Apple offers 'find out how' tutorials as podcasts

For some time, Apple has given the Designated Family Tech Support Personnel among us a small reprieve with its “Find out how” selection of tutorial videos.

While they don’t really tackle inevitable questions like “was deleting ~/Library/Keychains a bad idea?,” they serve as succinct primers for The Way of the Mac and Apple’s various apps and services.


Now, if your tech-blossoming family and friends prefer to gobble their media in a subscription format, Apple has finally created iTunes Store podcast channels for its “Find out how” series.

Organised by application, service, or topic, the nine “Find out how” podcasts that Apple has published so far cover MobileMe, iWork ’09, iWeb ’09, and of course, Mac Basics (search for “Apple find out how” to see them all).

There are around ten to 20 episodes in each of these podcasts, though for some series it seems that not all episodes have made the transition from Apple’s site to their podcast counterpart. While the iMovie podcast has a few more episodes than Apple’s website, the Mac Basics podcast is short around ten or so episodes.

It’s nice to see Apple making these useful tutorials available in more ways, and hopefully future videos will continue to keep the attention of aspiring i-everything users. They may not make a dramatic dent in the number of family tech support hours that some of us clock, but every little bit certainly helps.

Apple offers find out how tutorials as podcasts

Apple's Find out how is now available online and via iTunes.



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Play.com: Google Nexus One now available for pre-order

Google's Nexus One is now available for pre-order from Play.com.

The handset, which runs version 2.1 of Google's own Android platform is sim-free and will be available from February 16 but costs whopping 599.99.


Powered by a Qualcomm 1GHz Snapdragon processor, which Google says is ideal for running multiple apps at the same time, the 11.5mm thick handset also features a 3.7in 480x800-pixel AMOLED screen.

Until now, UK customers wanting to get their hands on the HTC-manufactured handset have had to purchase the phone through Google's own hosted webstore and have it shipped into the UK.

The handset is priced at $529 (339) in the US. Even when purchased with the $19 (12.18) UK charger and adding on the $29.65 (19) delivery charge and the 62.11 VAT, which UK users have to pay when importing mobile phones into the country, this works out at 413.15 - not quite as much as Play is charging.

Google Nexus One now available for pre-order

However, it might not be long before the handset is available on a contract from one of the UK's mobile networks. At the handset's launch, Google said Vodafone would offer the mobile phone in the UK in Spring 2010.

Meanwhile T-Mobile revealed last week it is in discussion with the search engine over also offering the Nexus One in the UK.



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MacFriendly intros 3rd bargain software bundle for Mac users

MacFriendly has announced their latest Bundle of 12 applications for Mac users. The Bundle is available for a limited time, until 26 February, and promises savings of over 85 per cent off the list prices.

The third bundle from MacFriendly is valued at over $400 and currently is available for $49.99/31 and includes the latest versions of the following applications.


TwistedWave

Audio Editing made easy. TwistedWave is simple, very easy to use, and yet very powerful. Thanks to its very intuitive user interface, no other audio editor will make you as productive from day one.

Veenix TypeBook Creator

Preview, organize and create font sample/specimen books of your font collection. It allows you to easily view, create, organize and print type specimen books and font sample sheets of all your fonts, whether they are installed and active in your System or just sitting somewhere on a hard drive.

Calico Panorama

It is an automatic multi-row panorama stitcher created with ease of use in mind. Unlike many other stitching programs, Calico does not limit you to a single row of images or a 3x3 mosaic.

Bracketeer

It is a front-end GUI for Enfuse. Enfuse is a command-line opensource utility which uses multiple exposures of a scene (bracketed exposures) and merges them together to form a uniformly lit scene.

Email Backup Pro

It is an easy to use, powerful, automated email backup solution. It allows for scheduled backups of the most common email applications through the configuration of a simple interface.

R10Cipher

Simple and Easy Method to Safely Encrypt your Email Correspondence and Document Files. It's like your emails are carried by a SWAT team rather than being written on a Postcard!

K Kitchen 3

Have you ever wondered how to convert your QuickTime files to NTSC or PAL? Watch them on PC? It's effortless with K Kitchen 3, a burning and ripping program which gives you the option to burn to necessary formats such as Divx and VCD.

Berokyo

Keep all your favorite and frequently used applications, documents, files, folders and webpages, organized in any number of multi-shelf cabinets, categories and subcategories.

CrossOver Mac

Our flagship Windows-to-Macintosh compatibility tool. Intended for Intel Mac OS X machines, CrossOver Mac allows Mac users to run their favorite Windows applications seamlessly on their Mac.

PhotoStyler

It is a light, quick and simple photo enchancer designed to make digital photos look like analog style pictures. Old tattered sepia images with scratches, 30's like photos, and incredibly popular polaroid pictures - you can choose a new style for your digital photos.

The video Diary

It is a small application that allows you to capture video with your webcam and keep it organized as a personal video diary.

MovieSherlock Full

It is the fastest and easiest way to download and convert YouTube movies. Even this is not the full list of MovieSherlock features. MovieSherlock search and select the most relevant movies from YouTube according to your request.

A portion of each sale will support animal rescue programs.

Full details can be found at www.macfriendly.org.

MacFriendly intros 3rd bargain software bundle for Mac users



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RouteBuddy intros RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3 for iPhone, iPod touch

RouteBuddy have released RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3, the latest version of their offline and online mapping application for the iPhone and iPod touch.

The free RouteBuddy Atlas application has the power to turn any iPhone into a hand-held mapping device, letting you access maps without data-charges and even without a mobile signal.


A range of Topographic maps are available for RouteBuddy Atlas from the RouteBuddy Store, including US 1:24K state maps based on USGS digital mapping and complete coverage of the UK with titles based on the Ordnance Survey's 1.25 000 and 1.50 000 scale maps.

New in RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3 are the following:

* Added ability to measure distance on the map by tapping with two fingers* Added coordinate display in LatLon, UTM, USNG (US), OSNG (UK), Lambert93 (France)* Added coordinate search to all maps* Added Country Name search to all maps* Added Nomimatim (OSM) and postcode search on OSM-based maps* Added Ordnance Survey Gazetteer search on purchased Ordnance Survey maps* Added search - tap on search results to keep them* Added tap to change coordinate system on map view and waypoint view* Fixed bug with units display in French localisation* Now animates zooms to waypoints, current location, and to search results* Several performance improvments to map display

RouteBuddy Atlas can use the iPhone's built-in GPS and compass to display your current location and heading, and can export tracks to both Mac and PC platforms for use in RouteBuddy or Google Earth.

RouteBuddy Atlas supports installation from both Mac and PC platforms, and any iPhone or iPod touch running iPhone OS 2.2.1 or later.

Available from the Apple iTunes App Store, RouteBuddy is free, compatible maps can be found at http://store.routebuddy.com.

RouteBuddy intros RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3 for iPhone, iPod touch

RouteBuddy intros RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3 for iPhone, iPod touch

RouteBuddy intros RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3 for iPhone, iPod touch

RouteBuddy intros RouteBuddy Atlas 1.3 for iPhone, iPod touch



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Former Apple exec: iPad too big, 'smarted out'

The iPad is too big and lacks communication capabilities, argued the former Apple executive who oversaw the demise of the company's iconic-but-flawed Newton more than a decade ago.

And it's no tablet, no matter what people say.


"The iPad is not a tablet, it's another addendum to the iPhone, the iPod Touch," said Andreas Haas, the CEO of Axiotron, a small El Segundo, Calif. company he founded in 2005. "It's the Newton reborn."

Haas, who left Apple in 2001, knows tablets: Axiotron sells conversion kits that transform MacBooks into pen-based tablets dubbed "Modbooks" that retail for $700 when the customer provides the notebook, $1,650 when they don't.

Haas also knows Newton. While the head of Apple's Newton Systems Group, he wound down Newton sales in Europe. But he kept the Newton fire stoked, and always thought there was room for a tablet based on the Mac.

iPad too big, smarted out

Not that Apple could afford to dabble there. "I always wanted to see the pen come back," Haas said. "But the market niche is too small [for Apple]. At 2.5 per cent of all portable systems, when you run the numbers of Mac laptops you get a ridiculously low number. Apple is just not going to do a tablet."

Which was why he came up with the Modbook, even though investors questioned the move. "Someone always asked, 'What if Apple does a tablet?' If they did, my business would go away. So I had to contend with this 800-pound gorilla in the room, that Apple could bring out a tablet."

Now that the iPad has been unveiled , Haas feels vindicated -- and believes his company is safe. "It's not a tablet, it's an extension of the iPod Touch," he contended, saying what many analysts and pundits had voiced the day Apple CEO Steve Jobs held up the new device. "It has some new kinks, but generally speaking it's using the iPhone OS. It's more like a smart phone than a personal computer. It's the Newton reborn."

But the iPad's connection to the Newton, especially the last in the line of Apple personal data assistants (PDA), the 1997 MessagePad 2100 that Haas said was the best of the bunch, doesn't include some critical comparisons in Haas' mind. And that's where he has some words for his former employer.

"The iPad was exactly what I thought it would be for the last five years," said Haas. "It's a media pad, a media consumption device. It's not a tablet, it's not a media creation device. And it's a little too large."

Haas was hoping for something smaller, something closer to the 8-by-5-inch MessagePad 2100's dimensions. "I expected that Apple's pad would be in the 7-inch size," he said, primarily because of the power that a 10-inch LCD requires from a battery, a point made before the iPad's launch by others. "The Newton offered portability. This doesn't. I can't put it into my back pocket, like I might be able to do with something with a 7-inch screen."

It's possible, perhaps even likely, Haas said, that the iPad is only the first of a family of devices, a tactic that Apple typically turns to with products. The MacBook Pro line, he pointed out, ranges from notebooks with 13.3-inch screens to one with a 17-inch display. But out the gate, heft and bulk of the iPad was a disappointment.

iPad too big, smarted out

"I'm also disappointed that I won't be able to replace my iPhone," Haas continued. "I have an iPhone and a MacBook Pro and a Modbook, but the iPad is not designed to replace either the Modbook or the MacBook Pro." It would have been better, Haas argued, if the iPad was able to replace a device rather than add yet another to the ones consumers carried.

Of course, some people will find the iPad a suitable replacement for, say, their notebooks, Haas acknowledged, citing his spouse as an example. "She has a work computer, but at home she does e-mail, consumes content, reads, browses the Web with her MacBook Air," he said.

The other wrong move by Apple with the iPad, Haas continued, was its lack of any communications capabilities. "What's missing most is the communications aspect. I was very surprised about that," he said. While he didn't expect that Apple's iPad would be a cell phone per se, the lack of a camera means that video chat is impossible. And it's unclear whether VoIP (voice over Internet Protocol) will be supported on the iPad via something like Skype.

"I think [the iPad] needs to be not only a media platform, but a communications platform," Haas said. "Of course, there could be a few things that Apple adds to the iPad before its [March ship date], something that would put the 'wow' into it."

iPad too big, smarted out

Some have speculated that Apple will add a user-facing camera to the iPad, based on reports that the device's aluminum frame includes a cut out that's the same size as the on in the bezel of the MacBook, which does include a camera.

Even with its flaws, the iPad is a great move by Apple, said Haas. "It's a first step into this arena, to get people started thinking about how to consume media," he said.

"That's where Apple did the right thing," Haas said. "Dumbed down netbooks use the same type of OS as a more powerful notebook, but on underpowered hardware. Apple's providing the right-sized operating system on the right-sized hardware to do the right-sized tasks."

But it's not a tablet, and never will be. "I wouldn't say it's 'dumbed down'," said Haas, "but it is 'smarted out.'"



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Apple vs. Google: Now Apple bans the word 'Android' from App Store

By now, we're all familiar with Apple's culture of control. Particularly when it comes to the App Store, the crew from Cupertino is famous for its frequent rejections and vague explanations. The process can make the satirical comparisons of Apple and a communist regime seem pretty reasonable at times.

Apple has apparently just forbidden a developer from using the word "Android" in his app's description. The message: Drop the A-word, or drop your application.


Apple and App Store Bans

Apple's heavy-handed use of the rejection stamp has hit everything from podcasting programs to breast-oriented offerings. If there's one company that knows the feeling of being banned, it's Google.

Apple banned Google's Google Voice app from its App Store last year, a move so strange-looking that even the FCC questioned it. Apple, according to documents made public as part of that investigation, said the app "duplicated the core dialer functionality of the iPhone."

Apple also waved away Google's Latitude app, reportedly claiming it was too similar to the iPhone's built-in Maps application and could offer features not found in the native program.

This stance, however, has taken another turn. Tim Novikof, the developer of the Flash of Genius app, says he tried to submit his program to the App Store with a mention of its success in Google's Android Developer Challenge. The Developer Challenge is an annual contest that seeks to honor the most innovative and useful new mobile apps.

The Flash of Genius app was a finalist in the Challenge, and Novikof thought including that information in the description could help illustrate the program's value and increase its iPhone-based sales. Apple evidently didn't agree; Novikof says he received a notice from Apple's app approval department that stated the following:

Now Apple bans the word Android from App Store

"During our review of your application, we found that your application contains inappropriate or irrelevant platform information in the Application Description and/or Release Notes sections.

"While your application has not been rejected, it would be appropriate to remove 'Finalist in Google's Android Developer's Challenge!' from the Application Description.

"Please log into iTunes Connect to make appropriate changes to the Application Description now to avoid an interruption in the availability of Flash of Genius: SAT Vocab 2.2 on the iPhone App Store."

To be clear, the developer himself doesn't appear to feel so strongly about the matter (either that, or he's afraid that expressing dissent could get him axed from Apple altogether). The app sells decently without the mention of the Android Developer Challenge in its description, Novikof says, and he's willing to leave well enough alone.



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Apple adds iPhone app previews via browser based iTunes Preview

Apple has added the ability, should you wish, to preview iPhone and iPod applications via your browser interface prior to opening iTunes.

The option comes after Apple added the ability to do the same with music tracks and albums, including brief 30-second song snippets, last month.


The web based iTunes Preview offers the same information you might find on the iTunes App Store including category, publisher, release date, version, requirements and similar applications along with a small selection of customer reviews.

A gallery of iPhone screen grabs are also included for each application, all of which should make browsing for new applications away from your own computer easier.

However, buying and downloading any application still requires you to open iTunes.

Apple adds iPhone app previews via browser based iTunes Preview



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