IFA: LG's Intel Atom laptop with built-in 3G

LG Electronics is the latest major IT brand to join the mini laptop market, showing an Intel Atom-based netbook with built-in 3G wireless capabilities at IFA.

Apple is expected to launch a new range of laptops in September, and several Macworld readers have expressed an interest in Apple making smaller and cheaper laptops.


The LG X110 will include an HSPA cellular data modem that should be compatible with the newer 3G networks now being rolled out by most major carriers around the world. HSPA is typically capable of download speeds of several megabits per second and the latest versions of the evolving technology also offer megabit per second uploads.

In addition to 3G, the machine also supports 802.11b/g wireless LAN and has a wired Ethernet connector. The Windows XP Home-based X110 includes the same 1.6GHz Atom processor that many of its competing devices also use and has a 10in WSVGA resolution (1,024 pixels by 600 pixels) screen.

LG has decided to go for a conventional hard-disk drive in the X110 and will offer models with either 80GB or 120GB of capacity. Some netbooks use faster solid-state disks based on flash memory chips but they typically offer much lower capacity.

The machine will be available in several colours including white, pink or silver. LG didn't announce the price.

With the market for small and ultra cheap laptops seemingly booming, are we likely to see Apple join the fray? Opinion on this has divided the Macworld team for some time, although we are expecting Apple to refresh its laptop range soon with a rumoured date of 9 September.




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IFA: Harman Kardon shows off new audio products

Audio giant Harmon Kardon showed us its range of new audio products aimed at Mac and iPod users at the IFA show in Berlin.

Possibly the most striking product on display was its new GLA-55 desktop speaker system. This is a high-end set of desktop speakers set into a chiseled see-through plastic stand.


The GLA-55’s (the name is a pun on glass, incidentally) aren’t designed to be a case of style over substance. Harman Kardon is aiming to woo audio professionals and audiophiles looking for something stylish to have on their desktop. The product contains a 100-watt bi-amplified digital amplifier in the base of the unit, coupled with DSP (digital signal processing) equalization.

Harman Kardon's new GLA-55 speaker system

Richard Metcalfe, international brand director for Harmon Consumer said: “our goal was to create a system that truly brought high-performance audio to the computer, but also had stunning visual appeal”.

Mark Hockey, Harman Kardon’s PR manager told us: “it’s a new product category for us that’s redefining home desktop audio. When they appear in the Apple stores and specialist retail stores, people will immediately see them, then they’ll want to touch and listen to them. They are a very individual product with strong visual appeal”.

All this comes at a cost though, and the GLA-55s will retail for approximately 500 in the UK.

Other products on display included a new iPod speaker system and integrated CD player / FM tuner called the MS-100. The unit has a high-gloss black finish and chiseled display with a slightly retro feel thanks to its green glow.

Although a busy stand isn’t the best place to test the audio quality, we can confirm that the MS-100 certainly is a powerful audio system with good audio quality. According to Harman Kardon’s press release the system sports: “a two-way stereo speaker system with premium-quality 5-inch high-excursion woofers, dome tweeters and built-in amplification, for clear, richly detailed and expansive sound.“

The MS 100 is also expected to retail for 500 when it arrives in the UK.

Harman Kardon's MS-100 iPod speaker system




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US consumers are most likely to choose Mac

More US consumers plan to buy a Mac in the next 90 days than any other brand, according to a ChangeWave Research survey of over 4,000 US Americans conducted earlier this month.

Of the consumers polled by ChangeWave Research who said they expect to buy a personal computer in the next three months, 32 per cent plan to purchase a Mac. The closest rival was Dell, which accounted for 28 per cent of planned purchases.


Apple was also the only vendor whose plan-to-buy share increased from July in both desktops and laptops. In the former, Apple gained 3 percentage points, climbing to 30 per cent from 27 per cent last month. On the laptop front, Apple increased it share by 2 points, reaching 32 per cent, compared to 30 per cent in July.

Both the desktop and laptop numbers were records for Apple in the long-running ChangeWave consumer spending surveys.

Dell's desktop share, meanwhile, increased by three points, climbing to 28 per cent. But the company lost 4 points in the laptop race, down to 28 per cent from 32 per cent in July.

Hewlett-Packard Co., however, was decidedly in decline. Planned HP desktop purchases were off 3 points from the month before, down to 17 per cent, while planned notebook buys dropped 4 points to 20 per cent.

"Apple's reached the tipping point," said Paul Carton, ChangeWave's research director. "Where the early adopters and the discretionary spenders were leading the charge, now as we go into the 30 per cent range [for planned purchases], the change to Apple looks permanent. What we have in the end, actually we're sort of there now, is that buying an Apple is as normal as buying a Dell or an HP [computer] in America."

Carton said Apple's consumer satisfaction scores and the "halo effect" of the iPhone would continue to pump up the company's sales. Apple trounced rivals such as Dell, HP, Acer and Lenovo on customer satisfaction, he said. In the August survey, 81 per cent of people who had bought a Mac in the past 90 days said they were "very satisfied" with the purchase. In comparison, 58 per cent of Dell buyers, 57 per cent of HP buyers, 53 per cent of Acer buyers and 48 per cent of Lenovo buyers said they were similarly satisfied.

"You want to see what a halo effect looks like? Take a look at last year," said Carton, 6.5-point jump in the planned purchase share last summer, immediately after the first-generation iPhone debuted.

That halo effect continues, Carton said. In the August survey, 17 per cent of those polled said that they were more likely to buy a Mac desktop or laptop because of the iPhone 3G, the model Apple launched last month.

"This year's halo isn't to the degree of last year's, but in this economic environment and the fact that Apple's hitting its biggest numbers ever, means it's enough to see Apple significantly outperform expectations going forward," said Carton.

"Everything else equal, Apple's outperforming in an incredibly difficult consumer spending environment," Carton observed.

During Apple's most recent quarter, which ended June 30, the company sold a record 2.5 million Macs.




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Steinberg updates Cubase to 4.5

Steinberg has introduced key updates for many music-makers, Cubase 4.5 and Cubase Studio 4.5, available for free download to registered customers.

“Cubase 4.5 is an important update that expands Cubase to add even more value for our customers,” said Helge Vogt, Steinberg’s product marketing manager for Cubase.


“With new technologies and many under-the-hood enhancements, this update significantly enhances Cubase as a state-of-the-art music production system, and reflects our ongoing commitment to our customers and expanding the world of Cubase,” he added.

The 4.5 update offers many new technologies, with full support for the upcoming Steinberg MR816 CSX/X Advanced Integration DSP Studios and the CC121 Advanced Integration Controller.

“Software and hardware are melded together with a FireWire I/O, a tactile controller and Steinberg’s Cubase Music Production System forming an exciting new system that pushes back the boundaries of what’s possible in digital audio,” said Vogt.

Cubase 4.5 also offers enhanced support for the Yamaha MOTIF XS series and KX USB Music Studio series.

VST Sound debuts, a universal media management format that is part of Steinberg’s VST3 standard. The software update also includes the VST Sound Collection Vol. 1 -1.6 GB of new sounds and instruments for Cubase.

Cubase 4.5 is compatible with Steinberg’s entry-level Sequel 2 Music Creation and Performance Software.




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Shorts International releases Oscar-winning short films through iTunes

Shorts International, the leading independent short films distributor, today announced the availability of The Animation Collection of short films is available now through the iTunes Store in the US, UK and Canada.

The collection includes the 2008 Oscar winning short title, 'Peter and the Wolf' and 2008 Oscar Nominee, 'Even Pigeons Go To Heaven'. Otherwise the collection includes everything from cartoons to computer graphics.


The company is also offering short animation, 'The Harvest', for free download from iTunes, an amusing take on an alien invasion. Otherwise, films cost 79p to rent or 1.49 to purchase.

Shorts International is the world’s leading short film company with the largest and most diverse film catalogue devoted to short films. More than half of the catalogue’s individual films have been nominated for or received international film awards.




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Radiohead webcast final US show

Hit UK band, Radiohead, who turned the music industry upside down with their trust-based approach to sales of their phenomenally-succesful 'In Rainbows' album have done it again.

In a quietly-orchestrated move, the band last night streamed the final Santa Barbara show of their US tour, making the video available to fans via the band's official website.


Little advance notice of the band's plan was given. Thursday saw the band publish an enigmatic message warning Mac users to download either Flip4Mac or VLC, because the software "might come in handy".

Hours before the event took place bassist Colin Greenwood wrote: “Hello! To celebrate the end of a brilliant tour, we’re going to webcast the last show here in America. We’ll be playing live in Santa Barbara, at the Bowl. It’s one of our favourite places to play."

"We’re going to try and share as much of it as we can on the webcast. Nigel, our producer, will be helping out getting it to you, so if it goes wrong….It’s live!"

Segments of the webcast are now beginning to emerge online, a report explains, also speculating the band made the move so quiet in order to make the best of limited bandwidth for the transmission.

That Radiohead chose to use a non-QuickTime format for the webcast isn't entirely unexpected. The band was among the last digital hold-outs, refusing to make its music available through iTunes in an attempt to preserve album sales, though the recent move to sell music through the Apple service saw Radiohead's 15-year old track, 'Creep' jump into the top 40.

The debate surrounding protection of the album format through iTunes has intensified in recent days, with labels now experimenting with removing tracks from iTunes in an attempt to preserve the format.

Meanwhile, Radiohead recently began streaming 'In Rainbows' through Last.fm.




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Macworld UK enters Hitwise Top 40

Macworld UK has officially joined the ranks of the top technology Web sites in the world.

According to figures from industry experts Hitwise, Macworld.co.uk has entered the world-wide tech top 40. During July Macworld tracked 1,238,850 hits on the site, with 314,595 unique individuals reading stories.


Macworld UK has been steadily working its way up the charts this year, and the month that Apple launched the iPhone 3G was enough to shoot it to the top half of Hitwise's chart.

The Hitwise Tech Top 40 reads like a who's who of the tech industry. While it's going to be hard work to knock the number-one tech Web site, Digg.com from its perch, Macworld UK is now only five places behind its US cousin Macworld.com (number 35) and homing in on its sister title PC Advisor (number 8); the upsurge in popularity in recent months has taken Macworld UK past The Guardian Technology blog (number 47) and ZDNet UK (number 41).

Macworld UK's editor, Mark Hattersley said: "This is great news, we've been working hard over recent months providing round-the-clock coverage of Mac and iPhone-related news and new product reviews. Our live coverage of the iPhone 3G launch, ongoing MobileMe situtation and, of course, our ongoing coverage of the Apple Mac market have combined to shoot us up the chart. It's great to see a UK-based Mac site entering a world-wide chart dominated by US tech giants".




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Inventec results hint at Apple's iPod road map

Speculation as to Apple's much-anticipated product launch plans intensified this week when a long-term iPod component supplier warned its income would decline as a result of Apple's plans.

Inventec announced its results last night, revealing net profits down 10.2 per cent, though gross margins actually climbed.


The interesting news is in the tail of the piece, which indicates the ratio of revenues contributed by orders from Apple will decline to 40-42 per cent in 2008 from 48 per cent in 2007, whereas revenues from TomTom will edge up to 22 per cent from the previous 20 per cent and revenu from Palm will climb to near 15 per cent from 10 per cent.

Inventec was Apple's original manufacturing partner for the hard drive-based iPods, which continues to handle the hard drive-based iPod models. The news suggests Apple may be moving to phase these out, though given the capacity required by some hardcore iPod users, it's potentially possible the company may simply trim the range to a single model. Though that is speculation.




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Mac clone maker sues Apple, plays antitrust card

The Mac clone maker Psystar, sued by Apple Inc. last month, fired back today with a countersuit charging Apple with restraint of trade, unfair competition and other violations of antitrust law.

Psystar says it has filed paperwork with a San Francisco federal court answering Apple's July 3 lawsuit and replying with one of its own.


"We're alleging restraint of trade, among other things," said Colby Springer, one of three lawyers from the firm of Carr & Ferrell LLP representing Psystar, "We're going to let the court decide."

Springer said the countersuit accuses Apple of violating the Sherman Antitrust Act and the Clayton Antitrust Act, in particularly for tying its Mac OS X operating system to its own hardware in the end-user licensing agreement (EULA). Because the EULA bars users from installing the OS on non-Apple hardware, Springer said, it's unlawful restraint of trade.

"Apple makes a good operating system, we don't deny that," said Springer. "This is about bringing Leopard [Mac OS X 10.5] to the masses."

Rudy Pedraza, the president and co-founder of Psystar, said somewhat the same thing. "It's not that people don't want to use Mac OS X, but they're not open spending an exorbitant amount of money for something that's essentially generic hardware."

Psystar, which has sold Intel-based OpenComputer desktops starting at $555 since April, and OpenServ servers since June, was sued by Apple last month on the basis of the Mac OS X EULA. In the lawsuit, Apple charged Psystar with copyright and trademark infringement, breach of contract and unfair competition because the Florida firm preinstalled its operating system on systems.

One expert in intellectual property (IP) litigation said last month that an Apple victory would probably put Psystar out of business, since if victorious, Apple would demand Psystar recall the machines it's sold to customers. At the time, Carole Handler, a partner in the IP department of Wildman, Harrold, Allen & Dixon, predicted Psystar would play the antitrust card.

In an interview earlier this month, Springer hinted that Carr & Ferrell's defense would include antitrust elements.

Today, Springer denied reports that Psystar was pirating or modifying Apple's software. "Every single copy of the OS is a purchased copy," said Springer. "Despite the allegations that there's a'master disc,' that's not the case. And allegations that Psystar has somehow modified [Mac OS X's] code to run on non-Apple systems, that's also not the case.

"There is no modification of any proprietary code of Apple's," Springer claimed. Psystar, however, has modified some of the open-source code that ships with Mac OS X, Springer acknowledged, but maintained that any modifications were under the licenses of each open-source component.

Pedraza, who spoke publicly about the case for the first time, echoed Springer. "We purchase copies of Mac OS directly from Apple or from an Apple authorized dealer," he said.

When asked if the countersuit cited any specific precedent in Psystar's favor, Springer responded: "No specific precedent, but we wouldn't be filing this if we didn't believe we could support it."

Psystar's countersuit asked for unspecified damages, which, if the case reaches trial, would be set there, Springer said. "We're not trying to shut down Apple," he said. "What we want to do is provide an alternative to Apple's hardware."

Apple already faces antitrust charges in a lawsuit first filed in 2006 over tight links between the iTunes music store to iPod players. That case, which is seeking class-action status, is similar to Psystar's, said Springer, in that both allege illegal tying.

Pedraza also said that Psystar was working on a mobile system able to run Mac OS X, although he declined to provide details of the potential notebook.

Apple officials did not respond to a request for comment on the Psystar countersuit.




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Mozilla enabling text commands in Firefox

An experimental extension to Mozilla Firefox lets people substitute simple text commands for complex web tasks such as putting links to maps in email messages.

On Tuesday, Mozilla Labs released its first version of Ubiquity, which is related to software called Enso that was developed at a small Chicago company called Humanized. Mozilla hired three executives of Humanized in January, and Aza Raskin, the former president of that company, introduced Ubiquity 0.1 in a Mozilla Labs blog entry. Raskin is now head of user experience at Mozilla Labs.


Ubiquity is designed to help ordinary people create something like mash-ups and to do it on a personal basis instead of in the form of a public web page. The commands that users type in Ubiquity, such as "map" and "email," find resources on the web and can gather information from those sources in one place.

For example, someone inviting a friend to dinner could highlight the name of the restaurant, type "map," and instantly call up a Google Map showing the location of the restaurant. The user could then edit that map and place it in the body of the e-mail message. Similarly, typing "yelp" and the name of the restaurant would bring the text of reviews from Yelp.com right into the message.

In an interview, Raskin compared it to a search engine, except that Ubiquity users type in what they want to do instead of what they want to find.

Other commands that are already available include "defi," which brings up a definition for a highlighted word; "trans," which translates any highlighted text; and "twit," which takes the highlighted text and puts it up on Twitter.

It's easy to create new commands, so average users can do it without advanced web development skills, according to Raskin.

"You don't have to wait for a developer to think of a user case. You can do it for yourself," Raskin said.

Users who created commands for Ubiquity can post them on the web and allow others to subscribe to them for free.

Ubiquity may or may not be added as an extension to Firefox. Mozilla Labs is designed to be an open test environment for new ideas, with participation by anyone, in which some ideas will graduate to use in Firefox and others won't, Raskin said.

Additional reporting by Elizabeth Montalbano in New York.




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Nvidia CUDA gives Photoshop speed boost

Nvidia on Friday announced the release of CUDA 2.0, a new version of its C language development environment for its graphics processing units (GPUs).

CUDA enables Macs or PCs equipped with certain Nvidia graphics processors to offload the computation of some information to the graphics processor instead of using the CPU. Nvidia's graphics processors are parallel processing engines, which makes them suited to handling tasks such as medical volume reconstruction and oil and gas seismic computing, for example.


CUDA is Nvidia's implementation of technology called General-Purpose Computing on Graphics Processing Units, or GPGPU. It's something Apple hopes to leverage on an operating system level with Snow Leopard, which will support an emerging standard called OpenCL. CUDA, however, lets developers leverage Nvidia's hardware today to perform the same function.

The latest production release of the CUDA toolset includes Mac OS X support, as well as Windows 32-bit and 64-bit support, and also includes an Adobe Photoshop plug-in example, as well as its source code.

Nvidia hopes the example will spawn further efforts from third-party developers to create filtering and image manipulation software that leverages Nvidia GPUs to speed processing.




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Apple achieving record Mac sales

RBC analyst Mike Abramsky predicts "massive" September quarter Mac sales, anticipating Apple could shift an unprecedented 3.04 million Macs in the quarter.

The analyst attributes some of these sales to the back to school market; but points out that the iPhone and iPod halos are also playing their part.


To achieve 3.04 million Mac sales would represent growth of 41 per cent, year-in-year, and 22 per cent sequentially.

Abramsky expects Apple's global marketshare to hit 4.2 per cent in 2009, up from 2.9 per cent in 2007.




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Apple hooks MTS for iPhone, Russia

Except for China - here Appleis in ongoing negotiations - Russia remains the largest country in the world without an iPhone distribution deal.

While the first-generation handset was popular on the Russian gray market, with no less than president Dmitri Medvedev calling the device "his latest passion", the 3G model has yet to come to the motherland.


Such an eventuality, however, could be in the offing. Reuters reports that Apple has struck a deal with Mobile TeleSystems (MTS), the largest mobile phone provider in Russia.

MTS has almost 84 million subscribers, making the company's customer base larger than several of the countries where the iPhone 3G is already on sale. If Reuters's source is correct, then the iPhone would launch in Russia in October, possibly amid another next round of country additions, like the ones due today.

Both MTS and Apple have declined to comment on the issue.




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Carphone Warehouse now stocks white iPhone 3G

Carphone Warehouse is finally offering the white model of the iPhone 3G.

This particular model of the popular device was only available at Apple retail stores until now, but from today it has been made available from the high street mobile phone retailer.

The white model offers 16GB capacity. Carphone Warehouse continues to stock the black models.





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Apple NYC SoHo retail gets loud noise complaint

Apple's retail store in New York's fashionable SoHo district has been slammed by neighbouring businesses and residents for causing too much trouble.

A lower Manhattan residents' group has lodged a lengthy complaint against the store, complaining about loud parties, huge crowds, illegal night-time construction work and a host of other "late-night disturbances", reports 9to5Mac.


The recent live performance by the Jonas Brothers was the final straw, prompting SoHo Alliance director Sean Sweeney to complain the band: "Attracted thousands of young teenage girls who screamed incessantly on the street for hours for their idols, blocking traffic, injuring one resident in the crush, and inconveniencing scores of other people and businesses."

Some elements of the Apple lifestyle also get a special mention in the complaint, with Sweeney moaning that all night vigils by Apple fans awaiting new products give the neighborhood, "the appearance of a homeless encampement."

"A classic example, at the end of the day, of the NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) type in full effect," notes 9to5Mac.




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We7 boss praises Apple for iTunes

The music industry has a huge debt to Apple and the company's efforts have shown labels that online services can be succesful, We7 boss, Steve Purdham, said this week.

We7 is a service which offers users free access to music so long as they are prepared to be exposed to advertising. Users can choose the music they want to play, stream or download tracks, share them with others through their sites and so on, and can also buy the music, if they like.


"We7 is a bridge between the paid-for music world and the world of music piracy, by providing a legal alternative to stealing," Purdham told Distorted Loop. Purdham was a founder investor in the service with Apple Master, Peter Gabriel.

He slams music labels for demonising file-sharing "it's just a technology, like electric light," he said. File-sharing became a major industry problem because the industry itself failed to quickly embrace digital processes in order to provide an alternative.

Apple came up with a strong alternative, he opines. Calling the company a "friend" of the industry, he says, "they made it happen without them the 4 billion tracks that have been bought would have still been downloaded in some matter, so they showed what could be done."

The We7 boss - also an award-winning technology entrepreneur, has a stark warning for label bosses now: "As a technologist I keep putting up the warning that the difference between streaming and downloading will be undetectable within the next iteration of technological change, yet the music industry is hell bent on producing models based on these fading technological differences. That will cause another crisis," he said.




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Facebook hopes new ad scheme can engage users

Facebook has quietly launched a new type of advertisement it hopes will help in the struggle to find a way to help advertisers profit from the treasure trove of demographic and other data it has gathered from members of its social network.

The new, so-called "Engagement Advertisements" aim to encourage Facebook users to interact with ads by leaving comments or sharing virtual gifts with other members, said Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst at Forrester who was briefed on the new scheme. Facebook has not yet formally announced the new offering.


"To combat dismal click through rates of traditional advertisements, these features emulate widgets and encourage users to increase member adoption, viral growth and brand interaction," Owyang noted in a blog post today. However, he cautioned that the plan will succeed only if advertisers create content that puts community first, find new ways to interact with users and change the criteria for measuring success.

Early users of the new advertising technique will include Paramount Pictures, Adidas and General Mills, Owyang said.

The new scheme lets users leave comments associated with the ads much like they post comments to their friends' profiles. It also lets advertisers create virtual items for users to share with their friends. In addition, users can become "fans" of a product, thus triggering a notification to their network of Facebook friends.

Owyang did warn potential advertisers that, according to Forrester's research, younger users of social networks are not interested in using them to learn about new products. Instead, these users are interested in communicating and expressing themselves on Facebook-like sites.

"While costly, risky and foreign to brands, the biggest missed opportunity for brands in social networks is to become part of the community, interact and build real relationships," he went on to note. "Although we should expect interaction rates and viral spread to increase with engagement ads, brands should wait and see how these ads click through rates perform."

Owyang said that companies that do use the engagement advertising scheme should:

- Focus ads on the community; - Interact with users in the community - don't ask them to link to other sites; - Change success metrics because it can't be weighed solely on page views or referral traffic.

"This announcement helps to set in place how online marketing will start to evolve," he added. "Widgets have already become advertising units, and now these advertisements are starting to become widgets."

As for Facebook, he suggested that they "hand-hold" customers as they navigate through the social network's frequently changing marketing plans.

"Facebook must develop a client solution that will help optimize these tools with professional services based on data, results and demographic information," Owyang added. "Marketers can't afford to experiment with their brand without the help of a trained and experienced group of social marketers provided by the platform."

Inside Facebook blogger Justin Smith spotted one of the new ads on Facebook last week when they were launched and noted that this type of ad unit has the potential to drive more engagement than any other such product on Facebook.

"The comments around the ad dramatically increase engagement with the unit, as the highly visible comments provide an opportunity for users to simultaneously draw attention to the ad by drawing attention to themselves," he added.

"While this could backfire if comments degrading the advertiser are abundant the ad comments powerfully take advantage of Facebook's social dynamics to draw attention to an ad in a way that is impossible without the social graph."




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Apple slides in UK online retail

Apple is among the top 20 online stores in the UK - but online sales are slowing as the credit crunch grips the UK, and hardcore users await new Mac models.

IMRG-Hitwise this week published its UK Hot Shops List for August 2008, representing which online destinations were the most widely used.


As one might expect, Amazon UK heads the list, pursued by the online retail front for Argos, Play, and Tesco in second, third and fourth place respectively.

Dell (17), Apple (19) and HP (48) fell four, seventeen and nine places respectively from their rankings in May, and three, eleven and five places on the year.

MRG's CEO, James Roper, comments: "With the market hardening under the daily hammer blows of worsening economic news, one would expect more volatility within the List. It is a measure of the competence that sets these brands out as market leaders that they consistently continue to attract high customer traffic volumes, even under harsh trading conditions."




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BIAS offers free plug-in from its Master Perfection Suite

Professional audio software company BIAS began offering a free pro level plug-in from its website this week.

The plug-in being offered is actually a part of the company’s Master Perfection Suite, so it’s one they have worked on for a number of years. While some free plug-ins have limited functionality or time out after a number of uses, the BIAS plug-in is the pro version and will not expire.


The Master Perfection Suite combines six plug-ins designed specifically for mixing, mastering, analysis and sound design. The suite features linear phase multi-band dynamics (Sqweez-3 and -5), spectral matching (Repli-Q), seven analysis tools (Reveal), 4,6,8 and 10-band paragraphic EQ (SuperFreq), pitch correction/modification (PitchCraft), and a gate with integrated downward expander (GateEx).

The AU, RTAS/AS and VST plug-in is compatible with many digital audio workstations including Peak, Cubase, Nuendo, Digital Performer, GarageBand, Live, Logic Express, Logic Pro, Pro Tools, Sonar.

You must download and authorize the plug-in by September 30.




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Groups ask court to lift gag order in Intel antitrust case

A tech trade group and a handful of news organizations have asked a US court to lift its order to seal documents in the pending antitrust lawsuit brought against Intel by Advanced Micro Devices, saying the gag order has "unnecessarily and unjustly" withheld information from the public.

The Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA), along with five news organizations including The New York Times and The Washington Post, filed a motion Thursday in US District Court for the District of Delaware, asking the court to unseal several records related to the case. The groups also asked for a new judge to rule on their request.


AMD filed the antitrust lawsuit against Intel in June 2005, and in mid-2006, the two companies negotiated a court-approved agreement that closed some transcripts of hearings and teleconferences, as well as some court filings, to the public. AMD alleges in the lawsuit that Intel has used its dominant market share in the x86 microprocessor market to intimidate and discourage computer makers and retailers from buying AMD chips.

In the case, AMD has issued subpoenas for documents from dozens of companies, including computer makers Hewlett-Packard and Dell and retailer Best Buy. Some of the companies subpoenaed refused to share the documents, saying disclosure would expose trade secrets. In response, AMD and Intel negotiated a protective order that was approved by Judge Joseph Farnan Jr.

But the protective order was overly broad, CCIA and the news organizations argued in Thursday's filing. "Protective orders, which govern the exchange of information outside of a public docket are obtained pursuant to a 'good cause' standards," wrote David Finger, a lawyer for CCIA. "When such information is filed with a court, however, it becomes part of a public document subject to the right of public access, absent showing a compelling justification and a clearly defined and serious injury."

Some information that's been protected describe events that "took place so long ago that there is no likely reason their disclosure would cause competitive disadvantage," Finger wrote. In some cases, redacted information appears to be employee lists, he wrote.

"Litigants may not seal information merely because public disclosure will be embarrassing or will otherwise reflect poorly on them," Finger added.

An AMD spokesman said the company is aware of the filing. "AMD does not oppose the motion," said Michael Silverman, the spokesman.

AMD has told reporters they'd have to file a motion with the court to get information beyond the redacted documents the company has supplied them, Silverman said.

Intel, however, would have concerns about lifting the protective order, said spokesman Chuck Mulloy. The groups wanting the protective order to be lifted have "no right of access" to those documents, Intel lawyer Richard Horwitz wrote to Finger earlier this month. The documents in question were related to a discovery dispute, and those materials are not public records, Horwitz wrote.

Intel is open to discussions about what documents are closed, but the company is not ready to agree to open all documents in the case, Mulloy added. Several companies have been subpoenaed, and several participated in negotiations to decide which documents should be closed, he said.

"It's not a simple issue," he said. "There are scores of OEMs [original equipment manufacturers] that have skin in the game."

The US Federal Trade Commission is investigating Intel's business tactics, and South Korea and Japan have ruled that Intel has violated antitrust law. The European Union is also investigating Intel, and a ruling there is expected soon.

"We trust the court can find a way to protect the companies' trade secrets, without blocking all information on the allegations in this case," Ed Black, CCIA's president and CEO, said in a statement. "We'd also hope that in reviewing our motion the court decides that providing trade secret protection to evidence related to illegal business practices and behavior would be adverse to the public interest."

CCIA has long advocated against anticompetitive behavior in the tech industry.




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Intel continues to invest in WiMax
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iPhone users are weekend browsers

The latest NetApplications figures confirm iPhone browsing marketshare is on a strong upward trend since the release of iPhone 3G.

The web monitoring firm has also confirmed some interesting trends to use, for example, iPhone usage on the weekends sees a 50-70 per cent spike, 9to5Mac claims.


"The release of the iPhone 3G has brought large gains in web browsing share. Prior to the launch iPhone usage share had leveled off, but has since resumed its upward trend," NetApplications explains.

The firm last year also remarked on the point at which web browsing on the iPhone exceeded the web browsing on all Windows Mobile devices combined.




iPhone multimedia lead advances, research claims
New iPhone SDK needs iTunes 7.7PR, Remote app
Safari, Mac usage climbs online in May

Digital DJ's gain a power tool

DJ-1800 has created the ultimate tool for online DJ's, introducing Nicecast and Hercules Rmx support within its recently updated DJ-1800 software.

DJ-1800 3.2 is available now, and also adds a full screen mode and better integration between the software, iPhones and iTunes,


Adding support for the popular internet broadcasting application "Nicecast", will enable DJs to broadcast mixes online. Dave Addey, CEO of DJ-1800 reflects: "Nicecast and DJ-1800 could have been made for each other. This new version makes it easy to show off your mixing skills to the world! And we're really excited to bring Hercules Rmx support to DJ-1800. With its rock-solid build quality, microphone talk-over feature and four-channel sound card, it's no surprise that the new Rmx is already one of the most popular DJ controllers around."

A fully-featured demo of DJ-1800 is available with the full version costing $80.




Linux macro benchmark tool stabilizes
Quark launches extensive online help resource
Apple ships iPhone SDK beta 8
Apple updates Shuffle reset tool for Windows

A third of Vista PC buyers downgrade to XP

More than one in every three new PCs is downgraded from Windows Vista to the older Windows XP, either at the factory or by the buyer, according to a US performance and metrics researcher.

Devil Mountain Software said nearly 35 percent of the 3,000-plus PCs it examined had been downgraded from Vista to XP.


"Either these machines were downgraded by [sellers like] Dell or HP, or they were downgraded by the user after they got the machine," said Craig Barth, the chief technology officer of Devil Mountain. "In any case, these machines are no longer running Vista."

Barth used data provided by users to Devil Mountain's exo.performance.network - which it kicked off last year and has expanded by partnering with Infoworld, a PC Advisor sister publication - to come up with his numbers. By collating such things as the vendor and system model number with manufacturers' catalogues, Barth was able to identify machines that were probably shipped in the last six months, a period when virtually every new PC was offered with Vista preinstalled.

"The 35 percent is only an estimate, but it shows a trend within our own user base," Barth said. "People are taking advantage of Vista's downgrade rights."

By the terms of Microsoft 's end user licensing agreement (EULA), Vista Business and Vista Ultimate can be 'downgraded' to XP Professional; businesses that purchase Vista Enterprise can also downgrade to XP.

Although Microsoft retired Windows XP from mainstream availability at the end of June - it stopped shipping the seven-year-old operating system to retail and large computer makers - some OEMs have continued to offer new PCs with XP preinstalled by doing the downgrade at the factory.

"Vista's installed base certainly doesn't equal the number of Vista licences [that Microsoft's] sold," Barth said, citing the exo.performance.network data as proof. "We're seeing this a lot in the financial sector."

Editor's note: If you're a PC owner looking to downgrade from Windows Vista to Windows XP, our sister site PC Advisor has a guide that you can read. Alternatively, you can read Macworld's reviews of the latest desktop Macs here or laptop Macs here.




Forrester: Vista rejected like ‘new Coke’ by enterprises
Microsoft Offers Vista Support to Small Businesses
When Vista sales aren’t Vista sales

Make your iPhone's camera go zoom

There are those who bemoan the lackluster camera on the iPhone, and there are those who decide to do something about it.

 Make your iPhone's camera go zoom

The iPhone 3G Mobile Phone Telescope from Brando is composed of a clear acrylic case that you snap onto your iPhone 3G, and an attachable lens which promises to give the built-in camera a 6x zoom. Point your iPhone at something far off, manually focus the telescope lens, and snap your photo. The telescope apparatus comes off the case, so you can still pocket your iPhone with ease, but what do you do with the lens? That's where the included lanyard comes in: simply wear the lens around your neck for easy access and, did we mention, fashionability.





Microsoft Opens Up the Heavens
iPhone leading Flickr phone, again

Six Apple executives you need to know about

The story of Apple's strong management may begin with Steve Jobs, but it certainly doesn't end there. Apple enjoys a deep bench of executive talent – one of the reasons the company has thrived in recent years.

A complete list of the people critical to Apple's success would fill page after page. We've focused on just a half-dozen executives – if you don't already know their names, you probably should learn them now.


Tim Cook, chief operating officer

While Steve Jobs enjoys a reputation for having a hand in everything that happens at Apple, behind the scenes Tim Cook is just as involved in the details. Apple's chief operating officer is responsible for every aspect of Apple's supply chains, sales, and support services in addition to overseeing the Mac division. An October 2006 profile in the Wall Street Journal described Cook as a "low-key operator making sure the company runs smoothly behind the scenes." He joined Apple 10 years ago, taking charge of Mac manufacturing and smoothing out the inefficiencies in the process. As the years went on, Cook added more responsibilities before becoming COO in October 2005. The fruits of his labours can be seen in Apple's sales figures – the company has sold a record number of Macs in four of the last five quarters.

Eddy Cue, vice president of Internet Services

How do you know when somebody's a go-to guy within Apple? When Steve Jobs calls on that person to fix a high-profile product whose launch was marred by technical glitches and widespread user complaints. That's the situation Eddy Cue finds himself in with MobileMe. After Apple's rebranded version of .Mac stumbled out of the gate, Jobs, in a memo acknowledging that MobileMe "was simply not up to Apple's standards," turned responsibility for the subscription-based service to Cue, who now holds the newly created title of vice president of Internet Services. "Eddy has been brought in to fix it," wrote former Apple employee Chuq Von Rospach in a blog post about Mobile Me, "which means it's going to get fixed." And Cue has a track record at Apple – he's spent the last several years heading up the iTunes team at a time that the online store has become a dominant force in digital music.

Scott Forstall, senior vice president of iPhone software

A few days before this year's Worldwide Developers Conference keynote – the venue where Apple would unveil the iPhone 3G as well more details about the iPhone 2.0 software update – the company had another announcement to make. It promoted Scott Forstall to the newly created position of senior vice president of iPhone software. The timing was not coincidental: The iPhone has grown into a critical part of Apple's business, and Forstall has emerged as one of the key figures in the product line's development. When it's time to discuss the intricacies of iPhone software at an Apple event like this year's WWDC keynote or the March unveiling of the iPhone SDK, Steve Jobs turns the stage over to Forstall. Of course, Forstall has earned that trust – he's an 11-year veteran of Apple and one of the original architects of Mac OS X and the Aqua interface. His last job before coming to Apple? Working at NeXT, under the watchful (and apparently approving) eye of his current boss, Steve Jobs.

Jonathan Ive, senior vice president of industrial design

In the consumer electronics and computer markets, Apple is famous for its attention to design. While the popular perception might be that Steve Jobs himself is responsible for all of Apple's products, in recent years it's been the notoriously publicity-shy Jonathan Ive who has played the major role in shaping the company's iconic look and feel. Ive and his team were the force behind the eye-catching industrial design of such prominent projects as the iMac, iPod, and iPhone. Given Apple's emphasis on the marriage of form and function, and the visceral reaction that its products evoke in users, Ive's hand is keenly felt in everything Apple makes, from the placement of screws to the boxes the hardware comes in. British born-Ive has won nearly every design accolade you can name, including a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his contributions to the design industry.

Ron Johnson, senior vice president of retail

Since moving to Apple from Target in 2000, Ron Johnson has presided over the roll out of more than 200 Apple Stores across the world, including the company's first store in China. After Steve Jobs, Johnson is one of the most outwardly charismatic members of Apple's executive team and is a common sight at Apple Store openings. Under Johnson's watch, Apple's retail operations have risen to become the envy of the company's competitors, bringing in almost $1.5 billion in net sales in Apple's last quarter and routinely drawing new customers to the Mac platform. Apple Stores have become not only attractive places to shop, but also outlets for expert tech support and personal training, as well as social landmarks.

Greg Joswiak, vice president of worldwide iPod and iPhone product marketing

Greg Joswiak is a longtime Apple veteran who rose through the ranks as a product manager in the company's PowerBook line of laptops. After becoming the company's chief product marketing manager for Mac Hardware products, he transitioned over to the then-fledgling iPod line – with more than 100 million iPods sold, that product line is anything but fledgling now. Joswiak now manages all product marketing for both Apple's iPod and iPhone product lines, when he's not making cameo appearances in iPod-based poker games.




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Turkcell joins Vodaphone for Turkey iPhone

Apple's added yet another partner to its extensive list of iPhone 3G cohorts: Turkish mobile phone provider Turkcell.

While Apple had already made a deal with Vodafone to distribute the iPhone 3G in Turkey, it has now reached an understanding with Turkcell, which, with over 35 million subscribers, is the largest mobile operator in the country (that's about half the population of Turkey). Turkcell offers both pre- and postpaid mobile phone plans, and in a statement it promised to bring the iPhone 3G to both kinds of customers later this year.

That's a pretty sizeable chunk of potential iPhone customers, to be sure, as well as one that gives the iPhone a good foothold in the Middle East. While Turkey may not be among the twenty countries to get rolled out this week, we imagine that we'll be seeing it in the not too distant future.





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Best Buy will offer iPhone in US from 7 September

Fire at Apple campus caused $2m in damage

The fire at Apple's Cupertino campus last week caused $2m in damage, according to the Santa Clara County Fire Department.

No one was hurt in Tuesday's fire, which broke out at 10pm in a building on Valley Green Drive across from Apple's main campus on Infinite Loop. Smoke from the fire and water damage from putting out the blaze caused most of the damage, according to fire officials. It took fire crews about two and a half hours to extinguish the flames.


The fire started accidentally, according to the Santa Clara County Fire Department. Fire captain Daron Pisciotta attributed the cause to construction work being done on the building, where workers were welding on the building's roof.

Initial reports of the fire said that it had broken out at a building housing Apple's research-and-development efforts; however, Apple executives confirmed that the building is not an R&D centre.




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Touch-enabled case developed for iPhone 3G

 Touch-enabled case developed for iPhone 3G

US-based case manufacturer IVYSKIN has introduced a new case for the iPhone 3G that protects the screen whilst enabling you to touch buttons at the same time.

The company is claiming this to be a world's first. Mike Panahi, Founder and President of Ivyskin told us: "body and screen scratches are inevitable. We built a full solid screen cover into our new Xylo T3's enclosure that's specifically designed to protect the whole device".

ICYSKIN is creating three separate cases in the range, the Xylo T3, XyloDuo and XylorReflect. More information can be found on IVYSKIN's Web site.





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BBC upgrades iPlayer video, audio quality

The BBC has introduced higher-quality video streaming through its iPlayer catch-up TV service, and announced a move to support open standards.

The broadcaster has elected to make streams available using open standards H.264 and AAC+, moving away from the previous codec it has been using. Stream quality has shot to 800Kbps from 500Kbps as a result.


The move follows the broadcaster's launch of iPlayer streams for the iPod touch and iPhone, which are offered in H.264 and AAC.

The iPlayer media player now supports hardware acceleration in full-screen mode, giving a greatly improved image at lower CPU usage than before, the broadcaster explained.

"The BBC has always been a strong advocate and driver of open industry standards. Without these standards, TV and radio broadcasting would simply not function," wrote BBC director of future media and technology Erik Huggers on the company's internet blog. "I believe that the time has come for the BBC to start adopting open standards such as H.264 and AAC for our audio and video services on the web. These technologies have matured enough to make them viable alternatives to other solutions.

"The advantage for the audience will be a noticeable improvement in audio and video quality. Furthermore, it should become easier for the media to simply work across a broader range of devices," he added.

The BBC will at first offer content in both On2 VP6 and H.264 format, and provide a button to let you choose which works best for you and your internet connection, Normal or High.

Automatic bit-rate detection will be added at a later date.

iPlayer has been nominated for a British Technology Award for 2008.




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Best Buy will offer iPhone in US from 7 September

Giant US electronics retailer, Best Buy, has announced it will beselling the iPhone across the US starting 7 September.

The in-demand Apple mobile phone will be made available at almost 1,000 locations throughout the US, the company said.


Best Buy seemed positive as to availability of the device, hinting Apple is beginning to catch-up with demand - though this could easily change should demand be stronger than expected in the 20 countries the device will launch in later this month.

Shawn Score, president of Best Buy's mobile division, says, "We think we'll have a good supply for our customers."

He added: "We had a lot of work to do, obviously, to get in a position where Apple and AT&T would feel good about Best Buy Mobile carrying it, and that's what we've done in the last 18 months."

Apple declined to discuss the supply issue. "We continue to ship iPhones daily," Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris says.

There is of course a slight UK connection to the move. The iPhones will be sold through the Best Buy Mobile concession, which is itself a joint venture with Carphone Warehouse, which offers the iPhone in the UK, along with O2 and Apple.




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Apple iPhone for Russia this year

Phishing scam targets MobileMe users

An email purporting to be from Apple alerting users to a billing problem is, in fact, a phishing scam that's targeting users of Apple's online service, Macworld has learned.

The email, forwarded to Macworld by a reader, looks like an official communication from Apple regarding MobileMe, the company's subscription service. The email states: "We were unable to process your most recent payment. Did you recently change your bank, phone number or credit card?" Users are then invited to click on a link to enter that information- but that link opens a web page in your browser that does not appear to be affiliated with Apple or MobileMe (the other links in the email do point to pages on Apple's official site).


A check of the link information reveals that it is registered to a personal Gmail account originating in Bacau, Romania. It is unknown at this time if this is the person who sent the email, or if their identity had been "spoofed" by the phisher.

In phishing scams, crooks send a phony, official-looking email that tries to entice recipients into revealing private information such as passwords, social security numbers, or credit card and banking account data.

This phishing email message tries to get personal information from Apple's MobileMe users.This isn't the first instance where a phisher has tried using an Apple-run service to trick users. In May, iTunes Store users began receiving email that appeared to be from Apple's iTunes Store, suggesting that they must correct an apparent credit card problem.

The phony page users were directed to asked for a credit card number and other personal information that, once revealed, could be easily exploited by malicious users looking to commit identity theft.

For more on phishing and how to avoid such scams, seeRob Griffiths' recent story on Web browser security.




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MatrixStore 2.1 - hardcore video archiving for pros

ObjectMatrix has introduced MatrixStore 2.1, production grade software for use with Final Cut Server.

MatrixStore is software that turns low-cost disks (Promise VTrack, Xserve RAID etc.) into a safe place to store your digital assets. It is a secure store to archive all your digital creations for as long as you want to keep them. It puts all your archived assets onto your network, available to search and use instantly.


MatrixStore is built on a cluster of Apple’s server and storage arrays. A MatrixStore license costs $1000 per Terabyte, but MatrixStore 2.1 is available now for download and ships with a free 15TB software license.

The combination of Final Cut Server andMatrixStore make it possible and affordable to have all an organisations video assetsavailable on the network and retrievable via a Final Cut Server metadata search.

The software can manage a failure of a complete storage array while keeping your assets available for you to search and use. If hardware fails MatrixStore automatically re-protects all assets affected, putting a copy of them onto another independent piece of hardware in the system, it can also be set-up to replicate assets to another off-site facility.




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Nehalem desktops to be called Core i7

The high-end desktop versions of Intel's Nehalem processor family will carry the Core i7 moniker when they are released later this year.

Nehalem, which Intel executives will detail at the upcoming Intel Developer Forum conference in San Francisco, includes multiple processor cores as well as an integrated memory controller hub to improve performance - a feature that is currently only available on x86 processors from rival Advanced Micro Devices.


The Nehalem chips will be manufactured using Intel's 45-nanometre manufacturing process.

Intel's current processor family is called Core 2, an apparent reference to both the use of multiple cores on these chips and the company's current microarchitecture, which is called Core. The Nehalem family will also use the Core brand, but Intel will drop the numeral two when referring to these chips.

Within the Nehalem family, chips designed for different types of computers will have individual sub-brands, such as the i7 brand that will be attached to the high-end desktop chips, called Core i7, said Ruby Au, a company spokeswoman in Hong Kong.

Other names will be used for Core processors intended for other types of computers, she said.

Nehalem is set to be the principal focus of IDF, much as Centrino Atom was the focus at IDF in Shanghai during April. But senior company executives slated to speak at IDF will also discuss other products, including system-on-chips designed for entertainment devices and an upcoming quad-core mobile processor, Au said.

The quad-core mobile processor was scheduled to be released this month, but Au said the chip is not likely to be released during IDF. "We are just planning to share some additional information about the chip," she said.




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Alleged Nvidia problem grips some MacBook Pros

A small but vocal number of MacBook Pro owners have been complaining of graphics errors affecting their machines, and the latest mumbles suggest Nvidia hardware may be to blame.

Nvidia is denying some reports which claim there's problems in some (not all) of its G84 and G86-based mobile graphics cards, while ZDNet suggests all cards with the new chips, including the GeForce 8600M GT used in MacBook Pros - may be prone to failure and overheating.


A Macworld reader who claims to have been affected by the problem explains: "The 8600M GT in my June 2007 MacBook Pro failed last night in exactly the same way as many other users - PC and Mac - have experienced.

"The computer runs as normal but has no video output - if you connect via screen sharing the System Profiler lists the display as an Intel GMA X310 with no other graphics chip available."

News of the problem first began to glimmer in July, when The Inquirer reported on these alleged problems with Nvidia hardware.

Apple's own tech support forumshave many complaints which seem to detail this problem.




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Apple to defy economy - Credit Suisse

Apple seems set to continue to outgrow competitors in the PC industry, kicking against prevailing market conditions, a Credit Suisse analyst explains.

"We believe Mac performance is due to several unique drivers that were not present in prior downturns. We anticipate that Apple will continue to grow at a multiple of the overall market for many years to come," Credit Suisse explained.


"First, Apple has successfully reduced the perceived and actual switching costs for Windows users looking to adopt the Mac platform. Second, Apple's support of the Intel architecture has leveled the playing field in terms of speeds and feeds comparisons between Macs and PCs.

"Finally, Apple's successful retail strategy has broadened the availability of Mac products and given Apple more control over the critical computer-selling process. Users can now explore the advantages of the Mac platform with highly trained Apple sales reps," Credit Suisse writes.

The analyst firm holds a $200 target price on Apple stock.




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Canadian iPod owners may gain $45 credit
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iPhone leading Flickr phone, again

Despite the paucity of its 2-megapixel camera, Apple's remains the leading camera phone on the Flickr photo-sharing service.

The iPhone grabbed supremacy from the then leading Nokia N95 several months ago, now it appears to be consolidating its lead.


It seems that while the camera's of relatively low quality compared to its peers in the mobile phone industry, the iPhones large screen, 3G internet access and built-in support for geo-tagging (and the recent debut of many photo-sharing applications for the iPhone designed to combine all these features) means the iPhone's relative market share on Flickr has hit another growth spurt.

Behind iPhone in the usage stakes sit the Nokia N95, the Nokia N73, the Sony Ericsson K800i and the Nokia N82.




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iPhone multimedia lead advances, research claims
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Apple management shake-up over MobileMe launch

Apple CEO Steve Jobs has given MobileMe to the executive who heads iTunes, part of a shake-up over the sync service's public problems since its launch last month, according to a memo sent to company employees earlier this week.

In the email sent to workers Monday, Jobs admitted that the launch of MobileMe "was not our finest hour," saying it "was simply not up to Apple's standards." He also acknowledged that the service, which debuted 11 July along with the iPhone 3G and the new App Store, needed more testing and should have been rolled out in phases.


The secretive CEO also said he had revised Apple's table of organization.

"We are taking many steps to learn from this experience so that we can grow MobileMe into a service that our customers will love," Jobs said in the email, which was first reported by the technology site Ars Technica. "One step that I can share with you today is that the MobileMe team will now report to Eddy Cue, who will lead all of our internet services - iTunes, the App Store and, starting today, MobileMe."

Cue will have the title vice president, internet services, and will report directly to Jobs.

Previously, MobileMe had been led by Rob Schoeben, Apple's vice president of applications marketing, who was in charge of the service's predecessor, .Mac, as well as some of its biggest applications, including iLife, iWork and Aperture.

"That was probably the most important step, internally as well as externally - to say that'We screwed up,'" said Mike McGuire, a Gartner analyst.

McGuire, who closely follows Apple's media moves, particularly its iTunes online music mart, was bullish on Cue's track record. "In their post-event examination, they identified that there was at least some problems with former leadership at MobileMe," said McGuire. "Eddy has shown with iTunes over the years that he's very good at running a 24/7 worldwide distribution point. He's got some serious chops, and the appointment is interesting."

More intriguing, said McGuire, is the conundrum Apple faces going forward if it's serious about ensuring that it not repeat a MobileMe-like debacle. "I think Apple may have to consider [broadly] beta-testing with services in the'cloud' like MobileMe," he said.

It may not want to, however, even though Jobs admitted that MobileMe "clearly needed more time and testing" in the internal email. "For Apple, both strategically and tactically, a lot of the sizzle would get shown in a beta," noted McGuire. "That would take a certain tool out of their kit, their ability to maintain secrecy around a product launch."

In McGuire's analysis, Apple reaps big benefits by not disclosing information about products before they're available. The buzz that precedes a launch, he said, is usually only exceeded by the excitement when the details become clear. "People say,'This is even better than all the rumours'," said McGuire. "That's been a real valuable asset to them."

But to respond to calls - both from users and possibly from within Apple - that it better test before it delivers products, Apple may be forced to give up that asset, in particular as it tries to expand its consumer-centric base to small business or larger companies.

MobileMe, said McGuire, was being pitched by Apple not just to consumers, but to small businesses, too, with the "Exchange for the rest of us" slogan that it initially used - but has since dropped - to promote the synchronization service. The reference to Exchange was meant to evoke Microsoft's mail server, which is used by bigger businesses but rarely by small firms, to deliver email and sync messages, contacts and calendar appointments with users in the field.

"This has to get fixed, and fixed quickly," said McGuire of the MobileMe mess.

MobileMe stumbled even before it got off the ground. The transition from.Mac, which was supposed to take only a few hours, instead dragged on a full day, raising the ire of users locked out of their accounts. Days later, customers complained about slower-than-expected synchronization, which Apple answered with an apology and a 30-day service extension to all users. Then on July 18, an Apple server went south, taking down the email accounts of about 1 per cent of MobileMe's subscribers. The outage lasted 11 days before service was fully restored.

McGuire isn't completely confident that Apple would take the step to test future products, "cloud" services especially, in a more public manner. "They won't do this on hardware or the OS, but maybe on these internet-related services they will," he said.

"I give it less than a 50-50 chance of happening," he said. "But I think they'll start considering it carefully."

Jobs wrapped up his email to Apple employees, not with a specific promise to test, but with a general mea culpa and call to action.

"The MobileMe launch clearly demonstrates that we have more to learn about Internet services," Jobs said. "And learn we will. The vision of MobileMe is both exciting and ambitious, and we will press on to make it a service we are all proud of by the end of this year."




Apple UK offers £15 MobileMe rebate
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When Vista sales aren't Vista sales

Microsoft Vista is failing to gain interest from business customers, it appears, despite what official sales figures maintain.

According to HP, most of the PCs it sells are actually running Windows XP, even though the sales are reported as sales of Vista-enabled devices.


What's behind this unusual statistic?

Demand, HP explains: "From 30 June, we have no longer been able to ship a PC with a XP license," said Jane Bradburn, market development manager, commercial notebooks for HP Australia.

"However, what we have been able to do with Microsoft is ship PCs with a Vista Business licence but with XP pre-loaded. That is still the majority of business computers we are selling today." Every sale of Vista is, in all actuality, a sale of XP.

Rob Kingston, group manager of commercial product marketing for HP explained: "Looking into the crystal ball, I don't think businesses will see much value in upgrading to Vista until late next year, and even so, Microsoft will probably have come out with something else by then."

HP's revelation casts doubt over Microsoft's claims about how many copies of Vista have been sold, as HP has made clear that although a sale may be counted as 'Vista', it may actually be XP, reports APC Magazine.




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IBM Lotus Notes slowly moves to the iPhone

IBM's Lotus Domino Web Access software (aka Lotus iNotes) is to make its iPhone debut "soon", Computerworld explains.

The software is expected to reach iPhone users before the end of the year, though that commitment remains subject to change, the company explains through its iPhone-focused Lotus Notes website.


"Lotus Notes data will combine with the flexibility and connectivity of the Apple iPhone. To be built on the time tested IBM Lotus Domino Web Access infrastructure, users will be able to quickly access e-mail, calendars, and contacts through the rich Apple iPhone user experience," IBM explains.

iPhone users will be able to see their Lotus inbox, read and reply to email, attach and send files, get access to a calendar and the capacity to read detailed notes regarding meetings and scheduled events, get access to contact databases, and will also be able to create new contact entries, IBM reports.

However, the company warns: "The above represents current IBM plans and directions, which are subject to change without notice."




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iPhone launch has boosted smartphone sales - Orange

Anecdotal evidence at least that the iPhone 3G has widened interest in the whole smartphone sector, as the chief executive of Orange makes such claims.

Orange chief executive, Tom Alexander, this week said that the weekend in which Apple introduced the iPhone actually became the "best trading weekend of the year so far," for his company.


As he put it, people were excited to see the iPhone, came out to have a look at what the fuss was about, and then upgraded their existing handsets.

"People were excited by the product, came out to shop and found other great deals on the high street. Everyone has benefited from the iPhone," he said.

Speaking on July 11, Dominic Hulewicz, O2’s Head of Converged Services, expressed his surprise at the interest shown in the iPhone, which launched that day. “We’re seeing phenomenal demand," he said, "I was staggered," he added, noting that his experience using the iPhone along with a MacBook provided for debugging the device had actually inspired him to switch to Mac at home. As industry observers note, it's possible Alexander is being diplomatic, as recent weeks have seen some speculation (now denied) claiming Apple will allow Orange to sell iPhone in the UK, along with current carrier, O2.

O2 has moved to dismiss such claims.




Analyst: Apple boosting iPod orders, cutting Macs
Needham & Co. predicts 30m iPhone sales in 2009

iPhone sales to surge as smartphone market grows

Apple may be on target to grab 28 per cent of global smartphone sales by 2009, a prediction originally offered by Piper Jaffray and now repeated by Turner Investments.

The analysts point to Apple's complete control over the iPhone's design and development, the quality of the phone's operating software, and the ample number of outside application developed for the phone as factors that could propel the company's share of the smart-phone market from 3.7 per cent in 2007 to 28.0% in 2009.


Allegedly, the iPhone 3G's low price, intuitive interface, applications and features will boost Apple's iPhone sales, forcing competitors to emulate the company with cheaper and better devices.

The analysts estimate that the "worldwide market for mobile connectivity is likely to generate accelerating double-digit growth over the next five to 10 years." And they note that emerging markets present the greatest growth potential for telecommunications, due to the massive numbers of people there who use their handsets as both their phone and their computer in the absence of desktop or laptop computers.

Separate research from Nokia indicates global smartphone sales surged 40 per cent in Q2 2008, far outperforming the 15 per cent growth for all handsets sold during the same period.

Sales of handsets worldwide reached 300 million units in the second quarter, up 5 per cent sequentially and 15 per cent year on year, while global smartphone sales in the same quarter topped 37.1 million units, up 37.4 per cent.

It's all to gain for Apple, particularly in the US, reports explain: "The ratio of smartphones to the global handset market is expected to climb to 15 per cent in the second half of this year, up from 12-13 per cent currently. In the US market alone, sales of smartphones already reached 20 per cent in the second quarter," a report explains.




RBC: iPhone 3G to trigger iPod-like sales boom
Windows Mobile Sales to Jump 50 Percent, Microsoft Says
Apple iPhone 3G is hot property in Japan
iPhone multimedia lead advances, research claims

Epson intros new photo viewers

Epson has widened its range of tools for photographers, introducing the P-7000 and P-6000 Photoviewers.

These feature high capacity - 160GB and 80GB - hard drives, and incorporate a large 4-inch 640-x-480 Epson Photo Fine Premia LCD screen.


Mark Robinson, business manager at Epson UK said: “Despite the fact that most cameras have viewing screens, it can sometimes be difficult to distinguish areas of sharp focus, graininess and lighting quality until the images are uploaded onto a computer. These new products tackle this problem by enabling photographers to view their images in fine detail regardless of where they are.” The devices offer a wider viewing angle and wide colour gamut covering 94 per cent of the Adobe RGB colour space. The devices can also be used in conjunction with Photoshop as a USB-wide gamut display. Additional features include the facility to conduct ad-hoc raw development on the viewer and print out the final image via PictBridge. Advanced software features allow users to edit and trim images and apply watermarking to photographs. The photographer can now choose between full or differential backup, giving the option to transfer all the data from the memory card to the viewer or just new files.

The devices feature sharp 4-inch LCD screens. The P-7000 ships with accessories including a battery charger which enables two batteries to be charged simultaneously, an in-car charger and a carrying case. Both the P-6000 and P-7000 are compatible with a broad range of memory cards including CF and SD, and also have USB ports. JPEG and RAW images from all major camera manufacturers are supported. The Epson P-6000 costs 449.99 and the Epson P-7000 is 549.99. Prices exclude VAT, products ship September.




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