Firemint’s Agent Squeek becomes Spy Mouse, gets a new trailer

It’s been interesting watching the development of Firemint‘s next iPhone game — I saw it in action way back at GDC 2010, but back then it was just a prototype without a name or even anything more than a few mechanics. More recently it was revealed as Agent Squeek, and looked like it was coming together as a worthy followup to the studio’s other big hits, Flight Control and Real Racing. Firemint is almost a completely different company since I first saw this game, however (having both merged with Infinite Interactive and been bought out by giant EA), and so it’s not too surprising that the game has undergone a marketing revamp — it will now be called Spy Mouse, and there’s a new trailer below.

As you can see, there’s not a lot of gameplay in the new trailer, so it’s unclear if the game itself has changed very much since we last saw it. It’s hard to think it has, given that the line-drawing/stealth title that was Agent Squeeks seems to work just as well as Spy Mouse (or SPY Mouse, if you want to surrender to the weird capitalization). We’ll keep an eye out for more on this one, as a release is probably coming soon.

Firemint’s Agent Squeek becomes Spy Mouse, gets a new trailer originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MacTech Boot Camp coming up on July 27, tickets still available

Neil Ticktin of MacTech magazine sends word that the upcoming annual MacTech Boot Camp in Los Angeles on July 27 is coming together quickly. Both this camp (which we visited last year to meet and greet some of the biggest names in the Mac community) and the one in Chicago on August 31 have nearly sold through on early bird pricing already, but if you still want in, you can follow this link to get $200 off the registration thanks to sponsor TidBITS and TUAW.

Speakers for the LA event include Ric Wilson, Chris Keller, and Peter Linde, so anyone interested in IT and/or consulting for the Mac platform would definitely do well to come by this event and check out the goings-on. Last year was very informational for attendees, and a lot of fun as well.

Again, registration is still open for Los Angeles and Chicago, so if you’re thinking about coming out, now’s the time to sign up. Hopefully we’ll see you there!

MacTech Boot Camp coming up on July 27, tickets still available originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Peel: first look at one of four iOS remotes for your TV

With so many new iOS-centric AV remotes coming out, we’re tackling them for review one by one. Each has a different approach to delivering on the “true universal remote” promise, and each has its own advantages and drawbacks.

The Peel is a two-part solution for your living room entertainment: there’s a free app, and a hardware IR blaster. You can use the Peel app by itself, but the hardware (which costs $99 and can be found in Apple Stores) adds the ability to control your AV equipment from within the app.

My expectation for the Peel remote was for it to become my universal remote, complete with nifty app that easily allows me to find something good on TV. Unfortunately, the Peel isn’t great hardware. You’ll need other gear, and still keep your original remotes handy. But as a TV show discovery app, and as a way to mine the data of what is on at a certain moment by genre or personal preferences, it excels. Read on for a full report on how Peel works, and what you can or can’t expect from this young company.

Hardware

At first, I was taken aback by the product setup. While the packaging is clever, the Peel isn’t just something you plop down on your coffee table.

There are 3 components to a Peel setup: the Wire, the Fruit and your iOS device running the app.

The Wire (cable)

This is about the size of a small, round pencil case and has a LED which glows green (if ready) or blue (if simply powered up). You have to plug the wire into your house power and into a spare Ethernet port on your home router.

Peel doesn’t use Bluetooth; it uses ZigBee, a Wi-Fi protocol designed for short range communications. Sure, Bluetooth is similar, but there’s a problem with Bluetooth devices (which I’ll discuss later this week in detail); they power down after a while to save battery. With the Wire plugged in and using ZigBee, the remote is very responsive provided you’re less than 30 feet from it.

The effective range of the Wire, and thus your entire Peel setup, is important. If you keep your router far away from your TV, you will encounter issues. In my case, once my iPhone moved more than 33 feet away, it had trouble picking up the Wire. The Wire sends a signal to the Fruit, and the Fruit is the IR blaster which actually tells your components to do things.

The Fruit

This is the pear-shaped infrared blaster unit which sends remote signals to your components. It is powered by a C battery and was at 1.6 volts after a month of testing. It’s built quite well, and the beige top comes off to reveal a clip on cover for the battery. Peel says they’ll produce different tops for the unit to match your style.

The Fruit should ideally be close to the Wire as well, and mine was 26 feet away. The Fruit must be within line of sight of your components, as it will need to send IR signals to each device. In my case that meant perching the Fruit on an edge of an old side table to point at my TV, etc. while remaining as close as possible to my somewhat distant Wire in the den. The app will tell you that the Fruit and the Wire should be no more than 25 feet from each other, and that’s a problem for me.

If you live in a small apartment or you happen to keep your wireless router close to your television, you may not ever have an issue with your Peel. In my case, I live in a long house with only one floor. My Airport base station is located centrally in my den, and my TV setup is in the adjacent living room. As stated, the Fruit was 26 feet from the wire but I found I sometimes had to pick up the Fruit and move it within just a few feet of the Wire to re-associate the two. This is bad. It was true of two Peel units as well, despite Peel’s insistence that I could theoretically be further away (it just wasn’t recommended, a rep told me).

In fact, today I tried once again to use the Peel remote and it failed completely. I was eventually able to get the Fruit and the Wire talking (as best I can tell as there are no indicator lights on the Fruit), but the Fruit was unable to even power on my TV — either it wasn’t receiving signals or it wasn’t sending IR blasts. There’s very little real troubleshooting you can do, sadly, and with 3 components to worry about, the simple act of turning on the TV can become a half-hour troubleshooting not-so-fun affair.

Peel app

Here is where the Peel approach really shines. I thought my Peel would be a universal remote, capable of controlling all my devices to the last button. Having seen Griffin’s Beacon at CES, my expectations were high. However, Peel’s purpose is not to provide a button-happy remote unit. Instead, Peel wants to help you find TV shows that you want to watch and do it with minimal effort.

Show “tiles” by genre and the detail screen

TV Discovery

Typically, if you want to watch “something” that’s on live, you have to pore through a giant grid (depending on how many channels you subscribe to), be it a printed TV listing or an onscreen program guide. Peel does something very different, instead choosing to sort shows by genre and presenting you with what’s on at that moment by category.

For example, I customized the Peel app to show me what comedies were on when I checked TV shows. You can customize what you see in each of the major categories, and I re-ordered the default to show Comedy, Animation and Sci-Fi first, followed by all the rest (and there’s just about everything).

The major categories, represented by buttons on a bar at the bottom of the screen of the app, are Top Picks (basically what’s on at that moment, but typically less than a dozen based on your preferences), TV Shows, Movies, Sports and a handy search function.

When tapping on a show’s icon from the grid view, you go into a bit more detail before you tune to that show. A single screen highlights the show, a description, what channel it is on, and there’s a button to turn to that channel immediately. In addition to these basic functions are buttons to “cut” a program (sort of like a thumbs-down on Pandora), favorite a show, set a reminder (which you can tie to a specific calendar) and a button to Tweet or post to Facebook.

I found the Peel method for finding “something to watch” very effective. Since you tend to want to shut off your brain when plopping down on the couch to watch TV, having to think less about what you’d like to watch is incredibly handy. I cannot stress enough how great it is to not have to poke around a giant grid of tiny text to find something on.

While I found a few bugs in previous versions of the app, a recent update has cleared up most of the issues, which were largely pages loading with no data.

The remote control and search screens

Integration with Hardware

If everything works, the Peel app works adequately well. Peel seems to think you will be staring, mouth agape, at your TV so they emphasize how all you have to do is swipe up or down to change the volume. You see, they are quite proud of the fact that they presume you will not want to look at your remote while engrossed in the latest “Sixteen and Pregnant” marathon. Of course, never mind you have to turn on your iOS device, unlock it, and you’ll inevitably have a bright light in your hand as you swipe, thus somewhat taking you out of the experience… But no matter, it does an OK job of making large fingers worry less about hitting a target on a small screen.

As I said before, this is not going to be your universal remote. If you want to pull up the guide on your DVR, or change a recording or access menus or do anything more than the most basic functions on your components you will be sorely disappointed. Actually, you’ll just have to keep your other remotes handy. Peel is all about you mindlessly gazing at the TV for hours on end, not much else.

As a remote, the Peel isn’t that great anyway. It’s cool if you want to tune to a show, but I found an odd lag when adjusting volume, perhaps the primary use of the app once you’re in a show. Turning volume up or down yielded frequent pauses, making it less than smooth.

You can swipe left or right to rewind or fast-forward (on your DVR or DVD/Blu-ray), or tap to pause/play. I like this idea, but again, the notion that you won’t look down at your iPhone while controlling components is a bit silly. Of course you will. Bright light, dark room. Anyway, you can jump back to a previous channel, remove a channel from your lineup and mute.

There’s a record button, but my DVR (from longtime manufacturer Scientific Atlanta) requires a few more clicks to activate a recording, which means you will need to tap another button to access the 4-way controller screen. The playback screen gives you a Menu button, an OK button and the typical 4-way controller found on most DVR remotes. There’s a handy Exit button and DVR button as well.

Settings and Customization

You can set up different Peels for different rooms (you won’t have to use any additional cables for the router, luckily, but they will all be restricted by the 25-foot range), check the Peel Fruit battery level (the graphics never worked and the voltage reading never changed, so I don’t think that really works), and customize your preferences. One cool thing about adding additional locations is that you can set up the Peel for a bar, providing quick help for bartenders to locate the game you’d like to watch (this tip from the Peel blog).

For your preferences, you can re-arrange the preset order for each category, and that is extremely handy. If you largely watch comedy, you’ll put Comedy at the top of the list for TV Shows. There’s a “basic info” you can input for your age and gender, but you can opt out. The only advantage here is supposedly yielding better show recommendations, especially if you behave as the average matching age-and-gender person would.

There are the requisite Facebook and Twitter logins as well, meaning you can spam all your buddies while you watch that Golden Girls marathon on Lifetime.

Here you’ll also find the settings for your reminders — which calendar they should go to and how long before you are alerted. Lastly, there’s a button to completely reset the Peel app, erasing all customization and settings.

Setup

When you first setup the app it’ll ask you if you want to use the Peel as a remote or just a TV discovery app. If you simply use it without the hardware, it’ll walk you through re-ordering the genres for TV and sports, then ask your age and gender.

If you use the hardware, the app will first instruct you to plug in the Wire. Then, you’ll need to type in a code found next to the battery compartment on the Fruit.

Finally, you’ll get a screen telling you the Fruit and the Wire should be less than 25 feet away from each other, and the Fruit and your components should be less than 15 feet away.

With that out of the way you’ll start the slow, arduous process of setting up the IR functions for the Fruit. That means going through a list of manufacturers for each component and testing which codes work. After this you’ll go through the software setup as described earlier. Then, you’ll be prompted about channel control. Peel asks if you use a cable box with or without a DVR or just the TV. In my case, I have DVR. Then it wants to know if you control volume via TV or a stereo. In my case, I use the TV.

Peel gets a little wacky for TV input, however. Instead of just giving you a darn Input button (and inching ever closer to being a universal remote), there’s a clunky setup procedure that sends input codes to your TV, iterating through them until you are on TV. Unfortunately this has no real practical purpose, as the remote has no way of knowing what input you might happen to be on when you decide to watch TV. So without a proper Input button on the remote app itself, this step is largely extraneous and annoying.

Setup is relatively painless, provided you have everything close to each other and the iPhone can find the Fruit. Mine just quit working, possibly because the battery was 1.6 volts (although it was working fine the week before). Unfortunately, there’s very little help in the hardware when troubleshooting, and the unit I purchased (not the demo, the one I got in an Apple Store) also exhibited the same behavior! Now I’m basically stuck with a $99 paperweight. Except it won’t weigh down paper without the C battery.

Conclusion

I bought a Peel in an Apple Store thinking it was a universal remote. When I found out it would only change channels and adjust volume (in the earlier version of the app there wasn’t even a record button), I was pretty upset paying $99 for something that couldn’t do anything more than what a $10 remote from Big Lots could do. However, I found that the way Peel presents TV discovery is really quite excellent. If you just want to watch something funny, or if you’re scrambling to see what kid shows are on, there are few apps like Peel.

So the software is great. The hardware? Not so much. I’m left to try and eBay my Peel and happily return the demo unit. Considering the distance between my router, the Fruit and where I’m sitting could add up to over 35 feet, there’s little reason for me to use the thing. Plus, after encountering difficulty re-associating the remote after a week not using the device, I’m not sure I can recommend this to even the smallest apartment dweller.

I guess if you have a daily habit of plopping in front of the TV but never have a specific show in mind, and you live in a tiny space, the Peel would be great for you. Otherwise? Well, there are other universal remotes on the market — and we’ll be looking at them shortly. Keep the Peel app around for finding stuff, but ignore paying for the hardware.

The rest of this week we’ll look at more hardware: the UnityRemote (seen at CES), the Beacon (also seen at CES) and the dark horse contender, the Ri universal remote. Stay tuned!

Peel: first look at one of four iOS remotes for your TV originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 18:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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33% of iPhone owners think their phones already have 4G service

With Verizon rolling out its advanced 4G LTE network, and AT&T deploying a similar 4G system, you’d think that these faster 4G services would be something iPhone owners are clamoring for. Not true, at least according to a survey from Retrevo.

The consumer research firm says that 1/3 of iPhone owners actually think their phones are already on a 4G network, even though, as we all know, Apple isn’t offering a 4G capable phone yet. Maybe it’s the fact that the latest iPhone is called the iPhone 4, but the Retrevo study indicates Blackberry owners are also confused, or at least 24% of them are.

Of the smartphone owners who know what 4G is, 1/3 think it is too expensive. Another interesting data point is that 61% of iPhone owners don’t care if their next Apple phone has 4G service or not.

It looks like marketing departments will have their work cut out for them trying to explain (and then of course sell) this service to consumers. Congress is watching this very closely, and there is a move to force service providers to spell out the differences in services and the fees associated with them. A survey result like this shows that consumers are definitely confused about exactly what services they do and don’t have.

The Retrevo survey had a sample size of more than 1,000 consumers in June of this year.

33% of iPhone owners think their phones already have 4G service originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Star Trek PADD official app creates iPad fact from science fiction

As soon as the iPad came out, Star Trek: The Next Generation fans were comparing it to PADD, the touchscreen device used in the famous sci-fi television series. But now those comparisons have come to life: an official version of the Star Trek PADD is now available in the App Store as a full app. Not only does it recreate the famous LCARS graphic interface from the series, but it’s chock full of official Star Trek information from the database, letting you know about all of the series’ ships, characters, and timelines. You can follow links to browse through the content, read up-to-date information from the official Facebook and Twitter accounts, and even run “diagnostic modes” on the USS Enterprise (the NCC-1701-D, of course).

Very sweet app for Star Trek fans, available in the App Store right now for US $4.99. Just try not to cause any intergalactic incidents while messing around in the ship’s databases — Starfleet doesn’t take kindly to anyone breaking the Prime Directive, accidentally or otherwise.

[via Los Angeles Times]

Star Trek PADD official app creates iPad fact from science fiction originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 17:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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EA buying PopCap Games for $750 million

Whispers about this started a little while ago, but it appears the rumors are true: EA is acquiring casual game developer PopCap Games for $650 million cash plus another $100 million in stock and incentives.

That’s a huge deal, and surprisingly cheap, given that PopCap’s value has been estimated as high as $1 billion. PopCap of course made its name on casual PC games like Bejeweled and Plants vs. Zombies, but in recent years those titles have become mobile juggernauts, and the iOS platform is currently the company’s crown jewel.

EA also has been working hard on the mobile front (recently acquiring iOS developer Firemint, among a few other big deals), so combining PopCap’s library and talent for casual gaming with EA’s marketing and distribution arms should make the two a lot of money going forward.

PopCap’s CEO says it plans to work with EA to “scale our games and services to deliver more social, mobile, casual fun to an even bigger, global audience.” As for us, we’re just hoping Plants vs. Zombies 2 is somewhere in those plans. Oh and Bejeweled 3 for iOS please. And more stuff from the 4th and Battery mini-studio, too. More of everything, really — thanks!

EA buying PopCap Games for $750 million originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 16:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW’s Daily Mac App: TinyExpander

TinyExpander for Mac

Every Mac comes with a built-in file compression utility, but its decompression support is limited. We’ve featured a perennial favorite, the Unarchiver before on the Daily Mac App, but today we’ll take a look at a new kid on the Mac App Store block, TinyExpander.

Just like the Unarchiver, TinyExpander is ready to expand whatever archive you throw at it. It’ll handle over 25 different formats, with the highlights being Zip, 7z, RAR, TAR and XAR. TinyExpander is also able to extract encrypted archives, so it’s pretty safe to say that it’ll get the job done for almost any archive you’re likely to have on a day-to-day basis, save for the really obscure formats.

There aren’t many preferences to change in TinyExpander (as you can see above), but you can set archives to expand to a custom folder, should you want everything extracted to the same place. You can also change whether it’ll trash the archive or not when it’s finished extraction, and also whether it’ll show you the results in a new Finder window. If you expand an archive to a folder that already exists, TinyExpander will give you the option to overwrite it or cancel your action, which should help make sure you don’t accidentally overwrite something important.

TinyExpander is a great little utility that gets the job done without a fuss. If you’re not enamoured with the Unarchiver, then the free TinyExpander is a worthy replacement.

Continue reading TUAW’s Daily Mac App: TinyExpander

TUAW’s Daily Mac App: TinyExpander originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Florida Apple Store expands, Hong Kong construction begins, Ala Moana coming soon

When you’re one of the top retailers in the world, you need to stay on top of your game. There’s news of Apple Store expansion, new construction, and renovation coming from all around the world.

First, ifoAppleStore is reporting that the Mall at Millenia Apple Store in Orlando, Florida is going to be moving to a new, much larger location sometime in 2012. The existing store is long and narrow, and was constantly packed, so Apple outbid Z Gallerie on a space on the upper level of the mall that is over twice the size.

Next, 9 to 5 Mac provided intel that the flagship Apple Store being constructed at the IFC Center in Hong Kong is now hidden behind a large construction curtain (above). The store is expected to be Apple’s most expensive in the world, rent-wise, and might open as soon as this fall. Oddly enough, Apple is also expected to open a smaller store nearby at Pacific Place.

TUAW tipster E sent us three photos of the construction of the new Apple Store at the Ala Moana Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. The open storefront visible in one of the photos in the gallery below is a temporary store to keep those dollars flowing in while the construction is underway.

Considering the shaky state of the global economy, it’s wonderful to see that Apple is continuing to look to a more prosperous future.

Florida Apple Store expands, Hong Kong construction begins, Ala Moana coming soon originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo app now supports iPhone, series 3 DVRs

Tivo has finally released its DVR app for the iPhone or iPod touch, a new version that offers many of the features of its bigger iPad cousin. The iPhone version lets Tivo users manage their recording schedule, browse throughout content and control their DVR easily from their phone. The app also supports both the newest Tivo Series 4 models and the older Series 3 DVR. The only thing missing on the iPhone is the ability to flick to watch content. This streaming part of the application is only supported on the larger screen of the iPad.

The now universal application also includes a handful of bug and speed fixes that appear on the iPhone and iPad version. Both apps are in the App Store now and available for free.

TiVo app now supports iPhone, series 3 DVRs originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iOS 5 beta 3 tethered jailbreak is out, requires Windows PC

That didn’t take long. Apple sent out iOS 5 beta 3 yesterday, and now a sn0wbreeze update has already jailbroken the beta.

It’s a tethered jailbreak (requires a Windows machine, in fact) and if you happen to be the type of person who just doesn’t feel right without a jailbroken iOS device, you can download sn0wbreeze 2.8b4 and go to town.

Engadget mentioned that there are features like custom alerts for text messages in iOS 5 beta 3, and also posted the following video from AppleNApps which purported to show that you could put app icons anywhere on the home screen of an iOS 5 device. The commenters on Engadget were quick to point out that this “feature” is actually a bug in beta 3 and not a new feature. Whoops!

iOS 5 beta 3 tethered jailbreak is out, requires Windows PC originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How to photograph jewelry with an iPhone 4

You know those beautiful photos of jewelry that you see in ads and catalogs? The folks at Modahaus wanted to see if their table top studios could be used with an iPhone 4 to make images that would be good enough for a professional photographer to sell. The results were astonishingly good.

The Modahaus studio comes in three sizes, ranging from 8.5″ to 24″ wide, and use a set of translucent and opaque backdrops that work with studio lights to create varied lighting effects. The crew at Modahaus used Tap Tap Tap’s Camera+ app, a Glif tripod mount, a GorillaPod flexible tripod, and lights to take some very professional photos.

Similar setups are available from other vendors as well. ThinkGeek, for example, has the $49.99 Portable Photo Studio, complete with lights and collapsible lightbox. With an iPhone 4, the right lighting, a good camera app, skill, and some patience, you could be shooting professional-quality product images.

How to photograph jewelry with an iPhone 4 originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s chief patent lawyer Richard Lutton Jr. to leave the company

Apple’s Chief Patent lawyer will soon leave the company according to a report from Reuters. The reasons for the departure of Richard “Chip” Lutton Junior during a time of escalated legal battles over patent infringement is not known. B.J. Watrous, former deputy general counsel at Hewlett-Packard, is Lutton’s replacement. Apple is also reportedly hiring more lawyers to beef up its intellectual property team as it takes on HTC, Samsung and others in various patent infringement complaints.

[Via AppleInsider]

Apple’s chief patent lawyer Richard Lutton Jr. to leave the company originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video App Demo: Agenda Calendar

Agenda Calendar is a gesture-based calendar app for your iPhone or iPod touch (our review here). Agenda features a very minimal interface, presenting your data in a simple, straightforward manner with a few animations here and there. There is some intelligence built in as well, giving you links to maps and other things within the app.

It’s very nicely done and should appeal to those who like a no-fuss interface. Check out the demo below for a preview.

Video App Demo: Agenda Calendar originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW’s Daily iPad App: PDF Converter

It’s not often that we can make a product announcement and also have it be a Daily App, but that’s the case with Readdle’s newest iPad app, PDF Converter (US$6.99).

PDF Converter adds a tremendous amount of power to your iPad; it makes it possible to save almost any content on your iPad as a PDF file. Whether you have an email attachment, a web page, a document from your iDisk or Dropbox that you want to make into a PDF, PDF Converter does it. A tap on an email attachment brings up the familiar “Open In…” buttons, allowing the document to be opened in PDF Converter. The attachment is automatically converted to PDF format and available for further distribution or storage on the iPad.

To convert a Safari web page to a PDF for future reading offline, just add a “pdf” prefix to the URL in the address bar, tap “Go” on the iPad keyboard, and the document is converted and placed in the Documents list in PDF Converter.

The app can also take anything from the iPad clipboard, your contacts list, or Photo Library and convert it to a PDF. This is a wonderful app for creating and distributing ad hoc address lists — by tapping on the names of assorted contacts and tapping the Convert button, PDF Converter instantly creates a formatted PDF with the contact info for all of the people you’ve chosen.

It’s also useful for creating ebooks on the fly. I took a Word document from Dropbox holding my 2009 NaNoWriMo novel, converted it to a PDF, and then used PDF Converter to open the novel in iBooks. This was all done without even getting near my Mac.

PDF Converter has found a place on my iPad, and I think a lot of iPad users will feel the same way once they install the app.

TUAW’s Daily iPad App: PDF Converter originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New MacBook Airs reportedly to feature backlit keyboards

Besides a faster processor and Thunderbolt support, the next generation MacBook Air models may also include a backlit keyboard. This feature was present on the first MacBook Air model introduced in 2008 and dropped from the 2010 line. This removal was widely criticized by Mac owners accustomed to the backlit keyboard of their MacBook Pro.

The new 2011 Air models may be introduced in the next few weeks either at the same time or shortly after OS X Lion is introduced. Apple reportedly has 400,000 units sitting in a warehouse waiting for the Lion to be finalized and installed on the hardware.

New MacBook Airs reportedly to feature backlit keyboards originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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