iPads headed into operating rooms along with surgeons

Georgetown iPadWhile some hospitals are eying the iPad as a way of going paperless with patient records, Georgetown University is already putting them directly in the operating room and into the hands of its surgeons. Offering real-time access to records and images of patients while inside the operating room, iPads have become “as essential as a scalpel” for surgeons while eliminating guesswork for those taking care of multiple patients each day.

“The iPad clearly has the potential to be very useful in the hospital and in the operating theater,” says Dr. Felasfa Wodajo in the January 2011 issue of the Journal of Surgical Radiology. “The same features which make the iPad great for surfing the web, such as looking at images and viewing video, nicely translate into the operating room.”

We have written about iPads showing up in Chicago-area hospitals and being offered to hospitals as a campaign promise in Australia, so I think we can safely assume that this trend will only increase as they become more popular outside of medical facilities. I have read a lot about how their use should bring down medical costs for patients. More and more hospitals are realizing just how powerful a tool like the iPad can be.

[via American Consumer News]

iPads headed into operating rooms along with surgeons originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monitor your baby from anywhere with the WiFi Baby 3G

My daughter is about four weeks away from having a baby, so I am really interested in the WiFi Baby 3G ($US 279.00). This Wi-Fi enabled baby monitor can let you see and hear your baby on any Mac or PC. Just plug it in, and any browser will let you check in from anywhere whenever you’d like. The device, manufactured by Y-Cam and created by a small husband and wife startup to watch their own baby, can display HD quality color video and audio during the day, and thanks to its array of (infrared, we assume) lights that turn on when it’s dark, it shows you black and white video at night using night-vision technology.

The WiFi Baby 3G is part computer and part webcam since it stands alone and doesn’t, as most other solutions, require you to plug a webcam into a computer. Although expensive, it’s quite ingenious. Some of its features include:

  • the ability to record video or still pictures
  • the ability to send email alerts or send alarms to a mobile device
  • if the built-in motion detector is triggered, an automatic light sensor that will adjust the light array to the light conditions of the baby’s room
  • and of course, the ability to work both on Wi-Fi and 3G networks

There are two options to monitor your baby from a mobile device. The cheapest (free) is also made by Y-Cam, and it’s called the Y-Cam MultiLive iP Camera Viewer. The limitations here are that this app doesn’t supply audio, and it’s a non-universal app without native iPad capability. The better option, according to the manufacturers of the WiFi Baby 3G, is the Baby Monitor HD ($9.99), a universal app that does transmit audio. To save battery life on your mobile device, this app gives you the option of turning off the video stream. There are also mobile solutions available for the Android. The WiFi Baby 3G is available in either black or white. Take a look at it in action by clicking below.

[via GEARlog]

Continue reading Monitor your baby from anywhere with the WiFi Baby 3G

Monitor your baby from anywhere with the WiFi Baby 3G originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Books app feels rushed, disappoints

google books app rushed tuaw hands onGoogle Books finally went live in App Store and we here at TUAW couldn’t wait to give it a try. Unfortunately, we should have. Google should have spent more time refining and polishing this app before releasing it. Google Books is a bit of a half-baked disappointment.

Let’s start with the big issues. The application doesn’t do landscape. Personally, I’m not completely adverse to portrait book reading — after all, it gives you the most room to read each page on the screen — but why doesn’t Google give me the choice?

I often like flipping back and forth between my books and ongoing solitaire games (I know, I know, but that’s what I do, and 4.2.1 makes it easy). Having to re-orient my iPad to the lap-unfriendly portrait orientation is just annoying. A two-page side-by-side layout seems to be a given in the e-reader world. I’m stunned it’s not already in there.

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Google Books app feels rushed, disappoints originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 15:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mobile share reports put Android in first for ads, RIM with most subscribers

Two big mobile market share reports have just released, both of them offering up some interesting news for Apple in the world of mobile phone OS users. First up, IDC’s report sends Google’s Android OS to a whopping 59 percent share, up from 48.6 percent last year. Apple, IDC says, will likely finish with less than 10 percent of the total market. That’s not necessarily bad news — Apple is one company, and Google’s Android phone comes in a variety of flavors from different manufacturers. IDC also says the mobile ad market has reached US$368 million, double what it was last year, and may double again next year to almost $2 billion. That’s a big pizza pie, of which Apple currently has around 8 percent thanks to iAd.

comScore has also released a mobile trends report, sitting Apple behind RIM in the top smartphone subscribers. The difference here is that comScore’s looking at subscribers, not users, and RIM’s large enterprise base allows it some leeway here. RIM has 36 percent of the market compared to Apple’s 25 percent, though in just the past few months, RIM has fallen over three points.

There’s also some information about how people are using their smartphones, and the number one usage, according to comScore, is text messaging, with 68 percent of mobile subscribers texting. Browsing on the phone, and downloading and using apps also both score high, but strangely, nowhere on the list is there information that anyone, you know, actually uses their phones to call people. Maybe that’s just assumed?

Mobile share reports put Android in first for ads, RIM with most subscribers originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 14:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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These are a few of Woz’s favorite things

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak enchanted members of a press tour late last week with the nine gadgets that proved most influential on his development as a computer guru.

His picks range from an IBM programmable punch-card machine to the Honeywell Kitchen Computer (above) to an original version of Pong. Of course, the last item on that list is the iconic Apple 1, the computer Woz and Steve Jobs built and sold out of a garage. It’s neat to browse through the eclectic list of older technology. It makes you wonder what today’s Macbook Airs and Apple TVs will eventually inspire.

These are a few of Woz’s favorite things originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 14:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Report shows vision of futuristic Apple campus

British architect Norman Fisher Foster is working on transforming Apple’s latest purchase — a real estate bargain from HP — into a new campus designed to give the company some breathing room.

El Economista reports that the 100-acre campus is to be modeled after Masdar, Abu Dhabi, the first city in the world without cars or carbon emissions. The new campus is being referred to as ‘Apple City,’ and both campuses are to be linked by tunnels.

It’s not surprising when you think about it. Apple has set out to revolutionize the personal computing experience, the mobile phone industry, tablet — sorry, slate computers — and your living room. Why not use these campus to test the ultimate Mac city, then eventually offer that technology to struggling municipalities? If this is Apple’s next step to world domination, I can buy it.

[Via MacStories and 9to5Mac]

Report shows vision of futuristic Apple campus originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sorry Google Books, I’m sticking with iBooks

Apple’s iBooks e-reading app is a flawed, early generation application with GUI and organization issues that fail to match the way that I read books. It has no folders (yet), no way of marking “I’ve finished reading this book so put it away” (a la the Kindle with its archive feature). Its store is understocked and overpriced. Those are hardly unique criticisms, though — these flaws permeate throughout the new and under-developed book reader world.

So when push comes to shove, I’m sticking with iBooks. Because for me, I want a reader that integrates seamlessly with iTunes. And only iBooks does that right now.

I tend to read public domain or buy books from smaller PDF-based vendors like Lulu.com. I’ve bought a few books from the iBooks store, but I haven’t found them a particularly good value. Their DRM limits me to on-device reading; I can’t read them from my Mac, even in iTunes. That’s a big fail as far as I’m concerned. TUAW’s Victor Agreda prefers to buy through Amazon and use the Kindle app. This choice allows him to read across all his devices, including (and especially) on his Macintosh. Amazon offers an unparalleled eBook collection.

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Sorry Google Books, I’m sticking with iBooks originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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White iPhone 4 reportedly due spring of 2011

If you have been holding out for a white iPhone 4, you might only have another three or four months to wait. We reported last month that the white iPhone had been delayed until spring, and now we have confirmation of sorts from Apple.

A number of our readers pinged TUAW over the weekend with news of the new iPhone signage at Apple Stores, which (if you read the fine print) notes that “The White iPhone will be available spring 2011.” In case you’ve forgotten when spring begins, that date in 2011 is March 20, with the season stretching until June 21. Apple could theoretically wait until June 21 to release the white iPhone 4, thus keeping their word while driving hordes of potential buyers stark raving mad.

The mythical white iPhone 4 has been on the hot list for many potential iPhone buyers / upgraders who have been holding off until they can have one of the gleaming, pure-as-the-driven-snow devices in their hot little hands. Nobody seems to know why the white iPhone 4 has been missing in action so far; rumors have it that there has been a shortage of unicorns, the ground horns of which are lovingly fabricated into the cases by elves. Others speculate that the white cases tend to discolor under use, and that the various materials used don’t precisely match and have not made it past the perfectionist scrutiny of Steve Jobs.

It’s our speculation that Apple’s captive unicorn breeding program has been wildly successful, and that it will soon be open season on the critters, with white iPhones and rainbow Skittles abounding.

White iPhone 4 reportedly due spring of 2011 originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 12:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple, publishers still debating magazine subscriptions

There’s yet another standoff between Apple and established media companies. While Apple and the recording industry seem to have finally reached something approaching détente if not peace, magazine publishing companies are still wary about letting Apple become the ultimate power in their universe.

Apple is offering the same deal for magazines that they offer for books and app developers: you get 70% of the profits, we take 30% to take care of billing, downloads, etc. Magazine publishers want more: namely, they want access to customer information, especially tidbits like credit card information and email addresses. It’s safe to say that app developers would like that too, especially the email addresses.

According to AllThingsD, that offer has been “on the table for a couple of months,” but no publisher has bitten yet. There are a variety of publishers trying different things, but mostly they seem to be waiting for Android tablets to be released so they can exert some market pressure on Apple. To which I say: good luck with that. I suspect that the only real pressure will be similar to what we’ve seen with audiobooks and music files. Audible.com puts DRM on their files, but they are playable on just about any device you can imagine (I even have a voice recorder that supports Audible playback). Amazon’s music store is the only significant challenger to the iTunes Music Store, and that only happened because they provided DRM-free MP3s, something Apple had wanted to offer for some time. The music industry finally conceded the lack of DRM in return for Apple’s willingness to give “flexible pricing,” which resulted in higher prices for most songs that you’d actually want to buy.

While magazine publishers either roll their own apps or wait it out, more and more readers will find content to read on the devices they already own, and if that isn’t the content magazine publishers are selling, they’ll find something else. Personally, since the creation of Instapaper the idea of a magazine subscription strikes me as quaint. I find more content than I can read already, just through Twitter and Tumblr.

Apple, publishers still debating magazine subscriptions originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mac 101: Adjusting your mouse and trackpad speed

Mouse and Trackpad SpeedMore Mac 101, our series of tips and tricks for novice Mac users.

If you’ve ever used the trackpad on a PC laptop connected to an external monitor and noticed how many times you have to swipe your finger across the pad to get the mouse cursor from one screen to the other, the end result can be quite frustrating and tiresome. Of course, the same thing can easily happen if you hook up an external display to your MacBook or iMac, although it usually is not as obvious thanks to the larger surface area that Apple has designed into recent trackpads. Luckily, this can be easily corrected on any Mac in just a few simple clicks.

Before we dive into the settings, though, let’s talk about what is causing this to happen in the first place. Although we often take it for granted, one of the most astonishing aspects of using a mouse with a computer is the fact that you only have to move your hand by a couple of inches, while the pointer on the screen moves from one end of the screen to the other — even if the screen is over 20″ wide. This feat is accomplished by a simple mathematical conversion being done in the background that measures the distance the mouse (or your finger, if using a trackpad) moves and multiplies that by a specific factor to determine how far — and in what direction — to move the cursor on the screen.

Read on to find out how to give your mouse (or trackpad) a speed boost.

Continue reading Mac 101: Adjusting your mouse and trackpad speed

Mac 101: Adjusting your mouse and trackpad speed originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 11:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Radio Shack offers iPhone at big discount

Just in time for your Christmas shopping, “The Shack” is offering the iPhone 4 at an incredibly nice discount.

The deal is this — you can buy a 16GB iPhone 4 for just $149, which is $50 off the price that you’ll find at Apple or AT&T stores, and much better than even picking one up at your local Walmart. That price, of course, requires a minimum 2-year commitment to an AT&T plan.

The 32GB iPhone 4 is similarly priced at $249, and an 8GB iPhone 3GS is an absolute steal at $49. In addition, if you have a working and non-damaged iPhone 3G, you can get a $75 trade-in credit. A 3GS will get you a whopping $125 trade-in.

You can only get this deal by walking into a Radio Shack location, and this is only good through Saturday, December 11. Grab that old 3GS and get movin’ to “The Shack” before it’s too late.

Radio Shack offers iPhone at big discount originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 11:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Bookstore for web and iOS

As expected, Google announced their bookstore today, offering eBooks for sale to be read across supported devices including iOS and Android, as well as web clients (no native reader for Windows, Mac, Linux, but you can download PDFs or ePub files for offline reading).

As of this writing the apps do not appear in the US iOS App Store. TUAW writer Richard Gaywood tells us that the Google Bookstore is not available to him at all in the UK, so don’t be surprised to find that the Google Bookstore isn’t available in many countries that aren’t located between Canada and Mexico.

Right now we’re busy kicking the tires and haven’t even been able to take a look at the iOS app yet, but at least we know that Google will keep track of your where you were reading if you switch from one device to another.

Check out a short promotional video after the break.

Continue reading Google Bookstore for web and iOS

Google Bookstore for web and iOS originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Mac App Store ahead of schedule, launch imminent

What goes better with a brand new Mac for Christmas than a Mac App Store?

Apparently, that’s the feeling around the halls in Cupertino, as rumors are now circulating that the Mac App Store could be launched as soon as next Monday, December 13. According to a post on AppleTell, Steve Jobs was pushing for the store to be launched today (December 6), and developers were told to have their software ready for that early launch.

The original announcement of the Mac App Store on October 20 said that the software distribution capability would be available “within 90 days,” which would put the store opening into January. Jobs wanted an earlier release, and the word on the street is that the early release drops next week. That’s just in time for all of those shiny new Macs that will be appearing under Christmas trees, and it means that the release of iWork ’11 (which many believe will be the marquee app for the new store) may be imminent as well.

Keep your browsers tuned to TUAW over the next week and we’ll be sure to let you know when it’s up and running.

[via AppleInsider]

Rumor: Mac App Store ahead of schedule, launch imminent originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 10:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dutch designer creates wind-powered iFan case-charger for iPhone

Tired of having his iPhone run out of juice halfway through the day, Dutch designer Tjeerd Veenhoven has created the iFan charging case. While it’s not quite as slick and integrated looking as a Mophie juice pack, the iFan does provide a renewable means of charging an iPhone and a bit of bumper-style protection at the same time.

Veenhoven modified a computer’s case fan to function as a generator and fashioned it into a wrap-around case with a dock connector. According to him, it takes about 6 hours to charge his iPhone via wind power, but he reckons that could be reduced by reworking the fan blades to make them more efficient. Currently, this appears to be just a one-off with no immediate production plans. The question is, would you be willing to hold your iPhone out the car window as you drive to charge it?

[via Engadget]

Dutch designer creates wind-powered iFan case-charger for iPhone originally appeared on TUAW on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iOS Advanced Programming: Understanding iOS 4 Multitasking

In the old days of iOS when you pressed the home button the application you where running in your iphone used to quit instantly. Today with iOS 4 you have a few more options.

Multitasking is the most relevant feature included in iOS 4. If you build an application on Xcode against iOS 4 it is supposed to support multitasking, which is great but it doesn’t really mean that your app can keep running all the time. Apple is not ready to allow that because of battery life and memory.

How it works?

In the previous versions of iOS when you pressed the home button your iPhone used to call the method “applicationWillTerminate” in the app delegate and your app had five seconds to complete whatever it was doing before the OS dumped your process.

Now when you tap the home button iOS calls the method “applicationDidEnterBackground” and if you relaunch the app it calls “applicationWillEnterForeground”, and you can close them by double clicking the home button and holding one icon in the list of the background apps, then your application will call the “applicationWillTerminate” method and exit.

iPhone Advance Programming | Understanding iOS 4 Multitasking | image 1

Ok, multitasking on the iPhone is great, but it may not run all the time in the background, then what can it do? Well there is a very short list of what your app can do. Here it is:

1. VOIP connections
2. Play audio
3. React to navigation changes

You have to create an entry in your plist file to say that your app will do this in background, if not, nothing will happen when you double click the home button. Besides these three items I mentioned there are two more. One of them is that you can request time to finish the operation you were running. This sounds very convenient, you may think that you can ask for time enough to finish a 1GB download over a 3G network but you can’t. Actually you have a very few minutes to finish and depending on the operation you’ll get only a few seconds before the OS kills your process. The other thing you can do in the background is send local notifications, these are just alerts sent to the user from your app in the background.

In contrast you can see that the things that you cannot do is much larger. But the most relevant are:

1. No OpenGL
2.- No network operations

And you should:

1. Save state when possible
2. Release large objects when going to background

For this tutorial i will show you how to request time to finish operations on your app (the most complex operation you can do with multitasking) and how to send local notifications.

Requesting time to finish operations

Open Xcode and create a new View-Based Application. Find your app delegate the implementation file in the Classes folder. Inside create an attribute called backgroundTask after the @synthetize of window and viewController like this:

UIBackgroundTaskIdentifier backgroundTask;

Now locate the applicationDidEnterBackground method. As this method is called when your app goes to background it is great time to request time here.

Next, add this block inside. A block is a small amount of code that can be executed with more priority. I will talk about Blocks in a future tutorial.

backgroundTask = [application beginBackgroundTaskWithExpirationHandler: ^{
        dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
            if (backgroundTask != UIBackgroundTaskInvalid)
            {
                [application endBackgroundTask:backgroundTask];
                backgroundTask = UIBackgroundTaskInvalid;
            }
        });
    }];

Here we asked for time to finish our operation. It is not executed when the compiler reaches it, we are just telling it that if we need more time to finish an operation, it can use it. Now you can do your long operation:

dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_DEFAULT, 0), ^{

        // Here goes your operation
		//.
		//.
		//.
	    // done!

        dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
            if (backgroundTask != UIBackgroundTaskInvalid)
            {
		// if you don't call endBackgroundTask, the OS will exit your app.
                [application endBackgroundTask:backgroundTask];
                backgroundTask = UIBackgroundTaskInvalid;
            }
        });
    });

This was another block of code, every time you see ^{ it means it is a block of code. As i said, i will talk about blocks in a future tutorial. In the previous code where I wrote “// Here goes your operation” you can replace it with the following code to see how much time has been given to you:

[NSThread sleepForTimeInterval:3];
NSLog(@"Time remaining: %f",[application backgroundTimeRemaining]);

This just waits for three seconds and writes the given time to the console.

iPhone Advance Programming | Understanding iOS 4 Multitasking | image 3

Using Local Notifications

Notifications can be scheduled anywhere in your application, when the user taps a button, launches an app, etc. they can be fired in any state of the app.

Here we are going to schedule one notification to be fired after ten seconds the app is launched and the user will be notified even if you send the app to the background, close it or keep running it.

In the application delegate class find applicationDidFinishLaunchingWithOptions. and before the “return yes” statement add the following code:

	application.applicationIconBadgeNumber = 0;

	UILocalNotification *local = [[UILocalNotification alloc] init];

	// create date/time information
	local.fireDate = [NSDate dateWithTimeIntervalSinceNow:10];
        local.timeZone = [NSTimeZone defaultTimeZone];

	// set notification details
        local.alertBody = @"Hello! i’m a local notification";
        local.alertAction = @"View";

	// set the badge on the app icon
        local.applicationIconBadgeNumber = 1;

	// Gather any custom data you need to save with the notification
        NSDictionary *customInfo =
	     [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:@"Black" forKey:@"Color"];
        local.userInfo = customInfo;

	// Schedule it
        [[UIApplication sharedApplication] scheduleLocalNotification:local];

	[local release];

First we reset the badge. It is the little number in a red circle that appears in the top right corner of the icon of an app, like mail for example. Then we set the parameters. I set the icon badge to “1” simulating that i got mail, a nd the userInfo to save information, I’m saving the value “Black” for the key “Color”.

iPhone Advance Programming | Understanding iOS 4 Multitasking | image 2

Conclusion

In this tutorial we talked about the truth of iphone multitasking and how it really works.

Of course there is more to talk about multitasking in iOS, but if i didn’t wrote about it is because i only wanted to tell you the most important things. If you want to learn more about this subject i recommend you to read the apple’s iOS 4 documentation.