MacBook Pro BTO gets a silent speed bump

After distracting us with new goodies, Apple updated the MacBook Pro with a build-to-order CPU bump, bringing the full speed processor choice up to a 2.8GHz i7.

The upgrade will cost you US$400 and is limited to the 17-inch and 15-inch models. Consider this the polar opposite of the new Core 2 duo-powered MacBook Air — huge, heavy and full of power and storage. If you need a maxed-out Apple portable, this is it.

MacBook Pro BTO gets a silent speed bump originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Scare up some fun with Angry Birds Halloween

Just like Doodle Jump, another big-name App Store game is getting in the Halloween spirit. Angry Birds Halloween is now available on the App Store. It’s a US$0.99 “special edition” of Angry Birds with 45 Halloween-themed levels, which are complete with “scary” backgrounds and pumpkins for you to smash.

Unlike the Doodle Jump “Doodlestein” update, Angry Birds Halloween is a totally separate app from Angry Birds, so even if you own the original Angry Birds, you’ll still have to pay $0.99 for Angry Birds Halloween. But considering how much fun Angry Birds is, another buck for 45 new levels isn’t a whole lot to ask.

Scare up some fun with Angry Birds Halloween originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple quietly deprecates OS X’s factory-fitted Java

In an announcement on developer.apple.com, Apple states that “As of the release of Java for Mac OS X 10.6 Update 3, the version of Java that is ported by Apple, and that ships with Mac OS X, is deprecated.” It now seems likely that OS X 10.7 will not have a Java install built into the OS, although the current runtime will continue to be supported during the regular support cycles for Mac OS X 10.5 and 10.6.

This is not all that surprising. In the early days of OS X, Apple was keen on Java, supporting it as a full-fledged alternative to Objective C for application development. Over the years, though, its enthusiasm waned; we saw longer and longer gaps between updates and an official discontinuation of the Java-Cocoa bridge in 2006. Client-side Java on OS X has been effectively moribund for a long time now (with one standout exception in recent times). Update: commenter David Emery quite rightly points out that NeoOffice is significant too.

Server-side Java on OS X, however, is a small but non-zero market. Currently, Oracle (which acquired Java developer Sun in 2009) offers Java installations for Windows, Linux, and Solaris; it remains to be seen if it or one of the handful of third-parties offering JVMs (like IBM) will step up and ship an OS X version of their product. There are also open source implementations that flesh out the not-quite-complete OpenJDK distribution to make it fully usable and Java SE 6 compliant, like IcedTea; none of those yet exist as packages for Mac OS X, but that could certainly change.

Thanks to Hendrik Schreiber for sending this in.

Apple quietly deprecates OS X’s factory-fitted Java originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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After iLife ’11 analysis: Uncertain future for iWeb, no future for iDVD

Yesterday’s announcement of iLife ’11 brought some cool new features across the suite… well, most of the suite anyway. As many people have noticed, only iPhoto, iMovie, and Garage Band were updated. iWeb and iDVD got no love besides small code changes that make them compatible with the new iLife ’11 apps. So, what does this mean for the future of the two apps?

iDVD

Sorry, iDVD fans, but the app is as good as dead. The last time iDVD got a major upgrade was back in 2006 with iLife ’06. A year later, iLife ’08 brought minor changes to iDVD, restoring some themes from the first two versions of the software. Since then, two versions of iLife have come and gone, but iDVD has not changed one bit.

Back in 2003 or 2004 (I don’t remember which year exactly), my group at Apple was in a meeting with people from the iLife team. One of the project managers threw out a question to us. He asked why iDVD was so essential to the iLife suite, which at the time also included iTunes, iPhoto, and iMovie. This wasn’t just a question he was asking us either — it was one of the interview questions for programmers that were hired to work on the iLife suite. The answer: iDVD was essential because it wrapped a user’s digital life up into one tidy package. Music, photos, and movies could be edited and burned onto a shiny disc for distribution to friends and family. As an interesting side note, the programming manager told us that no one on the iLife team ever got the question right on their first try.

Continue reading After iLife ’11 analysis: Uncertain future for iWeb, no future for iDVD

After iLife ’11 analysis: Uncertain future for iWeb, no future for iDVD originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW’s Daily App: Sally’s Salon Luxury Edition

A few super popular games on the App Store have basically helped spawn the “time management” genre. Games like Diner Dash and Sally’s Spa pioneered the genre, and Sally’s Salon follows in that tradition. The game tasks you with moving cashier, stylist, and masseuse Sally around her salon, where she has to take care of customers as quickly as possible. Sally’s Salon is stylized for girls, with lots of pink and sparkles to go with the theme of a beauty salon, but the gameplay actually gets quite hardcore. It ramps up well as the customers quickly move in and through the store, and you try to make as much money as possible.

The app recently got a free upgrade to the “Luxury Edition,” adding new salon locations, updated graphics and controls, and better visuals. As I write this, the app is just US$0.99, but even at the regular price of $2.99, it’s an excellently polished game with very solid gameplay. If you’re an old hand at the time management genre, or if you just want an excellent introduction to the process, Sally’s Salon is a great way to dive right in.

TUAW’s Daily App: Sally’s Salon Luxury Edition originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Terminal Tips: bash cron script to keep an app running

Do you have some apps that you want to keep running all the time? If so, and if you’re not afraid of the Terminal or the command line, I have a script for you.

When I come home at the end of the day, Dropbox has stopped running on my iMac. I’m running the latest version, and it works fine on my MacBook Pro, but for some reason, this just keeps happening. The script has nothing to do with Dropbox itself; you could substitute any app that you always want running, such as LaunchBar, OmniFocus, 1Password, or any other app that you like.

It’s fairly simple:

#!/bin/sh

PATH=/bin:/usr/bin

# Change 'Dropbox' to whatever app you want. Be sure to capitalize
# it correctly and include any spaces. You do not need to add .app
APPNAME="Dropbox"

# if the app name _IS_ found in process list, exit
ps xc|fgrep "${APPNAME}" >/dev/null && exit 0

# if the app isn't found, open it
open -a "${APPNAME}"

exit 0

That’s it. Now, you save the file (I call mine “keep-my-app-running.sh”); I saved it to ~/bin/, but you can put it anywhere you want.

Be sure to type ‘chmod +x /Users/luomat/bin/keep-my-app-running.sh’ (or wherever it is saved) to tell OS X it is an eXecutable file. (Thanks to Justin for reminding me about this in the comments below.)

Now, we need to tell cron to run it. Some folks will tell you to use launchd, but cron works well and it’s easy, so we’ll use that. To do that, create a ~/.crontab file using your favorite text editor. If it already exists, just keep whatever’s there, and add this line at the bottom:

*/5 * * * * /Users/luomat/bin/keep-my-app-running.sh

Change “luomat” to whatever your login name is, and change “keep-my-app-running.sh” to whatever you named the script. This tells cron to check if your app is running every 5 minutes or so. You can change the 5 to something else if you want to change the frequency. The last step is to tell cron to load the new file you’ve created:

crontab ~/.crontab

If you want to verify that it worked, run ‘crontab -l’ to see if your crontab is listed properly. It may also be a good idea to run ‘crontab -l’ before you begin in order to make sure that there isn’t anything already in there. Most likely there isn’t, or if there is, you already know about it.

Update: As noted in the comments, cron works fine, but launchd can be configured to relaunch Dropbox as soon as it exits. I’ve enclosed a picture of a Lingon screenshot below, or you can see the plist that it creates. Lingon is no longer developed, but it works fine for me under Snow Leopard.

Gallery: LingonForDropbox

Terminal Tips: bash cron script to keep an app running originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 07:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Review of MorningReport – Time to replace your alarm clock and weatherman

MorningReport is a wonderful way to wake up with the morning, and it gives you all the information you need to start the day for only $0.99. Not only is it great for the mornings, but it can also provide you with updates throughout the day regarding the current conditions. Although it is a very simple app, with just a few small additions and some little tweaks, this app has the potential to replace both your weather app and alarm app.

Features

Waking up in the morning and being able to know the time, weather, and current conditions without even opening your eyes is the highlight of MorningReport. Once you have the alarm set, you will wake up to a male or female voice, which will speak all of the aforementioned information to you. You can view the high and low temperatures for the day, and throughout the day you can listen to a report for the city you are in, which will provide you with the same, but updated, information as when you woke up. This can also be in a male or female voice, and it does not have to be the same as the alarm.

Review

Although not packed with features, the ones it has are implemented very well. The first thing it will do is automatically determine your location for you, and it will update it if you travel. The morning report it provides you is excellent, and the other report, which can be heard throughout the day, is great as well. Both reports are exactly the same, except one will play automatically when your alarm goes off, the other must be played manually. It does not give the exact time, but instead will say something like “It’s nearing 12:00,” or “It’s just past 7:30.” Some people may prefer the exact time, but I think this is nice, and you can just at the clock for the exact time anyway. Aside from the time, you are also given the current conditions, such as whether it is sunny, raining, etc., and the temperature, which can be in Fahrenheit or Celsius depending on your preference.

Then there are the alarms which are easy to set and can be set quickly. You can also choose the voice for each individual alarm, and if you want, you can make one alarm a male voice and the other female. You can choose whether or not you wantthe “Snooze” option on, and under “Settings” you can choose the duration of the snooze. However, the only alarm option is the vibrating combined with the spoken morning report, and it would be nice to see the ability to wake up to either a chosen radio station, or a song from your music library. The morning report is short and may not be too helpful at waking some people up, so having the option to pick a song or radio station, then play the report after the song or radio has played for a chosen duration, would be a very beneficial feature. It would also be great if the alarm would go off even if the app wasn’t open, but was still running in the background. Other small complaints are that the weather updates only every three hours, which is not very frequently at all, and seeing some added weather information would be a bonus as well. Lastly, although it looks very nice and it quite simple to use, a nicer, more elegant interface would be welcome, although that is more of personal preference.

Conclusion

Overall MorningReport is a handy little app to use in the mornings, and for only $0.99 it provides you with the time, weather, and the outside conditions right when you wake up. You can simply tap the speech bubble to get an updated report any time during the day. While this app could benefit from a few tweaks and additions here and there, overall it is a convenient app that does its intended tasks very well.

Steve Jobs announces an App Store for the Mac

Not surprisingly it was a slow news day yesterday for anything related to Apple that wasn’t the ‘Back to the Mac’ event. Therefore I figured I would post about the only (somewhat) developer related news from those announcements.

Many people have predicted it but Apple has finally made an official announcement it is going to create an App Store for the Mac. This really shouldn’t be that big of a shock to anyone considering Apple’s success with the iPhone App Store. It was announced on Wednesday that a total of 7 billion apps have been downloaded from the iTunes App Store since the store launched in 2007.

Thankfully Apple isn’t going to restrict developers from selling Mac desktop software in places other than the Mac App Store. The company plans to use a similar format to iTunes but the applications will be completely separate. You will be able to get updates via the Mac App Store as well. As with the iPhone app store developers will get 70% of sales with Apple getting the rest.

The Mac App Store is planned to open in the next 90 days.

Firemint’s Flight Control HD coming to Mac App Store

The dust hasn’t even settled in the wake of Apple’s announcement of the Mac App Store, but one well-known developer is already on board. Firemint, creator of Flight Control for the iPhone/iPod touch and Flight Control HD for the iPad, has announced it will bring Flight Control HD to the Mac via the Mac App Store. As a matter of fact, according to Firemint, Flight Control HD is already running on the Mac.

Firemint may be the first company to publicly announce support for the Mac App Store, but it’s unlikely to be the last. As Erica noted earlier, a centralized hub for app distribution on Mac OS X is something many developers will find very attractive, in spite of the more restrictive environment compared to the free-for-all market that exists now. Many developers won’t find the Mac App Store a good fit for them and will stick with traditional distribution channels, but developers like Firemint may find their apps reaching a much larger audience than before.

[via Mac Rumors]

Firemint’s Flight Control HD coming to Mac App Store originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 00:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SafeSleep lets you use safe sleep on demand on your Mac

If you’ve ever wanted more control over Apple’s “safe sleep” mode, the free SafeSleep.app from Side Tree Software is for you.

If you’ve never heard of it before, you might be wondering what “safe sleep” is (but if you have heard of it, you can skip the next couple paragraphs). When the battery on one of Apple’s notebook computers (including the MacBook, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and some late-model PowerBooks) is very low, OS X will put the machine into what Apple calls “safe sleep” mode. This is similar to standard sleep, except the contents of the RAM are completely written to the hard drive and all power shuts down. You can even remove the battery while the machine is in safe sleep. To wake the computer from safe sleep, press the power button on the computer. A progress bar will display (startup will be noticeably slower than a normal wake from sleep), then your computer will be restored to how it was before safe sleep was invoked.

This feature is called “hibernation” in the Windows world, and it’s one of the very few features I missed when I switched from Windows to Mac. (The other big one was how Windows deals with moving files, which can be replicated on the Mac side using moveAddict.) One of the nice things that Windows computers have is the ability to choose to hibernate when you are shutting down the machine. For years I never turned my Windows laptop off; I only hibernated. Unfortunately, Apple has not made that feature available to Mac users.

That’s where SafeSleep.app comes in. When you launch the app, it displays several options. The one I’m most excited about is “Safe Sleep Now,” which lets me choose safe sleep without having to change the way the Mac usually works. I can still just close the lid for normal sleep (or choose it from the window above), but if I want to make sure to trigger safe sleep, it’s now much easier to do.

“Always use Safe Sleep” will tell the computer to never use the normal, faster sleep mode. If you choose that and want to change it back later, select “Only Safe Sleep in Emergencies.” You can also totally disable safe sleep; this isn’t recommended for obvious reasons, but if you’re willing to take the risk, disabling it can make the process of putting your Mac into “normal sleep” faster.

Although safe sleep was designed for portable Macs, you can also use it on desktop Macs. At night I use safe sleep on my iMac because otherwise it seems to wake from “normal sleep” on its own. A word of caution, however: be sure to unmount any external drives which are connected to your Mac before entering safe sleep. Even if they remain physically attached to the Mac, OS X thinks the disk was ejected without being unmounted, which is something you want to avoid. Physically connected drives will automatically be remounted when the machine wakes from safe sleep.

SafeSleep is free and can be downloaded from MacUpdate.

SafeSleep lets you use safe sleep on demand on your Mac originally appeared on TUAW on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 21:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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App Store for Mac highlights two major App Store flaws

The idea of a Mac App Store is great… from a certain point of view. As it currently exists, the App Store has several problems and limitations which could be fairly easily removed.

1. Demos/Trial Periods/Returns: I’m not going to state unequivocally that Apple will have demos in the Mac App Store, but I will state unequivocally that Apple should have demos in the Mac App Store. As noted earlier, the Mac App Store guidelines state “Apps that are ‘beta’, ‘demo’, ‘trial’, or ‘test’ versions will be rejected.” That’s the same as the iOS App Store guidelines.

That should change. Demos aren’t just for small developers. Apple has offered demos for their apps, including iWork and Aperture. Adobe and Microsoft have as well. They give users a chance to try out an application without having to commit to it. This concept is almost as old as computers themselves.

Apple could address this very simply, without forcing users to understand ‘demo’ or ‘trial’ versions. All they need to do is say, “You have X days to change your mind after you download an app.” Maybe it’s two days, maybe seven, but some clearly defined window of opportunity. Most people are going to buy and go on. Some who buy and don’t like it will delete it. The App Store will know what apps you have installed. If you delete it before the return window closes, Apple simply doesn’t charge your credit card. That saves the developers from losing 30% of the cost of their app on a return, and Apple already purchases some length of time before processing them.

Amazon lets users return Kindle content for 7 days after purchase (hat tip to Patrick Burleson for that one!), and Android has as similar return window. Don’t tell me Apple can’t do the same thing.

2. Upgrade pricing: Right now, developers have no way of giving free or discounted upgrades to existing customers. This has been a problem that Apple was going to need to address even without a Mac App Store. Sure you may be willing to spend $40 on OmniFocus for iPad, but are you going to be equally willing to spend $40 for version 2? The folks at Iconfactory were skewered over a $5 upgrade for Twitterrific, can you imagine what OmniGroup is going to face when their apps come up for upgrade?

Again, this is a simple fix: Developers should be able to set two prices: one for those who have bought a previous version, and another for those who haven’t. Apple knows your purchase history, and should simply display the appropriate price in the App Store. It’s not rocket science.

Apple doesn’t do upgrade pricing for its consumer apps. If you go to buy iWork or iLife, you’re paying the same price regardless of whether you’ve been an iLife user since the beginning or whether you’re just picking it up. Logic Express, Aperture, Final Cut Express, and Final Cut Studio all have upgrade pricing.

These are both problems which existed yesterday before there was a Mac App Store, but the existence of a Mac App Store just makes these two problems all the more obvious. Both could be easily fixed, but it’s entirely up to Apple to fix them. Doing so will benefit not just Mac users, but iOS users too.

App Store for Mac highlights two major App Store flaws originally appeared on TUAW on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 23:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s FiOS Mobile Remote app ready for iPhone

Verizon FiOS appVerizon has had their FiOS DVR Manager app available for some time now. Now the company has released another offering to the App Store in the way of a wireless remote.

Using the Verizon FiOS Mobile Remote requires you to be connected to your FiOS-provided wireless network in order to work. Once you follow the simple steps presented by the app, you’ll be paired with your cable box and have the ability to quickly change channels, traverse the on-set programming guide and control the DVR. You know, like the actual cable box remote already does.

I’ve tried the app out, and it was certainly painless to setup. The controls are surprisingly responsive and, dare I say, may actually work faster than the standard IR remote. The biggest plus to using the app is the presence of a QWERTY keyboard. No more cursor-ing around an on-screen keyboard to search for programs!

I’m not really sure why Verizon didn’t just roll these functions into the DVR Manager app, but I guess they have their reasons. Both apps are free and in the App Store now.

[via electronista]

Verizon’s FiOS Mobile Remote app ready for iPhone originally appeared on TUAW on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Found Footage: Homemade stratospheric capsule uses iPhone GPS

In the midst of all the excitement and hype surrounding today’s announcements, we thought we’d share this popular and heart-warming tale of a father and son believing in their dreams and reaching for them.

Seven-year-old Max Geissbuhler and his dad, Luke Geissbuhler, dreamed of visiting space. After eight months of determination and preparation, and with the help of a weather balloon, a HD video camera and an iPhone, they got pretty close. Housing the equipment in a specially designed, insulated case (filled with some hand-warmers) and the hopes of capturing “the blackness beyond our earth,” the pair launched their explorer in August of this year. The video above is the story of that journey.

Climbing almost 19 miles, their craft flew into the stratosphere, capturing some rather impressive video footage along the way. International convention puts space at 100km. Once the weather balloon burst (due to lack of atmospheric pressure), the capsule began its decent back to the Earth — aided by a deployed parachute.

But how did they locate the unit once it had landed back on earth? Well, that’s where the iPhone came into play. They used a GPS tracking app on a borrowed iPhone (that’s how you know who your real friends are, by the way) to locate the downed capsule and recover it.

From all of us at TUAW, we say well done to you, Max and Luke Geissbuhler. The family is now gauging interest in a ‘how-to’ book for other parental explorers.

Found Footage: Homemade stratospheric capsule uses iPhone GPS originally appeared on TUAW on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 19:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Report: Apple to make significant enterprise gains in 2011

Despite Apple’s insistence that it is a mobile device company, it turns out that the Mac category is far from done growing. A new study from the Enterprise Desktop Alliance says that 2011 is set to be a huge year for Mac on the enterprise level, with reportedly 25 percent of all new systems in that category to be Macs. That would be astonishing, and would move the Mac from the current figure of 3.3% of enterprise systems up to 5%. All of this growth, says the EDA, will primarily come from companies who have already chosen Apple’s technology for their systems — they’ll just be buying more of it.

Why all the growth? Most of the respondents said that “parity in integration and management between Macs and PCs” was the biggest deal for them, and certainly Apple has moved strongly in that direction recently, with the switch to Intel chips and more compatible software than ever. Businesses also cited security as a concern, and while it’s not specifically mentioned in the report, you have to believe that the huge emergence of the iPhone and the iPad in the business world has done something to drive adoption of the Mac in that environment as well.

Enterprise Mac sales are already gigantic, but according to what enterprise customers are saying, they’re going to get even bigger in the next year.

Report: Apple to make significant enterprise gains in 2011 originally appeared on TUAW on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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