it, simply install it like any other software on your PC or Mac, it shouldn’t take more than a couple of minutes.

    Step 3: Now if you haven’t already, connect your iPad or iPod touch with your PC or Mac.

    Step 4: Download Google+ for iPhone directly from here on your computer.

    Step 5: Launch iPhone Configuration Utility, on the left hand side, you should see your device. Click on your device name.

    Step 6: On the tabs you see on the top of the screen where it is showing your device information, click on “Applications”.

    Step 7: Now click on Add+ button and browse for the Google+ .ipa file which you downloaded in Step 4 above.

    Step 8: In the “Applications” list, you should see the Google+ app, and right next to it should be an “Install” button, simply click the install button and in a matter of seconds the Google+ app will appear on your iPad or iPod touch. That’s it, you’re done and ready to scoop some friends inside your +Circles!

    It is important to note that Google+ for iPhone is not optimized for iPad’s display resolution, therefore you’ll see the iPhone version of the app running on your iPad, pressing the “2x” button will enlarge the app to fit the screen. Though not a pleasant experience, but better than having no Google+ app at all, right?

    Our friends have shot a very nice video tutorial. Make sure you check that out as well!:

    Move Image using Touch Function in iPhone

    This is the very simple application. In this application we will see how to image move using touch. So let see how it will work. My previous post you can find out from here ImageView Display

    Step 1 : Open the Xcode, Create a new project using View Base application. Give the application “Touch_Image”.

    Step 2: Xcode automatically creates the directory structure and adds essential frameworks to it. You can explore the directory structure to check out the content of the directory.

    Step 3: We need add also two resource in the project.

    Step 4: In the Touch_ImageViewController.h file, make the following changes.

    #import <UIKit/UIKit.h>

    @interface Touch_ImageViewController : UIViewController {
    UIImageView *image;
    }
    @property (nonatomic,retain) IBOutlet UIImageView *image;
    @end

    Step 5: Double click the Touch_ImageViewController.xib file and open it to the interface builder. First select the view and bring up Attribute Inspector and change the background color. Drag the label from the library and place it to the view window. Select the label and bring up Attributes Inspector and the text to “Touch Anywhere” . Now drag the ImageView from the library and place it to the view window. Select the Image View from the view and bring up Attribute Inspector and select the litchi-big.png image. Connect File’s Owner icon to the image view and select image. Now save the .xib file, save it and go back to the Xcode.

    Step 6: Open the Touch_ImageViewController.m file and make the following changes:

    #import "Touch_ImageViewController.h"

    @implementation Touch_ImageViewController

    (void)dealloc
    {
    [super dealloc];
    }

    (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet*)touches withEvent:(UIEvent*)event
    {

    UITouch *touch = [[event allTouches] anyObject];
    CGPoint touchLocation = [touch locationInView:touch.view];
    image.center = touchLocation;
    }

    (void)didReceiveMemoryWarning
    {

    [super didReceiveMemoryWarning];

    }

    #pragma mark – View lifecycle

    (void)viewDidUnload
    {
    [super viewDidUnload];
    }

    (BOOL)shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)interfaceOrientation
    {
    return (interfaceOrientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait);
    }

    @end

    Step 7: Now compile and run the application on the Simulator.

    You can Download SourceCode from here Touch_Image

    Apple may be putting in a bid to buy Hulu

    According to Bloomberg, the online video service Hulu is up for sale, and Apple is reportedly considering bidding on it.

    Apple certainly has enough cash on hand to buy Hulu (about 35 times over), and if successful in its bid Apple would gain a huge foothold in video media services. Put together with iTunes, an Apple-Hulu deal would be a serious competitor for Netflix.

    Other entities interested in buying Hulu include Google, Yahoo, and AT&T (shudder). Microsoft has dropped out of the bidding, and Bloomberg’s sources say Amazon is unlikely to bid unless it gets guaranteed access to shows. Several of the media companies associated with Hulu are offering a five-year extension of program rights that includes a two-year exclusive deal, so it’s a very lucrative target for all interested. Hulu went up for sale last month, and Yahoo reportedly made a US$2 billion bid for it already.

    Whoever buys Hulu, I have just two requests:

    1. Make the service available to the roughly six billion humans who don’t live in the United States.
    2. Like John Gruber says, get rid of the Flash-centric interface.

    Apple may be putting in a bid to buy Hulu originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 21 Jul 2011 22:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Source | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    The perils of bashing an OS you’ve never used

    I’ve been running OS X Lion for about 24 hours now. I knew what to expect before installing it thanks to months of coverage, but that was no substitute for actually diving through Lion’s features firsthand. After a day of getting used to new features like Mission Control, fullscreen apps, Resume, and various other tweaks to my Mac’s OS, I’ve grown to enjoy Lion far more than any version of OS X before it.

    That’s not to say it’s been 100 percent smooth sailing. I turned the iOS-inspired, systemwide autocorrect off immediately after the first boot up into Lion, because a feature that’s a godsend on a touchscreen would drive me (and most competent typists) absolutely insane on a “real” keyboard.

    I disabled the inversed, “natural” trackpad scrolling right away, too, but I’ve decided to give it one more chance to work its counterintuitive magic on my muscle memory. Some of the trackpad gestures don’t work all that well on my pre-unibody MacBook Pro — the gesture for showing the Desktop works maybe 25 percent of the time — and some of the other gestures occasionally bug out in Safari and stop working. I’m also not a fan of the “dumbing down” the Finder’s sidebar has received; in Snow Leopard I had several default saved searches in the sidebar that let me access files based on history, but those went away in Lion, I’ve had to rebuild them from scratch, and they still don’t work quite as well as they did in 10.6.

    The one common thread running through all these gripes? They’re coming from someone who’s actually used Lion. I can speak with some authority on what I like or dislike about Apple’s newest OS, because I’ve spent most of my waking hours since the launch playing around with it (much to my wife’s chagrin). Some people who’ve also used Lion have laundry lists of complaints that are even longer than mine, with a handful of reviewers from (ahem) bastions of impartial Apple-related journalism (/ahem) like Gizmodo panning it thoroughly.

    All snark aside, even though I disagree with the bulk of their review, at least it’s coming from the point of view of someone who’s actually used Lion. It’s far harder for me to wrap my head around screeds like this one from a TUAW reader:

    Coming from a Windows PC I moved to the Mac about 2 years ago, and up to now I didn’t regret it at all. But what I now read about Lion makes me think that Apple is no better than Microsoft in telling people how they should use a computer. I call that arrogance, and I hate arrogance. Apple should not tell their users how to work, they should assist them with their work.

    I hope that Lion will be made more user friendly very soon, otherwise Snow Leopard may be the last Mac OS I will ever use.

    Did you see the key text in that quote? If not, here it is: “What I now read about Lion.” If you believe everything you read about Lion, then like everything else Apple does the OS is merely a conspiracy from Big Brother Steve Jobs to lock down your computers all 1984-style, but so subtly that the Kool-Aid-drinking masses won’t even notice as they line up, iSheep all, to plunk down money for overpriced and over-hyped hardware that would cost half as much from any other company even though it’s far less functional than a ThinkPad running the latest Linux distro. (Gasp, gasp… did I miss any clichés? Oh, wait, I forgot to call you all fanbois. There, done.)

    Judging something as complex as a computer’s operating system solely by what you read is a fool’s errand (even if it’s book-length). I’ll happily talk smack about any version of Windows from XP on down to 3.1.1, because I’ve used (and despised) them all. But I don’t go out of my way to bash Windows 7, because I haven’t used it. Same story with Android; I may get my jollies smacking down the common memes associated with Android’s supposed dominance over iOS, but my practical experience with actually using Android can be measured in minutes, so I’m far from qualified in saying, unequivocally, that Android sucks and no one should use it, ever.

    That’s why I find pieces like this one from Dan Gillmor particularly puzzling. He claims that his current Mac will almost certainly be his last one because buying a new MacBook Air would force him to run Lion, and 10.7 “is far too new for me to trust as my primary OS.” That’s half of a fair statement; if you’ve got mission-critical stuff running on your Macs, running a day-old operating system on it may be unwise. Maybe wait for the first couple bug-fix updates, then take the plunge.

    He also mentions the lack of Rosetta, which we’ve acknowledged may block the big cat for some users. But why the big leap from “Lion is too new” to “Last. Mac. Ever?”

    This wouldn’t be a big issue if I liked Lion more. Some of the changes look terrific, based on reviews. Others are more questionable, even though they’re designed to create a more modern structure — in itself a worthy objective but not when forced on users who have become accustomed to perfectly workable earlier methods. (Emphasis mine)

    Again, we have someone who’s apparently decided Lion is the Devil in digital robes without actually using it. He doesn’t elucidate any of the changes he finds so questionable, but if his biggest complaint against Lion is that the user interface has changed compared to Snow Leopard’s, he’s right that it’s changed but (mostly) wrong that the changes are a bad thing.

    Both Gillmor and our unnamed tipster are complaining about how apparently non-user-friendly Lion is (it must be emphasized again, based on reviews, not personal experience), but Lion is probably the most user-friendly desktop OS I’ve ever used.

    If you want brain-dead simple, feature-deprived but so basic even my 91-year-old grandpa could understand it, Lion has Launchpad. If you want middle-of-the-road in terms of usability, features, and ease of use, you have full-screen apps. Semi-advanced usage, hey, the Finder is still there, still confusing as ever to novice users and still frustrating as ever to the mega-geeks who crave UI consistency. As someone who knows just enough about power user features to be a danger to myself and others, Mission Control rocks my face off with its features. And finally, for the über-nerds, Terminal is the same stolid UNIX-y text interface it’s been since the 1970s.

    Gillmor’s core complaint against Lion? It’s “plainly designed to push Mac users into a more iPad/iPhone-like ecosystem, where Apple gives you permission to use the computers you buy in only the ways Apple considers appropriate. The writing has been on Apple’s wall for some time. It’s aiming for absolute authority over the ecosystem in which all its devices operate.” In other words, it’s the “Steve Jobs Big Brother 1984” meme dressed up in a rented tuxedo. The Mac App Store is the harbinger of a future where only Apple-approved apps will run on your Mac. Inversed “natural” scrolling, fullscreen apps, and Launchpad are Apple’s way of brainwashing us all into buying iPads and iPhones. Macs and iPads living together, MASS HYSTERIA.

    “By rejecting its past so thoroughly — a proud history of creating devices that we users could modify for our own purposes with no one’s permission but our own — Apple is forcing me to move on,” Gillmor says. I don’t know if he’s been paying attention for the past decade, but user-modifiable devices haven’t been Apple’s forte since the late 90s. You can’t even swap out the batteries on Apple’s notebooks without a trip to the Genius Bar, and the whole idea that you can build your own Mac out of off-the-shelf parts is one that’s been dead for a long time for all but the most dedicated, persistent, and above all masochistic of hobbyists.

    Let’s say he’s talking about the software, and not the hardware. It is, after all, Lion’s purported intransigence that’s driving Gillmor away from the platform. For someone who espouses Linux (of all things) as a viable alternative to OS X, he doesn’t seem to give much credit to the OS X Terminal, or the Mac’s ability to run Windows (or even Linux!). I don’t know a chmod from a grep without Google holding my hand, but I can still do things in the OS X Terminal that simply aren’t practical (or, often, possible) in the Finder. I wouldn’t install Windows on my MacBook Pro unless someone paid me (a lot) to do it, but I know full well that I can.

    It’s not as though tripping the Lion fantastic is a difficult proposition. For US$30, you can download it and see for yourself whether it’s Jobs’s Gift to Mac Users or The Death Knell of OS X. You don’t even have to change out of your “play clothes” and drive to the Apple Store in order to get Lion. Stay home, stay in your bathrobe, download Lion, and at least give the thing a 24-hour spin before you decide that it’s bad enough to warrant leaping wildly onto a Linux-chugging ThinkPad.

    Remember when you were six years old, and you insisted that you HATED broccoli, and your mom said, “How do you know you hate it if you’ve never tried it?” It’s pretty much the same principle here, guys.

    The perils of bashing an OS you’ve never used originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 21 Jul 2011 21:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Source | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    New MacBook Air SSDs are replaceable

    No sooner had the new MacBook Air models shown up in Apple Stores than the iFixit team grabbed one for dissection. The site always does a teardown of the latest in Apple technology for the benefit of repair technicians and for hobbyists who love to see what’s inside their Macs. The 2011 13″ MacBook Air teardown shows how Apple engineers cram so much power in such a tiny computer.

    One of the nicer things to come out of the teardown was the news that the internal solid-state drive isn’t soldered to the logic board, meaning that MBA owners who would like more storage and don’t have an issue with invalidating their warranty can open the computer and install a drive with more capacity. While Apple’s MacBook Air storage solutions max out at 256 GB, OWC has faster SSDs with capacities up to 480 GB.

    With more powerful processors (up to a 1.8 GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i7 CPU) and the ability to bump up the SSD capacity, it’s a pity that none of the MacBook Air models are able to take more than 4 GB of RAM. It’s soldered onto the logic board, which is why iFixit notes that “it might be worth it to buy the nicer model (4 GB) from the get-go.”

    New MacBook Air SSDs are replaceable originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 21 Jul 2011 20:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Source | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    Video App Demo: USB Disk

    Let’s get this understood up front: USB Disk doesn’t allow you to use a USB drive on your iPad. Instead, it uses the metaphor of a physical drive to explain its function: it stores files on your iPad.

    You get files onto USB Disk using Dropbox, email attachments, FTP, Finder (and your local network), iDisk and of course, iTunes. Yes, USB Disk is another file storage app for your iPad, but a nicely designed one. Check out a walkthrough of its features in the video below and see if it is right for your needs.

    Video App Demo: USB Disk originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 21 Jul 2011 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Source | Permalink | Email this | Comments