Category Archives: Apple

iOS 7 – my views

On Monday, Apple demoed iOS 7 to the world. It is a visual re-imagination of a new operating system for the iDevices, including iPod, iPhone and iPad.
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First reaction was wow, this is a total redesign and quite drastic. Then some of the reason I tried jail breaking had been covered off with the introduction of the control centre. I liked the fact that the spotlight search was now accessed from within the notification centre. I then watched over the next few days critics and admirers leave their opinions.

What was clear from the initial negative comments was the lack or ignorance of those comments. The depth of iOS 7 did not lie in the visual but the 1,500 new APIs. These were the clues to what iOS7 might reveal. On Tuesday, I already covered off some of the hidden features, but there are considerable more to discover. Since Monday I have asked people at work and at various meetings which style of iOS did they prefer. The winner every time was iOS 7. These are not tech geeks, just ordinary people.

I for one really like the redesign. It is fresh, modern and incorporates enough new tweaks to make it very user friendly.

IOS 7 Game Controller API is significant

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Watching Apple’s Keynote I learned that Apple was adding hardware controller support . A slide (pictured above) indicated that the iOS 7 SDK would support MFi game controllers, a reference to Apple’s licensing program for third-party hardware add-ons. By adding support for controllers directly into the SDK, Apple is sidestepping the biggest problem that has plagued third-party controller makers up to this point: the need for game developers to write software that specifically targets their hardware. Now, in iOS 7, Apple is providing some kind of consistent interface that all developers will be able to target. Write once, run everywhere. That is, as long as the hardware conforms to Apple’s standard.

The next question is how much extra cost will this add to game controllers.

As a comparison I ordered the Moga Pro Controller for my HTC One. This was just under £40. What would be great is if companies can make controllers for the iPhone at the same price. This then leads on to the next question, that with a controller and airplay mirroring, who needs a Xbox or PS4?

The Quest for the Best Maps is Underway

Bing updated its Maps by adding on a whopping 270TB of high-res flyover images to their database. Some of the more notable additions include overviews of Rome and Milan in Italy, Stavanger in Norway and Kaanapali in Hawaii. Aside from the new visuals, Bing also added a couple of improvements to its Venue Maps with an expanded points of interest list and a new “Report a problem” system so users can inform Bing if a location is marked incorrectly.

Bing is starting to show signs of massive improvements and in iOS 7 is the default search engine for Siri.

Pebble Watch – review – a novel piece of technology

Over a week ago I received the Pebble Watch in black. It is currently only available from Pebble directly, so if you live in the UK, custom charges will get added to the overall cost.

First some key facts about the Pebble Watch.

– Battery life is quoted at 7 days plus. I got 6 days on my first run. I suppose it depends how often you use it, but it certainly doesn’t need constant charging. A USB cable magnetically clips on to the side of the watch and then charges off a USB port.

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– Watch faces are changeable and the display remains on all the time. In direct sunlight you will still be able to read the screen with ease. There are hundreds of different watch faces.
– The Pebble watch is waterproof to 5 ATM. So you can go swimming, wash dishes etc. The screen is also covered with a scratch resistant coating. The watch strap is a standard 22mm size, so is easy replaceable or changeable to something of your own choice.
– It has a backlight for night viewing. This can be activated by movement.

Setting up is a simple affair. Download the app from either the Google Play Store or Apple AppStore. Yes, it works both on android and Apple iPhones. I used the Pebble with my HTC One but it will work with the iPhone 3GS, 4, 4S, 5 or any iPod Touch with iOS 5 or iOS 6. (iOS 5 and iPhone 3GS have restricted feature sets). Android devices running OS 2.3 and up. Works great with Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)!The Pebble app interface looks as follows :

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You simply turn on Bluetooth, and activate accessibility settings, pair and voila. Next you can select what type of notifications you would like to receive. With android, there is a third party app Pebble Notifier that allows you to add any app. See screenshot.

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Some of the basic notifications available are –
– Incoming Caller ID
– Email (Gmail or any IMAP email account)
– SMS on both Android and iPhones
– iMessage (iOS only)
– Calendar Alerts
– Facebook Messages
– Twitter
– Weather Alerts
– Silent vibrating alarm and timer

Some of the more interesting uses is letting the Pebble watch access the phone’s GPS. This allows the watch to show your running speed, track, or show information while golfing.

So what’s the impact on your phones battery life. I would say about 5%.

So what’s it like to use? Well it’s been rather good in some ways and not so in others. The negative is the look of the watch. It is not sleek and elegant, but maybe some will like a more bulky fit. Here it is on my wrist.

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The positive aspects are being able to browse at notifications on your watch and then decide which ones are worth responding too. You cannot respond from the watch, just view. In the car, or out and about being able to control my music was excellent. Pause, play, next or last track. I was surprised how useful I found this. Also in the hot sunny days, it has been a breeze reading the notifications as the Pebble screen loves sunlight. Other wow moments were playing an action game full screen, when suddenly you hear a text bleep. Instead of quitting the game, I just glanced at the watch and could then decide if that person was important enough to respond.

I have found it simple to use and I overall a fascinating experience. However, it is not something I would normally have bought, it was more curiosity that made me purchase it.

BMW will incorporate Siri and S Voice into its 2014 cars

Siri will be a standard option in 2014 BMWs thanks to an update to BMW iDrive, the car maker’s integrated mobile interface.

The update will enable BMWs to interact with not only Apple’s Siri in Eyes Free mode, but also Samsung’s S-Voice Drive mode. Users will be able to press a button on the steering wheel and, once the digital assistant has activated, dictate messages, send calls, and use other voice command options. BMW’s system is also compatible with apps like Pandora, Stitcher, Rhapsody, and Glymps.

But it’s useless as it can’t iron my shirts or make my tea.

The hidden features of iOS 7

iOS 7 beta is just out but here are some of the more interesting features not covered –

– the Clock app is a live tile that features the actual time

– Spotlight has moved. Pull down from within app grid to reveal Spotlight. Pull down from top to reveal Notification Center.

– per app settings for cellular use

– twitter and Facebook posting via notification centre has gone for now

– Ability to block users in Phone, FaceTime and Message apps

– Improved mail search

– New smart mailboxes

– Notification sync

– FaceTime audio

– Per app VPN

– Activation lock

– View PDF annotations

– Inclinometer

– Long MMS support

– Maps bookmark syncing

– Chinese-English bilingual dictionary

– Handwriting recognition for multiple Chinese characters

– Do Not Track option in Safari

– App Store volume purchasing

– Enterprise single sign-on

– Italian, Dutch and Korean dictionaries

– Tencent Weibo

– Wi-Fi Hotspot 2.0

– Night mode for Maps

– Managed app configuration

– Smart downloading of TV episodes

– Turn-by-turn walking directions in Apple Maps

– Newsstand can be placed inside a folder

– Live home screen icons

I will update as I find more.

Here’s how to get iOS 7 beta 1 without a developer account

Want to test the beta of iOS 7 and don’t have a developer account. Well this method currently works. Be warned installing a beta can destroy your iPhone and make it become unreliable. Install at your own risk.

What you’ll need to do is install a fresh copy of iOS 6 on your device, then to acquire the iOS 7 beta 1 IPSW file, simply hold down Shift on PC or Option on Mac while clicking the Update button in iTunes. Then, select the iOS 7 beta file and you should be able to update your device to the latest software version. iOS 7 is compatible with iPhone 4, iPad 2, iPad mini and iPod touch 5th gen or later.

The new mac operating system – OS X 10.9 Mavericks – what’s new

So apart from iOS 7 Apple introduced Mavericks. I better cohesion between the iDevices and Macs. So what’s new?

-OS X names will now be California-themed
-New Finder Tabs
-Tags for files – keep track of files by adding a tag in OS X
-Multiple Displays – much more powerful. Menus and dock appears on both displays.
-OpenGL 4 support
-Time Coalescing – helps improve your CPU efficiency by up to 72%
-1.5x faster at waking a system from standby
-Accelerated Scrolling optimized for Retina displays
-AppNap – lets you pause apps to prevent battery drain
– Developer beta preview available now
– Released September / October

– Safari – New Sidebar with reading list, bookmarks and shared links, Big performance improvements, 1.44x faster in SunSpider JavaScript benchmark than Chrome and Firefox, Improved CPU energy uses, iCloud Keychain which links in with your iPhone or iPad. This remembers your website logins, credit card numbers and more. It can suggest to auto-fill your forms for you with private info too.

– Notifications – Reply to iMessages, Email, FaceTime calls right from desktop, Get push notifications from iOS apps on your Mac (that’s your iPad, iPod or iPhone ), Tells you what you missed on your lock-screen, Apps update in the background.

– Maps for OS X – Street Maps, 3D Flyover, Info cards, Turn-by-turn directions, Send directions to your iPhone which appear on the lockscreen ready to use.

-iBooks for Mac – Access to 1.8 million books in iBookstore, Read books from your desktop or iOS,
Interactive books just like in iOS.

– iWork for iCloud – Create iWork docs from a web browser, Works on OS X or Windows, New iWork releases coming to Mac and iOS later this year.

With all the new features the integration between all Apple hardware becomes closer and closer. The user experience of the Apple Eco system is set to raise to new epic levels.

The new MacBook Air and Mac Pro

At Apple’s Keynote speech they launched 2 new devices. The MacBook Air and Pro.

The MacBook Air

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– All-day battery life thanks to Haswell processor
– 2X GPU execution units with 40% faster graphics
– 11-inch MBA will have 9 hours of battery life
– 13-inch MBA now has 12 hours of battery life
– 45% faster SSD storage
– Faster WiFi 802.11ac card
– 11-inch starts at $999 with 128GB storage
– Ships now

Mac Pro

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– New unified thermal-core body
– Intel Xeon with up to 12-core
– Fastest ECC memory
– PCIe Storage that’s 10x faster than any previous Mac Pro drive
– Thunderbolt 2 support. 20GBps throughput
– Dual workstation GPUs
– 4k display support
– 1/8th the size of old Mac Pro
– Made in the USA and coming soon

Two great new products to add to Apple’s range of hardware.

Apple Keynote stats

The key facts from Apple’s Keynote –

– 600 million iOS devices sold to date
-24th WWDC with attendees from 66 countries
– 6 million registered developers
– WWDC sold out in 71 seconds
– 1 million daily vistors at the 407 Apple Stores in 14 countries
– 50 billion apps download from the App Store
– 300 million iTunes in the Cloud users
– 900,000 apps in the store
– 375,000 iPad apps
– 575 million App Store accounts (more accounts with credit cards than any store)
– $10 billion has been paid to developers ($5 billion just last year)
– 72 million Macs installed
– 28 million copies sold of OS X Mountain Lion
– 35% of Mac users are now using OS X 10.8

Some serious numbers!