Archive for the ‘Game’ Category

Ryan Block: No Room for iPad Between Laptop and Phone

Ryan Block of GDGT.com guest posts on GigaOm : The first time you walk into an Apple Store and pick up an iPad, you’ll understand the hype: Apple has managed to create a beautiful, thoughtfully designed, compelling product in a space where mediocrity was, until now, status quo. But odds are you probably won’t buy one — at least not yet. And that’s OK. For despite the high level of anticipation for and proclamations associated with the launch of the Apple device, the fact remains that outside of a few select vertical uses (like medicine), tablets are constrained by their own form factor, stuck in the nether realm between productivity and portability. Standing onstage during the device’s unveiling, Steve Jobs himself posed a question that acutely underscores the tablet dilemma: Is there room for a third category of product that sits between your two most essential devices, the laptop and phone? As much as I’m looking forward to the iPad, I’m still not sure there is. Is the word between really how we should think about the iPad? I mean, Block is right, the iPad doesn’t fit into our lives

Follow the Health Care Vote This Weekend With C-Span iPhone App

There are bound to be some political fireworks this weekend as the House votes on health care reform. If you want to get raw, unfiltered access to all the debates on the floor, we recommend C-SPAN Radio (free, iTunes link ). The app offers access to 3 streaming audio channels: C-SPAN Radio as well as the C-SPAN and C-SPAN 2 TV channels (but no video).

Sprint Upgrades the iPhone to 4G in New Commerical (Video)

In a new commercial, Sprint takes a shot at AT&T’s 3G network while also introducing its Overdrive 4G WiFi Hotspot ( $49 ), a small portable device that creates a WiFi hotspot anywhere you go using Sprint’s 3G/4G networks. A character in the commercial states: My friend Steve’s iPhone’s cool, but it’s limited to AT&T’s 3G speeds, so I’m going to use the Overdrive 4G mobile hotspot to make it up to 10X faster.” Steve proceeds to connect his iPhone to the 4G WiFi hotspot and exclaims “Woah” as streaming video appears. I have Sprint’s 4G network in Chicago, called Clear, and my 4G laptop card is rarely faster than than AT&T’s 3G network on my iPhone, although my larger Clear 4G home modem does get speeds up to 3.5mbps. But that’s still hardly revolutionary. I like the wireless nature of the 4G service, and it’s a good deal, as I pay $50 a month and get both home and mobile wireless 4G broadband for my laptop. I’m just somewhat disappointed that the speeds aren’t faster than last generation broadband.

Developer Rants Against App Store, Gets Banned (Video)

Last week at the Games Developer Conference , Tommy Refenes, developer of the game Zits and Giggles , had a few choice things to say about the iTunes App Store and the iPhone as a gaming device in general. This week, Apple removed his game from the App Store. During his GDC rant, Refenes said the App Store “is kind of shit for most things,” claimed the “App Store is the Tiger handheld game of this generation,” and made fun of the controls for games like Mega Man , Sonic , and Street Fighter IV

WSJ Examines Story Behind iPad Preorder Sales Predictions

The Wall Street Journal , on Apple-watcher Victor Castroll’s efforts to count iPad preorder numbers: Castroll primarily follows Apple as an investor because clues are available to create such an assessment. “If you want to know Apple sales, you can look at order numbers or you can see people walking into a store,” he said. Other companies, by contrast, are “a black box.” There’s been a lot of silly hype about how the preorders “fell off a cliff” after the first day, mostly by Apple haters. But even if we were to accept it as a negative indicator, the WSJ points out it’s no prediction of a product’s long-term success: ….Yet early sales numbers are far from definitive. Studio executives can tell their technology counterparts all about the dangers of paying such figures too much heed. A year ago, “Watchmen” debuted to an impressive opening-weekend box-office take of $55.2 million, according to Hollywood.com. It didn’t make that much in the rest of its domestic run, finishing with a gross of $107.5 million. Eight months later, its studio, Warner Bros., released “The Blind Side” and raked in a more modest opening-weekend total of $34.1 million. That film’s box-office total is $252.7 million and counting — more than twice the total for “Watchmen.” And the iPhone experienced similar bad guesses from “experts” at launch: Gene Munster, senior research analyst at Piper Jaffray, recalled taking phone calls from investors who considered the iPhone “dead on arrival” soon after its launch when early numbers from AT&T Wireless missed early sales forecasts.

Gruber: Apple to Make Free Android Cost Handset Makers in Legal Fees

John Gruber dropped a subtle bomb over on his blog Daring Fireball concerning Apple’s lawsuit against HTC and the New York Times recent write-up of the growing Apple vs. Google rivalry. That last bit, regarding a general belief that Apple is gearing up for war against Google, echoes what I’ve heard lately from several sources who work at Apple. ….Hence the patent suit against HTC.

Steve Jobs On His Health: “I’m feeling fine. I almost died. It’s been a pretty good last few months.”

Steve Jobs appeared at the unveiling of draft organ donation legislation in California Friday where the Apple CEO was instrumental in getting state lawmakers to create SB 1395, a law which, if passed, will require Californians applying for or renewing driver’s licenses to answer whether they’d like to donate their organs in case of death. According the Mercury News , Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger spoke at the event and thanked Steve Jobs for his efforts: Steve Jobs’ was very instrumental in getting us here today,” said the governor. “Steve Jobs told my wife about his transplant and she talked to me. Then we had great phone conversations back and forth

Steve Jobs On His Health: “I’m feeling fine. I almost died. It’s been a pretty good last few months.”

Steve Jobs appeared at the unveiling of draft organ donation legislation in California Friday where the Apple CEO was instrumental in getting state lawmakers to create SB 1395, a law which, if passed, will require Californians applying for or renewing driver’s licenses to answer whether they’d like to donate their organs in case of death. According the Mercury News , Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger spoke at the event and thanked Steve Jobs for his efforts: Steve Jobs’ was very instrumental in getting us here today,” said the governor. “Steve Jobs told my wife about his transplant and she talked to me. Then we had great phone conversations back and forth. … He knew that others don’t have a plane waiting for them to get to a transplant.” Jobs said, “There were not enough livers in California to go around. I was advised by my Stanford doctors to enroll on a list at a Memphis hospital, because it was more favorable to get a liver there. “I was fortunate,” he said because he had the ability to fly cross country in the four-hour window needed to transplant a healthy organ. “Last year, 400 other Californians died waiting. I could have died.” He called current system “an obscure process” with “no one asking the simple question: Will you donate your organs?” Of his current health, the whippet-thin Jobs told other transplant survivors who attended the Friday news conference, “I’m feeling fine

Marriott Underwriting iPad Version of USA Today, Free Until July 4?

USA Today has struck a deal with Marriott International, Inc., in which the hotel company is underwriting USA Today ’s launch of its iPad app. While the full terms of the deal haven’t been revealed, it’s likely that the iPad version of USA Today will be free for a limited time thanks to the sponsorship (and ads) from Marriott before the paper moves on to a paid subscription model.

Marriott Underwriting iPad Version of USA Today, Free Until July 4?

USA Today has struck a deal with Marriott International, Inc., in which the hotel company is underwriting USA Today ’s launch of its iPad app. While the full terms of the deal haven’t been revealed, it’s likely that the iPad version of USA Today will be free for a limited time thanks to the sponsorship (and ads) from Marriott before the paper moves on to a paid subscription model.