PhotoCopy iPhoto/Flickr tool gains speed, stability

24x7digital has updated PhotoCopy to version 1.1. It's a free update for registered users. PhotoCopy costs $20 to register, and a demo is available.

PhotoCopy helps users with iPhoto libraries mirror their content on the digital photo sharing service Flickr.


You select which iPhoto albums and events you want to share and PhotoCopy takes care of it. Image information like title, date, time, rating, keywords and description is also copied over.

New to the 1.1 version is Event support. Proxy servers are now supported, and scanning has been optimised for speed. CPU load issues have been improved, as has error handling of movies. iPhoto scan logging has been improved, multiple stability issues have been fixed, and log entry detail text has been added.

System requirements call for Mac OS X 10.5 or later, 5.2MB hard disk space, iPhoto 6 or later, and a Flickr account.

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Parallels Desktop for Mac 4.0 unveiled
Rapper Lil Wayne at work on “Tha Carter IV”
(Reuters)

Kingston Trio’s Nick Reynolds, 75, dies in SD
(AP)

Screen recording application Screenium adds new features

VAT rates explained on Apple Store

An article on the Apple Store hopes to clear up some confusion regarding the VAT rate being charged by the company.

As our UK-based readers will be aware, the VAT rate (the UK equivalent of Sales Tax) is dropping from 17.5 per cent to 15 per cent on Monday.


With Apple holding a sale, many people are wondering if the price they are paying includes the old or new rate of VAT. A note on the Apple store aims to clear up some confusion.

It turns out that most products on the Apple Store are being charged at the full 17.5 per cent rate of VAT, until the tax fall kicks in at midnight on Sunday.

Mac computers in the one-day shipping event, however, are being taxed at the lower rate of 15 per cent because they will not be shipped until Monday. Although no mention is made of Mac computers not in the sale being taxed at 15 per cent, even though these will also – we presume – not ship until after the tax cut.

Apple also states that any items you order today alongside a Mac will be taxed at the lower rate of 15 per cent, because it will be shipped with the Mac after the tax drop.

The rate on the site will still display 17.5 per cent though. We are presuming that Apple, like many other online retailers, is having to recode its site to display the different tax levels that are incorporated into the final price.

It has been 17 years since the last change in VAT in the UK, and many online retailers have the VAT rate hard-coded into their e-commerce software, requiring a major rewrite of their Web sites.

The note on the Apple Store reads:

"From 00.00 on Monday December 1st the standard rate of Value Added Tax (VAT) in the UK will be reduced by the UK government from17.5% to 15%

All prices displayed on the Apple Online Store during our one-day shopping event are inclusive of VAT at the current rate of 17.5% but exclusive of delivery charges unless otherwise indicated.

If you order a Mac from the Apple Online Store during our one-day shopping event, the price displayed during the checkout process and in your Order Confirmation email will include VAT at the current rate of 17.5%. However, since your order will ship on or after Monday December 1, your order will be subject to VAT at the new rate of 15%.

If you order any additional items at the same time as your Mac, these items will be shipped together with your Mac as a single order, and will also be subject to VAT at the new rate of 15%."

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Apple denies CastCatcher update entry into App Store
Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Eddie Van Halen Pops the Question
(E! Online)

Europe to cap prices for roaming text messages and data

European telecommunications ministers gave their backing on Thursday to a plan to cap retail prices for sending SMS (Short Message Service) text messages and browsing the Internet using mobile phones while abroad.

In September the European Union's executive body, the European Commission, proposed slashing both the retail and wholesale prices for text messaging by introducing caps of €0.11 and €0.04 respectively. Average retail prices are currently estimated at around 0.29 euros, the Commission said.


It also proposed a cap on the wholesale price for downloading data of €1 per megabyte, and called for further reductions in the cost of voice calls when roaming.

"Ministers have answered the Commission's call for a speedy response to the SMS and data roaming rip-off very positively," said Viviane Reding, the telecommunications commissioner.

EU citizens sent 2.5 billion SMS messages, generating €800 million for their mobile phone operators last year, the Commission said. The cost of sending messages while roaming can be ten times more than sending a message from within the home country.

Slashing this price is seen as an essential part of creating one single European telecoms market, and an excellent way of illustrating the merits of the single European market to consumers.

"I am confident that with Parliament we will ensure that consumers travelling in the EU will save money when sending texts and surfing the Web with a mobile phone as of 1 July 2009. This would send a clear message of consensus that the EU’s single market is there to serve European citizens as well as businesses," Reding said.

NEXT: Ability to set limits on data roaming bills

Continued... 1 | 2 | NEXT >




Oscar loosens rules for music categories
(Reuters)

Avaya jumps on the iPhone bandwagon
US mobile sales to beat economic gloom, forecasts Ovum
Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Nokia Home Control Center: mobile control for the home

Nokia is developing a device to link mobile phones to home automation systems. Using a mobile phone consumers will be able monitor and control security, heating, and ventilation systems via its gateway Home Control Center, Nokia announced on Thursday.

With appropriate equipment, users will be able to see who is ringing the doorbell at home, via the mobile phone. They can then talk to the person, and for example open the door to a workman, according to Nokia.


Nokia's first systems are expected to become commercially available by the end of 2009, said Toni Sormunen, director for the Smart Home Program at Nokia.

The heart of the Nokia system is the Home Control Center (HCC), a piece of hardware which will act as gateway between different systems for home automation and the mobile phone, or any device that is equipped with a browser.

Phones will talk to the HCC via an Internet connection or Wi-Fi. Nokia has developed a native client for phones running its Symbian S60 software, and a browser-based client for other devices.

Using the native client users will be able to plug the phone into the HCC with a USB cable, and everything is installed automatically.

The native client will also be more responsive, and users won't have to log in when they access their HCC, according to Kari Rantanen, director of sales and marketing at Nokia's Smart Home Program.

The HCC will then be able to talk to security, heating, and ventilation systems via home automation systems. Nokia will initially support only one, Z-Wave, but is opening up its system to enable partners to implement support for other home automation technologies such as ZigBee or KNX (Konnex).

It chose to start with Z-Wave because the number of available products. The members of the Z-Wave Alliance have already introduced 300 products to the market, according to Sormunen.

NEXT: Third party developers

Continued... 1 | 2 | NEXT >




Nokia introduces phones and content targeted at rural users
Placido Domingo sings at Mexico pyramid
(AP)

Acclivity acquires MYOB US Mac business management software

Acclivity has announced the acquisition of MYOB and its Mac and PC development team from MYOB Limited of Australia.

Terms of the deal between the two companies were not disclosed.


Acclivity currently distributes MYOB software throughout the United States. The acquisition will allow Acclivity to manage development of MYOB's Mac business management software, including FirstEdge, AccountEdge and AccountEdgeNetwork Edition.

As part of the arrangement, Acclivity can now enter markets outside the US and one of their first goals will be to bring AccountEdge back to Canada, according to Tom Nash, managing partner at Acclivity.

Current MYOB US customers, along with their Australian and New Zealand Mac customers, will continue to have access to the same products and support resources, according to Nash. "There will be no customer disruption," he said.

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Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

OmniFocus 1.5 expands Mac to iPhone sync
Microsoft quietly opens US online store

Zevrix updates plug-ins for InDesign CS4

Zevrix Solutions has announced compatible versions of its plug-ins with Adobe's Creative Suite 4 software. Zevrix makes plug-ins for InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator.

LinkOptimizer, designed as a workflow app for InDesign, reduces the size of images linked to InDesign documents. The latest release is 3.2.4.


BatchOutput automates InDesign print exporting to PDF, PostScript, EPS and JPG. Its latest version is 3.2.

BatchOutput Server automates file processing from network-based "hotfolders;" its latest release is version 4.1.

InPreflight is a quality control tool for InDesign that manages file packaging and reporting. Its latest release is 2.6.1.

All plug-ins run on Mac OS X 10.4.2 or later with Adobe CS, CS2, CS3 and CS4.

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Adobe Creative Suite 4 Tour continues
Rapper Lil Wayne at work on “Tha Carter IV”
(Reuters)

Guns N’ Roses to release new album next month
(Reuters)

Extensis ships Suitcase Fusion 2

Adobe Configurator for Photoshop adds comprehensive user guide

Adobe has released a comprehensive user guide for it’s new free Adobe Configurator application, that lets people create customised Photoshop CS4 control panels and share them with others.

The first full version of Adobe Configurator was announced last week. The open source utility enables the easy creation of panels (palettes) for use in Photoshop CS4 and runs on Adobe's AIR (Adobe Integrated Runtime) foundation.


Configurator is designed to make it easy to drag and drop tools, menu items, scripts, actions, and other objects into a panel design, then export the results for use inside Photoshop.

“The app is designed to be very straightforward to use, but the guide can help answer questions as you start using Configurator more intensively,” explains Adobe’s John Nack in a blog posting. “The team has also provided a list of known issues - rough edges and their workarounds.”

Nack also highlights a few ideas for Configurator, Adobe are “kicking around”:

* Support containers (sub-tabs, accordions, etc.) that would make it easy to provide more content within a single panel

* Offer better localisation/auto-layout (so that a tab could be switched from English to German to Japanese on the fly; this is essential if we're to use Configurator to create content that ships in the box)

* Include more widgets that can be dragged in (e.g. a foreground/background color indicator/selector like the one at the bottom of the PS toolbar)

The Configurator PDF user guide can be downloaded here.

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Adobe fixes 6 flaws in Flash
R&B trio Labelle back in spotlight with new album
(Reuters)

Jay-Z Gets Out Vote for Obama; Boss Adds Shows
(E! Online)

Adobe Creative Suite 4 Tour continues

Microsoft faces antitrust complaint from software trader

Dutch software trader Samir Abdalla has filed a broad antitrust complaint against Microsoft with the European Commission, charging that the firm's pricing policies violate European Union treaties. The trader complains that Microsoft charges European users at least 30 percent higher prices than in the United States.

Abdalla has hired law firm Houthoff, a well known legal firm with a broad representation in Brussels.


Microsoft last May filed legal charges against Abdalla for allegedly illegal export of software licenses. The software maker argued that Abdalla illegally sold home and student licenses with an estimated value of $3.4 million.

Abdalla has always denied those charges. In response to Microsoft's complaint, he accused the firm of stifling the legal trade in grey software. Abdalla purchased software licenses in Egypt and then sold them in the US.

The practice is known as grey trade and although banned in the EU, it is allowed by US authorities. Back in May, Abdalla promised to file charges with European authorities.

Although it took six months longer than planned, Abdalla earlier this month filed his legal complaint with the Directorate General for Competition. The body, which is headed up by Commissioner Neelie Kroes, has a long history battling Microsoft for antitrust violations.

NEXT: Microsoft charges significantly higher prices

Continued... 1 | 2 | NEXT >




Antitrust case against Apple still on, says Mac clone maker
Busta Banned in the U.K.?
(E! Online)

Colombian singer Shakira lends support to Obama
(AP)

Microsoft quietly opens US online store

YouTube offers Japanese content owners way to make money

In late 2006 a coalition of 23 of Japan's biggest TV broadcasters and copyright organisations, alarmed at the uncontrolled spread of their content on the Internet, were preparing to battle YouTube. Two years on, the video-sharing site has just signed a site-wide licensing agreement for its content and is telling Japanese content owners that user-uploads of copyrighted content aren't necessarily a threat.

Armed with a new tech toolkit to identify the owner of uploaded content, YouTube says it is committed to making money for its partners.


"We really want to focus on monetisation," said David Eun, the company's vice president of content partnerships and one of the executives originally sent to Japan to allay industry fears. He was speaking at a Tokyo news event held to outline YouTube's business plan for the coming year.

"We really understand that YouTube can provide a fantastic opportunity for research, reach to send content and distribute it to new audiences but we also understand that revenues are very, very important," he said.

NEXT: YouTube Content ID

Continued... 1 | 2 | NEXT >




Rapper Lil Wayne at work on “Tha Carter IV”
(Reuters)

Sony shares sink on earnings revision
Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

YouTube wants voters to ‘Video Your Vote’

US mobile sales to beat economic gloom, forecasts Ovum

US revenues from wireless services will experience strong growth over the next year despite widespread economic gloom, predicts telecom and IT research firm Ovum.

According to Ovum's latest projections, mobile connections and revenues will grow by an estimated 6.3 per cent in 2009 over 2008. The firm predicts that the mobile market in Canada will see even stronger growth in 2009, as mobile connections are expected to grow by 7.5 per cent and mobile revenues are expected to grow by 11.3 per cent.


The major driver in continued growth in the North American mobile market is the fact that North American countries still have relatively low rates of mobile penetration, with the United States (85 per cent) and Canada (60 per cent) trailing behind several countries in East Asia and Western Europe, Ovum says.

Ovum says that the United States added 3.9 million mobile connections in the third quarter of 2008 and that total US connections have grown by 10 per cent since the third quarter of 2007. Sprint was the only wireless company to see a drop in wireless connections in the third quarter of 2008, Ovum reports, as Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Alltel and other big wireless companies all reported solid gains in wireless subscribers.

Additionally, every major wireless company in both the United States and Canada reported double-digit revenue growth in the third quarter of 2008, except for Sprint, whose wireless segment has lost $645 million so far in 2008.

Another big driver for mobile revenue over the past year has been the growth in mobile data services, Ovum reports, as both AT&T (51 per cent) and Verizon (43 per cent) have experienced very strong growth in wireless data revenues over the past year.

With more carriers subsidizing smartphones such as the iPhone and the BlackBerry Storm, Ovum projects that mobile data revenues will see continued strong growth throughout 2009.

Ovum's sunny projections for mobile data growth come at a time when many tech companies are bracing for a recession by cutting jobs and services. Google has been reported to be slashing 10,000 jobs from its payroll, for instance, while Cisco is shutting down between 29 December, 2008, and 2 January 2009, to save money.

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Canada, Japan see ‘very good’ demand for iPhone in Q3
Country star Tim McGraw rips label over hits CD
(Reuters)

The Beatles iTunes debut stalls again, says Sir Paul

Sir Paul McCartney has thrown cold water on hopes that The Beatles back catalogue will be appearing on iTunes sooner rather than later.

In an interview with Billboard magazine magazine McCartney said Apple Corps and the band's label EMI couldn't agree on terms to release the Beatles' catalogue to iTunes and other digital download services, remastered or not.


"That is constantly being talked of. We'd like to do it. What happens is, when something's as big as The Beatles, it's heavy negotiations," McCartney said.

"We are very for it, we've been pushing it. But there are a couple of sticking points, I understand. So the last word I got back was that it had stalled, the whole process. They [EMI] want something we're not prepared to give them. Hey, sounds like the music business. It's between EMI and The Beatles. What else is new."

This seems to suggest that the negotiations that McCartney spoke of in September, when he told Mojo magazine that various Beatles tracks and albums have been remastered and the results were "better even than we'd hoped," have fallen through.

It was hoped that the remastered selection of Beatles tracks would appear on iTunes early next year.

Apple and EMI

"We have been working very hard to secure an agreement with Apple Corps to make The Beatles' legendary recording catalogue available to fans in digital form," said a spokesperson for EMI. "Unfortunately, the various parties involved have so far been unable to reach agreement, but we really hope that everyone can make progress soon."

McCartney was speaking at the launch of a new CD, The Fireman's 'Electric Arguments'.

It’s the third collaboration but the first with vocals. MySpace users can listen to the album free, after they launched a joint music venture with several record labels this year to challenge Apple's iTunes music store.

The Fireman's 'Electric Arguments' was released on Monday in the UK.

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Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Apple response on Norwegian iTunes case fails to impress

Real Dan Lyons goes the way of fake Steve Jobs

The man behind Fake Steve Jobs has bid adieu...to himself. Newsweek's Dan Lyons will cease posting to his "Real Dan Lyons" blog after he made some comments that were taken as less than favourable by their subjects.

In a recent post on the departure of Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang (archived at Valleywag), Lyons wrote of Yahoo's PR team, who had told him that Yang wasn't going anywhere:


“I'd never dealt much with Yahoo before, and I was stunned by their PR operators - they're really an unsavoury bunch. During that same reporting this crack team of lying sacks of s*** put one of Yahoo's attorneys in Washington on the phone to tell me, over and over, the true "inside story" of what was going on with the Google deal, which was, he informed me, that the deal with Google was a sure thing, definitely going to happen, no way in hell is the deal not going to happen, there are no real objections from the regulators, they're fine with it, the objections from advertisers are not an issue, blah blah blah.”

That deal, you may remember, fell apart like a wet newspaper in the mouth of a pitbull. Anyway, apparently Yahoo's PR team objected to their characterisation (we presume it was the word sacks that really got them riled), a complaint which made its way to Lyons's employers at Newsweek, prompting him to pull the blog entry.

Or, as Lyons himself described it to the AP:

"The bottom line is I don't want to jeopardize a job I like (and which feeds my hungry 3-year-old twins) over some blog that's just a funny little thing I'm doing in my spare time," Lyons wrote. "Or, to translate this into Fake Steve speak: I'm a coward and a whore who has totally sold out to The Man."

We understand Lyons's reluctance to upset his corporate overlords, but we also kind of wish he stood by his remarks, if not for himself then for everybody who's been forced to deal with...shall we say, circumlocutious PR reps.

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Pink’s “So What” tops British pop charts
(Reuters)

Yahoo’s Yang to step down as CEO after deals with Microsoft, Google fail

Screen recording application Screenium adds new features

Screen recording application http://www.synium.de/products/screenium/index.html has been updated, adding new features, localisations and performance enhancements.

The big new feature in Screenium 1.0.6 is the addition of multiple camera support. This feature allows users to use different cameras, alternating as sources for the iSight picture-in-picture, according to the company.


The update also adds localisation for French and Italian, adding to German and English already available. Performance and stability enhancements round out the updates for this version.

Screenium 1.0.6 is available from the company's Web site. For new users the application costs 14.

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iShowU HD Pro screen recording utility updated
Rapper Lil Wayne at work on “Tha Carter IV”
(Reuters)

Onion-powered iPod a hit with environmentalists

An environmentally conscious iPod user has used an onion and energy drink mixture to power his iPod, reports the Metro newspaper.

Owen Louis, 21, dug two holes into an onion, poured in the energy drink and then placed his USB cable in to charge his iPod.


“I was watching TV with my laptop on and my iPod playing and thought, "How much electricity must I be using? A friend showed me the experiment as a laugh but I thought it was the greatest thing I have ever seen, and do it religiously every day,” Owen said.

The environmentally conscious iPod user from Portsmouth claims the unusual charging method is green, because the onion will decompose and the energy drink bottle recycled.

Phil Stubbles, a physics lecturer from St Vincent College in Gosport, Hampshire quoted by the Metro said almost all vegetables could power iPods because they contain ions which react with energy drinks to create a charge.

'The only problem is you have no control over how long it may work for ... and it can be smelly,' he added.

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Jay-Z Gets Out Vote for Obama; Boss Adds Shows
(E! Online)

Guns N’ Roses to release new album next month
(Reuters)

DLO finally releases hi-def iPod video dock

Swedish provider hints at Multimedia Messaging service on iPhone

The iPhone may be the most advanced handheld computing device in the world, but you can flummox it pretty easily: for example, try to get a picture sent from your friend's cell phone via the Multimedia Messaging service (MMS).

But that may not long be the case every place in the world, according to a presentation by iPhone provider Telia Sonera.


As Macworld Sweden reports, Telia Sonera, which is partnered with Apple to distribute the iPhone in Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, gave a presentation earlier this week that specifically says MMS is part of the company's "next phase" for the iPhone.

A slide from a recent Telia Sonera presentation suggests MMS support for the iPhone is forthcoming.The MMS application in question may not come from Apple or Telia Sonera, however, but rather appears as though it will be developed by a third party.

That third party could be Mobispine, a Swedish company that announced an MMS iPhone application targeted at mobile phone operators on Wednesday. It's unknown at this point when the MMS service might roll out, in which of Telia Sonera's countries it might be deployed, or whether it might make its way to other iPhone service providers.

Lack of MMS support has been a complaint of iPhone users ever since the first version of the device shipped in July 2007. While there are potential workarounds to send and receive pictures via email, many users remain frustrated at having to work around something that most common phones can do just fine.

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Buffalo LinkStation NAS sports iPhone access
Colombian singer Shakira lends support to Obama
(AP)

Beastie Boys add dates to Obama tour
(Reuters)

Apple spells “Catagories” wrong in iPhone update

Speck offers 'satin' case for new Apple MacBook

Speck has announced the forthcoming expansion of its SeeThru hard shell case line with a new "SeeThru Satin" model aimed at Apple's new MacBooks.

The new design is expected to ship before the end of the month and will cost $49.95.


The SeeThru Satin features a smooth-touch rubberised exterior coating, but it's a hard shell that protects the MacBook from scratches and dings.

It's a two-piece design that provides access to all key features and functions, including the side battery indicator button, trackpad, keyboard and all connection ports.

Rubber feet on the bottom half of the case help keep the MacBook stabilized on slippery surfaces. The shell is also vented to provide optimal heat dissipation.

The SeeThru Satin is coming in black, purple and red, and Speck said that additional colours are coming in January, 2009, ostensibly around the time of Macworld Expo.

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Apple spells “Catagories” wrong in iPhone update
Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

Apple spells "Catagories" wrong in iPhone update

We know people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones, and that 'teh odd typo' slips through on the Macworld site. But you don't really expect it from Apple; especially not in such a glaring way as to have a mistake on a menu on the iPhone.

So we are amused to see that Apple has written the Categories menu on the new Podcast download area of the new app as "Catagories". It's all the more embarrassing because Apple has the correct spelling on the same page.


Wasn't it Scott Forstall, Apple's vice president of platform experience that said: "I actually have a photographer's loupe that I use to make sure every pixel is right. We will argue over literally a single pixel."

Maybe it's time to get that loupe out again.

Hat tip to Darren –the Macworld reader who was the first to spot this.

Apple spells Catagories wrong in iPhone update

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Apple blocks Opera from the iPhone
Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Burning Qs: Miley’s Poll Numbers & LOL Religion
(E! Online)

iShowU HD Pro screen recording utility updated

Shinywhitebox updated its screen recording application, iShowU HD Pro, releasing a new beta version.

Several new features have been added to iShowU HD Pro 2.0.5b, including Recording Recovery.


This feature helps protect your work in case of a crash. When you restart the application, iShowU will recovery as much of your work as it can, so you may not lose everything.

Other features in the new version are some new Low CPU modes and more efficient CPU modes for those that rely on that function.

Fixes in this version include allowing the Pause button to work, upload scripts get upgraded if they haven't been before and recording rate is now smoothly limited to what the compressor can achieve in real-time.

The new beta version is available for download from the company's Web site.

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Rapper Lil Wayne at work on “Tha Carter IV”
(Reuters)

Parallels Desktop for Mac 4.0 unveiled
Snow Leopard, iPhone betas in the wild

OmniFocus 1.5 expands Mac to iPhone sync

The Omni Group has released OmniFocus 1.5, an update to their task management software for Mac OS X.

A free update for registered users, OmniFocus costs $79.95 (53.90)


OmniFocus is designed to help people get things done using David Allen's "Getting Things Done" management method.

The software lets you add or hide features as you see fit, capture tasks from any application and store data securely; it also syncs with iCal and Mail and works with Spotlight.

OmniFocus for the iPhone and iPod touch is also available, and version 1.5 now lets you synchronise between any number of Macs and iPhones via MobileMe or a Web server, or just locally using Apple's Bonjour zero-configuration networking service.

You can also customize the appearance of your OmniFocus data.

Also in this release are new view presets in the default toolbar, interface improvements, performance enhancements, bug fixes, and the ability to archive completed or dropped items.

OmniFocus requires Mac OS X 10.4.8 or later.

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Snow Leopard, iPhone betas in the wild
AT&T executive says iPhone 3G tethering coming ’soon’
Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

DLO finally releases hi-def iPod video dock

Digital Lifestyle Outfitters on Thursday announced the release of HomeDock HD, a new home entertainment peripheral for iPods. It costs $249.99.

First introduced at Macworld Expo in San Francisco in January, 2008, the HomeDock HD features an iPod dock connector, and attaches to your home entertainment system.


It connects the iPod to a High Definition TV (HDTV) using the highest picture quality available, upscaling video to 1080i or 720p using a High Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) connector.

The HomeDock HD also features support for analog TVs using S-Video and composite video connectors.

Other connectors include a USB interface (for synching to a host computer), digital audio output, and RCA stereo audio output. Auxiliary audio input is also supported.

The HomeDock HD uses its own user interface, which has been enhanced with an icon-based "visual flow format," according to DLO, enabling you to navigate the contents of your iPod, looking at album art and other details.

A Radio Frequency (RF)-based remote control is also included, which works through walls.

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Roxio updates Toast 9 and Streamer
New Product: Western Digital WD TV
Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

Google to shut down Lively, virtual world alternative to Second Life

Google will shut down Lively, its browser-based virtual world environment, by the end of December.

Launched in July, Lively is Google's alternative to Second Life and other virtual world environments.


Google said it launched Lively in Google Labs because it wanted users to be able to interact with their friends and express themselves online in new ways.

Google said on its blog that after four and a half months on the Lively project, its resources would be better spent focusing on its core search, advertising and applications businesses.

"We've also always accepted that when you take these kinds of risks not every bet is going to pay off," the posting added.

Google was not immediately available for comment. Google employees working on the project will move to other teams, according to the blog.

Lively users have been asked by Google to capture their work by taking videos and screenshots of their rooms. Rooms and avatars on the site will not be available after 31 December.

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Google updates Chrome to third beta
Delta museum is a tribute to bluesman B.B. King
(AP)

Wolfgang's Vault proving a hit with iPhone owners

A recent iPhone and iPod touch service offering live and rare classic rock recordings is proving a hit with music fans following a launch earlier this month.

Concert Vault for the iPhone and iPod touch gives you free access to the world's largest collection of live concert recordings right in your pocket.


Brought to you by the famed Wolfgang's Vault, Concert Vault lets you listen to the Vault's latest additions, most popular concerts, and any of our radio stations playing hundreds of songs from thousands of concerts spanning the 1960s through today.

Wolfgang’s Vault includes live music and memorabilia from the Bill Graham Archives, Record Plant Recordings, King Biscuit Archives, Silver Eagle Archives and others.

Most played artists include Frank Zappa, The Rolling Stones, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, Grateful Dead, Pink Floyd, Santana and Bruce Springsteen.

A recent deal with Daytrotter.com, has also seen classic names joined by new and emerging artists playing live including Vampire Weekend, The National and Okkervil River.

The service includes full support over WiFi, 3G and EDGE connections on the iPhone, and WiFi on the iPod Touch, with advanced automatic bandwidth detection and stream adjustment.

The Concert Vault is free although you will need to register to listen to streaming music online. Fees may apply for some services. A range of 1960’s inspired iPod skins also available to buy.

Concert Vault for the iPhone and iPod touch is free to download from the Apple Apps store.

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iPod touch is ‘Gadget of the Year’ - T3
Jay-Z Gets Out Vote for Obama; Boss Adds Shows
(E! Online)

Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

National Geographic launches Mac-friendly games division

National Geographic Global Media has announced the launch of National Geographic Games (NGG), a new business unit that is creating games for multiple platforms, including the Mac and iPhone.

NGG will work with game publishers and developers to create games based on National Geographic's core themes and media properties, the company announced.


As part of that effort, NGG announced that it has partnered with Namco Bandai Games America and Sony Computer Entertainment to bring new titles to market. Namco Bandai has brought several of its own game properties to the iPhone and iPod platforms.

The first title to be released is Herod's Lost Tomb, a downloadable game for the Mac, iPhone and Windows that can also be played online through the National Geographic Channel's website.

The game, featuring content from the December 2008 issue of National Geographic magazine, features information about the biblical figure King Herod.

Other titles coming in November include National Geographic: Panda and National Geographic: Africa. December will bring Sudoku Traveler: China. And releases planned for 2009 include Rain Forests, Greencity and From the Bottom Up.

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Bruce Springsteen Preps for the Big Game
(E! Online)

AT&T executive says iPhone 3G tethering coming ’soon’
Games, networking and music drive iPhone usage

Online retail spending slows in October

Online retail spending tumbled in the US in October 2008, growing by only one per cent over the same period last year, according to a new report by market research company comScore.

According to the report, this is the lowest monthly growth rate since the company began tracking online commerce in 2001. The lower spending comes from mid to lower income segments - those with US incomes under $50,000, according to comScore.


Households with income between $50,000 and $100,000 showed a spending gain of one per cent, while those making at least $100,000 increased their spending by 14 per cent.

It's no surprise that concerns over the financial markets grew from 14 per cent in July to 49 per cent in October.

Retail spending has fallen every month since April 2008 where growth was 15 per cent. May (12 per cent), June (11 per cent), July (8 per cent), August (6 per cent), and September (5 per cent), all lead to this month's lowest rate.

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Britney Spears Ready to Hit the Road
(E! Online)

Apple COO Cook explains Mac market advantage
Microsoft earnings beat Wall Street estimates
Lil’ Kim Sued and Silenced
(E! Online)

Yahoo's Yang to step down as CEO after deals with Microsoft, Google fail

After a bungled buyout offer from Microsoft, a deal with Google that fell apart and two rounds of layoffs, Jerry Yang is calling it quits and stepping aside as chief executive of the company he confounded, Yahoo said on Monday.

Yang, who became CEO in June 2007, will take on his former title of "Chief Yahoo" once a successor is found, and also remain on the board.


He has been under intense pressure from shareholders in recent weeks for a string of perceived missteps that began in February with Microsoft's $45 billion offer to buy Yahoo. Microsoft was offering $33 per share for its Internet rival but Yang rejected that price as too low.

Eventually Microsoft withdrew its offer and Yang went on to talk with News Corp. about a venture with MySpace and with TimeWarner about a merger with AOL, but the talks came to nothing. In June he struck an advertising deal with Google but that too fell apart in the face of opposition from the US Department of Justice.

With Yahoo shares closing under $11 on Monday, the Microsoft offer, with the benefit of hindsight, looks like a very attractive one, thus the discontent from some shareholders.

Yang appears to recognise this and at an Internet conference in San Francisco two weeks ago made a thinly veiled initiation to Microsoft to come back to the negotiating table.

"To this day I would say that the best thing for Microsoft to do is to buy Yahoo," he said. When quizzed on whether he would stick to a higher price that he demanded back in May he added, "Oh no. At the right price, whatever the price is."

But Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer didn't bite and said a couple of days later, "We are not interested in going back and re-looking at an acquisition. I don't know why they would be either, frankly. They turned us down at $33 a share."

NEXT: Microsoft deal

Continued... 1 | 2 | NEXT >




Is Apple building a search engine?
Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Opera to redesign its user interface, wants feedback

Opera, the Web browser, is looking for feedback from users over how the User Interface (UI) appears on different on different platforms and how it should look in the future.

UK designer Jon Hicks has just started as Lead Designer at Opera and is looking for feedback.


“I'm currently working on a strategy on how to take the Opera User Interface forward, and I'm eager to get your opinions on a particular subject: Native look and feel.”

“How much does Opera feel like native application on your operating system? How much does it matter to you? Those using Opera on just one platform may want it look utterly native, whereas those using it on multiple platforms might appreciate a consistent 'family' look. This is one of the things I'll be looking at, and striving to find the right balance and approach.”

Although primarily a Mac user, Hicks is looking for constructive feedback from all Opera users regardless of platform. Opera runs on a variety of personal computer operating systems, including Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris.




Apple blocks Opera from the iPhone
Placido Domingo sings at Mexico pyramid
(AP)

Developers prefer Macs

When Terry Weaver wants to create .Net applications, he fires up Visual Studio and types away like any other .Net programmer. The setup gets a bit weird when he wants to test how the .Net application might appear to a Mac user visiting the Web site. Instead of starting up another machine, asking a colleague with a Mac, or simply ignoring those crazy followers of Steve Jobs, Weaver just pops over to the browser in another window.

That's easy because Visual Studio is running on Windows inside a Parallels virtual machine, which, in turn, runs on his Mac. He has a PC, a Mac, and a Unix development box all in one.


"I set up the networking so that I can type the IP address of my dev Web server to test my ASP.Net pages to see how they look and behave on Mac systems," said Weaver. "I think that's a good thing since I don't believe many developers of .Net take the time to test their applications on browsers in other operating systems."

Stories like Weaver's are increasingly more common as the Mac's popularity among programmers continues rising. Apple's decision to move to Intel chips and embrace virtualization of other operating systems turned the platform into a very flexible tool for programmers.

Macs let coders work with most of the software standards that live in boxes that range from the smallest smartphone to the biggest cluster of computers.

This newfound success has been evolving for some time. One team manager interviewed for this article said that his programmers started switching from Dells and ThinkPads at least three years ago. Now 80 percent of his group uses Apple laptops.

NEXT: iPhone development kit

Continued... 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | NEXT >




Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Finder rewrite for Apple’s Snow Leopard
Apple COO Cook explains Mac market advantage

Developers prefer Macs

When Terry Weaver wants to create .Net applications, he fires up Visual Studio and types away like any other .Net programmer. The setup gets a bit weird when he wants to test how the .Net application might appear to a Mac user visiting the Web site. Instead of starting up another machine, asking a colleague with a Mac, or simply ignoring those crazy followers of Steve Jobs, Weaver just pops over to the browser in another window.

That's easy because Visual Studio is running on Windows inside a Parallels virtual machine, which, in turn, runs on his Mac. He has a PC, a Mac, and a Unix development box all in one.


"I set up the networking so that I can type the IP address of my dev Web server to test my ASP.Net pages to see how they look and behave on Mac systems," said Weaver. "I think that's a good thing since I don't believe many developers of .Net take the time to test their applications on browsers in other operating systems."

Stories like Weaver's are increasingly more common as the Mac's popularity among programmers continues rising. Apple's decision to move to Intel chips and embrace virtualization of other operating systems turned the platform into a very flexible tool for programmers.

Macs let coders work with most of the software standards that live in boxes that range from the smallest smartphone to the biggest cluster of computers.

This newfound success has been evolving for some time. One team manager interviewed for this article said that his programmers started switching from Dells and ThinkPads at least three years ago. Now 80 percent of his group uses Apple laptops.

NEXT: iPhone development kit

Continued... 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | NEXT >




Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Apple COO Cook explains Mac market advantage
Finder rewrite for Apple’s Snow Leopard

Intel launches Core i7

Intel began sales of its high-end Core i7 desktop chips in Tokyo late Saturday night, bringing to market a series of processors that are significantly more powerful than any of the company's current desktop products.

The chips are widely expected to be used in the next generation of iMacs and Mac Pro desktops. The Core i7 is a quad core processor, but has Intel's hyper-threading technology built in -making it a virtually an 8-core processor. Early reports suggest a significant speed increase.


PC manufacturers are now selling computers with the Intel i7 processor and customers in Japan can pick up the chip. Apple, however, has not released an update to its iMac or Mac Pro range, and recently nixed speculation that an upgrade was due, stating that its holiday line-up was complete.

In a move intended to stoke demand among Japanese PC enthusiasts, shops in Akihabara, Tokyo's main electronics district, stayed open past midnight to put the first Core i7 chips on sale. The launch pre-empted a San Francisco news conference planned for today, as signs increasingly point to softening global demand for computers.

"This is a major new architecture for Intel and to be able to launch it here first to the user-community that Akihabara supports is a really exciting thing for us to do," said Steve Dallman, vice president of sales and marketing and general manager of Intel's worldwide reseller channel organisation, shortly after the midnight launch. He was referring to the PC hobbyists and gamers who crowd the areas electronics stores in search of components to build their own computers.

"One of the features in the new processor I think they are going to be very excited about is Turbo-mode," he said. "There's also Turbo-tuning, which allows them to go in for the first time and tune 20 different parameters to optimize the performance of the processor."

The 3.2GHz Core i7 965 Extreme Edition is priced at $999, while the 2.93GHz Core i7 940 and 2.66GHz Core i7 920 are priced at $562 and $284, respectively. Additional versions of Nehalem targeted at other market segments, including laptops, are expected to be released next year.

Several hundred people crowded stores that were open from around 10pm until 1am Sunday morning to check out the new chip and buy it. It was offered alongside compatible motherboards and other components.

"We ran-out of the high-end ones, the 965 processors, and the motherboards above 40,000 (US$410)," said Keisuke Kuraishi, manager of the Faith store in the electronics district.

NEXT: Intel's Nehalem architecture

Continued... 1 | 2 | 3 | NEXT >




Intel repudiates executives’ criticism of the iPhone
Busta Banned in the U.K.?
(E! Online)

Intel’s Atom processor no longer in short supply

Intel launches Core i7

Intel began sales of its high-end Core i7 desktop chips in Tokyo late Saturday night, bringing to market a series of processors that are significantly more powerful than any of the company's current desktop products.

The chips are widely expected to be used in the next generation of iMacs and Mac Pro desktops. The Core i7 is a quad core processor, but has Intel's hyper-threading technology built in -making it a virtually an 8-core processor. Early reports suggest a significant speed increase.


PC manufacturers are now selling computers with the Intel i7 processor and customers in Japan can pick up the chip. Apple, however, has not released an update to its iMac or Mac Pro range, and recently nixed speculation that an upgrade was due, stating that its holiday line-up was complete.

In a move intended to stoke demand among Japanese PC enthusiasts, shops in Akihabara, Tokyo's main electronics district, stayed open past midnight to put the first Core i7 chips on sale. The launch pre-empted a San Francisco news conference planned for today, as signs increasingly point to softening global demand for computers.

"This is a major new architecture for Intel and to be able to launch it here first to the user-community that Akihabara supports is a really exciting thing for us to do," said Steve Dallman, vice president of sales and marketing and general manager of Intel's worldwide reseller channel organisation, shortly after the midnight launch. He was referring to the PC hobbyists and gamers who crowd the areas electronics stores in search of components to build their own computers.

"One of the features in the new processor I think they are going to be very excited about is Turbo-mode," he said. "There's also Turbo-tuning, which allows them to go in for the first time and tune 20 different parameters to optimize the performance of the processor."

The 3.2GHz Core i7 965 Extreme Edition is priced at $999, while the 2.93GHz Core i7 940 and 2.66GHz Core i7 920 are priced at $562 and $284, respectively. Additional versions of Nehalem targeted at other market segments, including laptops, are expected to be released next year.

Several hundred people crowded stores that were open from around 10pm until 1am Sunday morning to check out the new chip and buy it. It was offered alongside compatible motherboards and other components.

"We ran-out of the high-end ones, the 965 processors, and the motherboards above 40,000 (US$410)," said Keisuke Kuraishi, manager of the Faith store in the electronics district.

NEXT: Intel's Nehalem architecture

Continued... 1 | 2 | 3 | NEXT >




Busta Banned in the U.K.?
(E! Online)

Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

Intel repudiates executives’ criticism of the iPhone

Microsoft quietly opens US online store

Microsoft has quietly launched a new online store where US customers can buy its software and hardware products.

There were already Microsoft Stores for customers in the UK, Germany and Korea, and the US store launched on Thursday.


"With this launch, our customers in the US are able to buy first-party software and hardware directly from Microsoft offered in a comprehensive online catalog," said Trevin Chow, Microsoft senior program manager, in a blog post about the site launch.

Online shoppers in the US have been able to buy and download some Microsoft software from the Windows Marketplace. But some Microsoft hardware, like the Xbox, has been available only from third-party retailers and is now for sale in the Microsoft Store.

People will be able to re-download software products that they buy for as long as Microsoft supports the product, typically five years, Chow said. Customers can also copy the software onto disks for future access.

Microsoft will store product keys for buyers, who will be able to access the keys online if they need to re-install the software.




KavaSoft frees your tunes
Eddie Van Halen Pops the Question
(E! Online)

72 per cent of businesses would dump ISP over poor service

72 per cent of businesses say they would change ISP if their internet connection became unreliable. The independent research carried out by Shape the Future Limited on behalf of Zen Internet, the award winning ISP, surveyed over a 1,000 Small Medium Enterprises (SMEs) between September and October.

An important decisive factor for SMEs is the level of support provided by ISPs: 85 per cent stated that the level of support was the most important criteria when choosing an ISP while the highest number of respondents, 80 per cent, considers UK based support to be very important. Some ISP providers have been criticised for taking telephone support overseas and cutting staffing costs.


Despite the concerns over poor service and reliability, the survey found businesses change ISP infrequently. Just over half of those asked, 55 per cent were happy with their current supplier and were unlikely to change, 68 per cent had not changed ISP in the last year and only 13 per cent are considering changing ISP at present.

When they do, it's mainly when there are issues with reliability, quality of service, cost or for higher speeds. It was found that 72 per cent of SMEs said they would change provider because of unreliable connection, but note only 40 per cent would change to save money.

98 per cent of SMEs consider reliable Internet access to be critical to the needs of their business.71 per cent of SMEs thought it was important that their ISP was business orientated, as 80 per cent use the Web to locate suppliers and 76 per cent use it for purchasing activities.




Delta museum is a tribute to bluesman B.B. King
(AP)

Gmail activation problem in Apps finally solved
AT&T to buy Wi-Fi hotspot provider for $275M
Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Judge orders IBM to pay $3M to keep Apple exec case going

A federal judge has ordered IBM, which is trying to block a former company executive from taking a job with Apple, to provide a $3 million bond by the end of Friday to keep the case going.

In an order signed Wednesday, but posted to the federal court system's database only Thursday, US District Court Judge Kenneth Karas instructed IBM that it must file the bond by 5 pm EST.


A week ago, Karas slapped a temporary injunction on Mark Papermaster, a 26-year veteran of IBM, which barred him from working at Apple. Papermaster, who was announced as Apple's new vice president of devices hardware engineering on 4 November, was told to "immediately cease his employment with Apple until further order." Karas has yet to issue an opinion to explain his reasons for that order.

The $3 million bond is designed to pay for any costs or damages that Papermaster might suffer if it's later determined that IBM wasn't entitled to an injunction.

Karas noted that district courts are allowed "wide discretion" in setting the bond's dollar figure, then added: "Based on a careful reading of the letters sent by the Parties to the Court, which are being filed under seal, the Court finds that a bond in the amount of $3,000,000 is appropriate to guarantee payment of the costs and damages that Defendant may suffer, if the injunction should not have been issued."

IBM sued Papermaster on 22 October, claiming that a noncompetition agreement he signed in 2006 prevented him from working for competitors for a year after leaving the company.

According to IBM, Papermaster had information of "highly confidential IBM trade secrets" that would "irreparably harm" the company if he was allowed to work for Apple.

Papermaster, in turn, countered that "Apple and IBM are not even competitors," and argued that the two firms targeted completely different markets, Apple aiming its electronics at consumers while IBM pitches its products to businesses.

The next item on the case's calendar is a status conference slated for next Tuesday in Karas' White Plains, New York court.

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Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Apple attempting to recruit IBM’s top PowerPC expert
Busta Banned in the U.K.?
(E! Online)

Is Apple building a search engine?

A story published by tech blog TechCrunch on Thursday cites "multiple (if thin) reports" claiming that Apple is developing its own search competitor.

The story notes that Apple's Safari browser, which currently commands about 6.5 percent of the browser market, uses Google as its default search engine - thereby handing off valuable real estate that Apple could be using to its own advantage.


Tech Crunch offer little in the way of information to back up its claims of an Apple search engine, and there are no reports that Apple have been hiring any search engine engineers. Because of this the rumour is being treated with a certain amount of caution.

However the story also notes that "the rumours persist" and many employees at other search companies have reported hearing the same rumours.

Apple would face stiff competition from the established big three in Google, Yahoo and Microsoft should they enter the search engine market.

Google continued to increase its U.S. search share dominance in October. Google's share of Web searches by people in the US rose to 71.7 per cent, up from 71.2 per cent in September and 64.5 per cent in October of 2007, according to market research company Hitwise.

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Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Apple blocks Opera from the iPhone
Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

Apple confirms 14 October notebook launch

Google and MySpace celebrate OpenSocial's first year, FaceBook still refusing to party

Google's OpenSocial project is celebrating a year of major progress in its project to establish a common set of tools for developing social networking applications.

The celebration took place yesterday, and MySpace, an early supporter, held an event in its San Francisco office to mark the project's first birthday. Representatives from other vendor backers attended, as well as about 300 developers, and, of course, staffers from Google, which launched OpenSocial in November 2007.


Using OpenSocial, developers have made more than 7,500 applications, which in turn have been installed more than 315 million times in over 20 social networking Web sites.

Among the technology highlights is the significant enhancement of the API, now in version 0.8, and the delivery of a server-side REST [Representational State Transfer] component, important for mobile and enterprise applications that need to tap backend servers.

There is also an open-source reference implementation of the OpenSocial API called Shindig, overseen by the Apache Software Foundation and designed to let Web site owners implement OpenSocial easily in a matter of hours.

What hasn't been accomplished is the rather important task of convincing Facebook to support OpenSocial, a major gap considering the company operates the most popular platform for social networking applications.

NEXT: Why FaceBook isn't interested

Continued... 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | NEXT >




iTunes playlist sharing - online and legal
Burning Qs: Miley’s Poll Numbers & LOL Religion
(E! Online)

Games, networking and music drive iPhone usage

Apple to launch largest Black Friday sale in history?

Apple may launch its largest Black Friday sale in history which could, or at least should, include the iPhone, according to Ben Reitzes of Barclays Capital.

In a report to clients, obtained by Apple Insider, Reitzes said, ""We have not seen any Apple Black Friday ads yet (as is customary), but expect the company to be more aggressive than usual in its one-day sale, perhaps with $100 off a few Mac models and discounts on several iPods."


Reitzes also notes that Orange, the iPhone's carrier in France, has slashed the cost of its iPhone from 149 euros to 99. It seems unlikely that Apple would slash iPhone prices in the United States even for a limited time, especially considering its dominant place in the US market.

But then again, a need to stay ahead of the pack may prompt Jobs & Co. to spread some iPhone Holiday cheer.

Speculation by Reitzes was prompted after Black Friday ads began to leak online. According to BlackFridayAds.com, Dell is planning on selling the Dell Inspiron Mini 9 netbook for $299 (base price is typically $349) and Wal-Mart is offering a limited supply of 15" Compaq notebooks for $298.

Apple has not unveiled any pricing for their annual sale, but the company may want to follow up its this year's back-to-school sale with something comparable.

HDTV and Blu-Ray bargains

Black Friday is a time for companies to charge towards the year-end finish line and rake in profits as holiday shoppers start to search for bargains in droves. Electronics are always high on the list, and this year is no exception, but the market has changed drastically since 2007.

Low-cost options for ultra-portable netbooks, the newly announced Flip Mino HD camcorder, and-as Luke Landes points out in his Insider's Guide to Black Friday Bargains-even some HDTV models and Blu-Ray players are starting to go for bargain prices.

Whether Apple will make some dramatic cuts in prices or glide towards the finish line with customers lusting after iPods, iPhones, and Macs remains to be seen.




Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

iPhone is biggest-selling US smartphone

Intel's Atom processor no longer in short supply

Evidence suggests that the shortage of low-cost Atom processors that system makers faced earlier this year is over.

The low-cost Atom processor is primarily used in low-cost laptops, called netbooks. The popularity of these devices initially exceeded Intel's expectations, resulting in a shortage of the chips for hardware makers eager to cash in on high netbook demand.


In a bid to catch up with demand, Intel repeatedly increased its Atom output this year.

Acer, the world's third largest PC maker and a major netbook vendor, says it's no longer having any problem obtaining Atom microprocessors.

The company estimates it will ship 6 million Aspire One netbooks this year, a heady target considering it started shipping the devices at the end of June.

As recently as August, the company was still struggling to produce enough Atom chips. In a conference call, Intel CFO Stacy Smith pinned the shortage on a lack of adequate testing capacity to meet demand for the chips.

Shortage blamed for disrupting netbook shipments

Some netbook makers blamed the shortage for disrupting netbook shipments. Asustek Computer, which created the netbook market with its Eee PC, even turned to using an older Intel chip, the Celeron M 353, because of the Atom shortage.

By October signs emerged that the Atom shortage had eased. One of the first confirmations came from Jeff Clarke, senior vice president of Dell's Business Product Group, who said plenty of Atom chips are available for its recently announced Optiplex FX160 thin-client computer. "I won't have a supply issue," he said.

Analysts also picked up on the increased availability of Atom.

"With respect to the Atom processor, any supply shortages seen earlier in the year are now resolved, with plenty of available supply," wrote Craig Berger, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets, an investment bank, in a report released last month.

The easing of the Atom shortage in October roughly meets Intel's stated goal of shipping Atom chips in high volume by September, and allays vendor fears that too few chips would be available for the year-end shopping season.

"We've always worked to meet customer demand and we've always been pleased with the strong reaction that Atom has been getting in the market," said Nick Jacobs, an Intel spokesman, noting the company has four plants producing 45-nanometer chips, including the Atom.




Country star Tim McGraw rips label over hits CD
(Reuters)

Intel repudiates executives’ criticism of the iPhone
Dell expands music tie-ins on festival circuit
(Reuters)

Apple updates iPod nano, classic firmware

Apple on Wednesday released updates for its iPod nano (4th generation) and iPod classic (120GB), bringing the most current versions to 1.0.3 and 2.0.1, respectively.

The nano update fixes several issues including instability when using the Nike + iPod Sport Kit and a problem that caused Cover Flow art to be distorted after playing a slideshow with TV out. Apple also fixed a problem that caused photos to be distorted when waking the nano from sleep.


Support has been added to the nano for Apple's new earphones and in-ear headphones with remote and mic. A setting has been added to turn off Cover Flow when rotating the nano.

The iPod classic update also added support for Apple's new earphones and in-ear headphones with remote and mic, as well as fixing a bug with saving Genius playlists.

Both updates are available through iTunes when your iPod is plugged in.




iPod earphones could deactivate pacemakers
Meat Loaf: Bat Out of Hospital
(E! Online)

Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
(Reuters)

Dixons: 'Stock supplies unaffected by Atradius stance'

Dixons is denying reports that it is looking to secure alternative trading terms with several large electronics suppliers, among them Samsung, after credit insurance firm Atradius reduced its credit insurance risk cover across the retail sector, including cover on stock sold to the consumer electronics retail giant.

The decision could potentially threaten Dixons and Currys stores abilities to stock their shelves this Christmas, meaning that in some cases they may have to buy stock up front.


Atradius' decision comes just weeks after Dixons reported a sales slump of 7 percent for the first six months of the year. Atradius reduced cover from the Dixons group as part of a wide-ranging review of UK retail, which also saw high street giant Woolworths and JJB Sports taken off its books.

The reduction of cover from Atradius means vendors that insure through the company, among them Korean giant Samsung, have no guarantees that outstanding debt with the retailer will be met. In order to avoid being left without stock during the run up to Christmas, Dixons is now understood to be working to secure alternative trading terms with suppliers affected by the decision - although the company says that its suppliers 'still have access to credit insurance'.

A spokesman for DSG told PC Advisor: "Atradius is only one provider of credit insurance in the market. Whilst it is true Atradius have reduced, but not withdrawn, credit insurance across the retail sector, this is not a DSG-specific issue. This is more about Atradius and how it manages its business.

"Our suppliers still have access to credit insurance, they continue to supply us and there have been no changes to our terms with suppliers."

And a spokeswoman for El-giganten, a Dixons group subsidiary in Scandinavia, confirmed that the company was currently in discussion with suppliers. In some cases the company has taken to paying for stock up-front. She added that the situation would be resolved "without any noticeable effect on our stores".

Atradius declined to comment on any specific cases, but did confirm that it had recently reviewed its exposure in electronics retail and that "some" companies were no longer covered.

"Times in general are tougher today. Home electronics is just the type of product that gets hit hard and quickly by the financial slowdown. We are reviewing our exposure in the sector, pulling back in some cases and withdrawing credit in other. But that doesn't mean we're moving away from the sector," said Magnus Lindgren, managing director of Atradius Sweden.

Atradius is one of the world's top-three credit insurers. Its main competitors, Coface and Euler Hermes, both declined to comment on their trading relationship with the Dixons group.

Like other electronics retailers, Dixons is feeling the squeeze of the global financial downturn. Two weeks ago, the group reported a profits slump of 7 percent for the first six months of the year and warned of further tough times ahead. The group has lost 80 percent of its stock value during the past 12 months.




Sony shares sink on earnings revision
Samsung withdraws offer to acquire SanDisk
R&B trio Labelle back in spotlight with new album
(Reuters)

Adobe Creative Suite 4 Tour continues

The free Adobe Creative Suite 4 Tour continues across the UK with events in Sheffield (today), Edinburgh (18 November), Newcastle (20 November), Bristol (25 November) and Dublin (27 November).

Adobe will showcase print, web, rich media, video and mobile applications covering Creative Suite 4 Design Premium, Creative Suite 4 Web Premium, Creative Suite 4 Production Premium and Creative Suite 4 Master Collection with four creative sessions available.

Full details including booking information is available on the Adobe Creative Suite 4 Tour website. Macworld is a sponsor of the tour.





FileWave 3.6 ships for Mac, Windows, Linux
Beastie Boys add dates to Obama tour
(Reuters)

Digidesign previews Pro Tools 8

Parallels Desktop for Mac 4.0 unveiled

Parallels has unveiled Parallels Desktop for Mac 4.0, the next major version of the company’s virtualization platform for Intel-based Macs. The new version introduces over 50 features and enhancements, including the ability to run Leopard Server in a virtual machine.

Improvements in the new version include speed boosts that the company says are up to 50 per cent faster than the previous version of Parallels. In fact, making the application faster was one of the most requested features from its users and something the company focused a significant amount of time doing.


New features like the Adaptive Hypervisor allow Parallels to intelligently load balance the processes between the Mac OS and Virtual Machine. The virtualization engine itself has also been reworked to consume 15-30 percent less resources than it did before.

Graphics performance has been improved with added support for support for DirectX 9, DirectX Pixel Shader 2.0 and OpenGL 2.0.

Further improving the speed of Parallels, users can now dedicate eight CPUs and 8GB RAM to each virtual machine. Of course, the amount of resources that you can give to each virtual machine depends on the amount of physical resources you have available.

A new viewing mode called Modality allows users to set the transparency of the guest operating system, so you can view the activity of a virtual machine while in the background. Coherence has been updated as well. Now when you switch to Coherence, the Windows taskbar items move to the Mac’s menubar, so you always have access to them.

Virtual machines can now be started in Safe Mode. Everything will run exactly the same as it would if you started the machine normally except the changes you make while running in Safe Mode are not saved. This is handy if you are running beta software and something goes wrong. If everything worked okay, you do have the option of saving the changes when you stop the virtual machine and exit Safe Mode.

Parallels Desktop 4.0 for Mac is available immediately and costs 49.99. Current Parallels Desktop users can upgrade their existing software for 31.99. Users that purchased version 3.0 on or after September 1, 2008, qualify for a free upgrade to version 4.0.

Parallels is offering a special offer upgrade price until 30 November 2008 of 24.99.




Digidesign previews Pro Tools 8
Travis Barker Still in Recovery Mode
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PasswordVault new version ships

Apple denies CastCatcher update entry into App Store

Apple has rejected Internet Radio application CastCatcher entry into the App Store because of bandwidth concerns. The rejection comes after three prior releases to the store were accepted by Apple.

According to a note from Apple, "CastCatcher Internet Radio cannot be posted to the App Store because it is transferring excessive volumes of data over the cellular network, which as outlined in the iPhone SDK Agreement section 3.3.15, is prohibited."


The developer takes exception to the being denied for bandwidth usage because other radio apps on the store also use the cell network. Another good point by the developer is that three previous releases of CastCatcher were accepted by Apple.

"CastCatcher does not burden cell networks any more than any other radio application. Ridiculous."

The developer said he has emailed Apple and hopes to resolve the issue.

CastCatcher isn't the first application Apple has denied entry into the App Store. A podcasting app was refused because Apple said it "duplicates the functionality of the Podcast section of iTunes." MailWrangler was denied because of potential confusion with Apple's built-in Mail application.




The iPhone application graveyard
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Norway consumer body challenges Apple over iTunes
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Eddie Van Halen Pops the Question
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