There’s going to be another Apple retail store in Australia


by bennyling Published on 26th May 2011 on MacTalk

And according to Macworld Australia it will be located in the Westfield Southland shopping centre complex in Melbourne. No love for the other states just yet, but I think pigs will fly the day Apple open a store in Adelaide or Hobart before a Melbourne flagship store.

Pick a number, any number. You might be thinking of something that’s below half a million, in which case you would be thinking of a number less than the number of apps in the iOS app store. Half a million apps is pretty mind-blowing, and to think Apple have approved every single one and within the space of roughly 35 months is pretty incredible indeed.

Another day, another iOS concept. This time around we’re looking at how the homescreen could be revamped with the use of Android-like widgets, but the last thing I want is a gigantic clock on my homescreen. Android users have big trouble telling the time, if the majority of Android screenshots are anything to go by.

Report: 80% of Mobile Video Views Happen on Apple Devices


By Ryan Lawler May. 23, 2011 on Gigaom

UPDATED Mobile video is still a small part of overall online viewing, but it’s a part that Apple dominates, according to a new report by video monetization startup FreeWheel. In its Q1 2011 Video Monetization Report, FreeWheel said the vast majority of video views that occur on mobile devices happen on Apple’s iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.

FreeWheel reported that four-fifths of all mobile video views happen on Apple iOS devices. The iPhone and iPod touch each account for about 30 percent of all video views that happen on mobile devices, with the remaining 20 percent being attributed to Android devices, according to the report. Other devices account for less than one percent of all video views on mobile devices, according to FreeWheel.

The video ad startup attributes Apple’s dominance in mobile video to the early lead the company had in the mobile video market and the longer period of time consumers have had to get used to watching video on its devices. FreeWheel also hypothesizes that greater viewership on Apple devices  represents the priorities of video publishers and mobile developers as well, who build for iOS devices first before moving on to other platforms.

The most surprising finding might be that despite having sold just 20 million tablets worldwide, Apple’s iPad already accounts for 20 percent of videos viewed on mobile devices, according to FreeWheel. We thought the iPad would be an ideal device for viewing video when it was announced, but the extent to which it has been embraced by even traditional video producers and distributors speaks to the power of the platform. TV networks like ABC and HBO have built applications for the iPad, as have pay TV operators like Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cablevision and others.

While mobile video viewing accounts for just one percent of all online video views, according to the report, much of it was driven by news and live events. Mobile views peaked during Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, and also during the March Madness tournament, when viewers turned to their smartphones and mobile devices because they weren’t near a TV.

Update: As some commenters have noted, the data in this report only includes video views from FreeWheel’s ad clients, which include professional content creators and distributors. It doesn’t include user-generated content or videos from subscription or VOD services like Netflix.

Your iPad’s a Telephone With Google Voice


By Geoffrey Goetz May. 26, 2011 on Gigaom

Out of the box, Apple has you covered on your iPad 2 with FaceTimefor video chat with your friends, family and colleagues, so long as they have a FaceTime capable device and a Wi-Fi connection. But let’s face it, not everybody is on FaceTime, and certainly not constantly near a Wi-Fi hot spot. If all you want to do is replicate a phone connection, Google Voice along with a couple of native iOS apps may be just what you’re looking for.

What You Need

Google Voice Account. If you’re not already part of Google Voice, simply log into your Google account and sign-up for Google Voice (google.com/voice, but it’s U.S. only as of this writing). It will walk you through the sign-up process, including setting up a new number.

GV Connect. Google’s strategy for the iPad, including Google Voice, appears to be limited to Safari apps only. Google offers an official iOS-native Google Voice client for the iPhone, but GV Connect is a better option, as it has full support iPad support.

Talkatone. Neither the Safari interface that Google offers, nor GV Connect will make VOIP calls from your iOS device. To enable that functionality, you need to download and install the free, ad-supported Talkatone app.  Yes, this is an iPhone app, but you can control it from the iPad-friendly GV Connect interface.

How to Make a Phone Call

Once you have a Google Voice account, download and install both the GV Connect and Talkatone clients on your iPad, and set up each with your Google Voice account information. Then, in GV Connect, do the following:

  1. Under Settings, set the Start Calls From setting to Google Talk.
  2. Enable the Call using Talkatone setting.
  3. Click on the telephone handset icon in the upper left corner to place a call.

While you are controlling your Google Voice account from within GV Connect, the VOIP call is actually being handled by Talkatone. Talkatone does claim to allow calls over 3G, but the quality of those calls are dependent on the network. I’ve only used it while connected via Wi-Fi.

How to Receive a Phone Call

To direct all your incoming calls to be received on your iPad. In GV Connect on your iPad, do the following:

  1. Under Settings, set the Call Forwarding setting to Google Talk.
  2. Make sure you are logged in to your Google Account in Talkatone.
  3. Wait for an incoming call.

It’s that easy; just make sure you’re not logged in to Google Talk anywhere else. I tend to use the stock earbuds to avoid looking like a fool with the iPad pressed against my face, but unfortunately, Bluetooth headsets aren’t fully supported by either Apple or Talkatone. I have yet to completely dedicate my Google Voice account to exclusive iPad-only calling, but I’d love to hear from you if you end up using the solution described above as a total home or cell phone replacement.

ooVoo Releases Multiuser Video Chat App for the iPhone


By Ryan Lawler May. 26, 2011 on Gigaom

Online and mobile video chat provider ooVoo has just released a new app for the iPhone  that offers multi-platform video chat for Apple devices. By doing so, iPhone and iPod touch users now have one more way to launch multi-user video chat wherever they are.

The mobile video chat market is heating up, ever since Apple launched its FaceTime app with the introduction of the iPhone 4. Since then, a number of companies have sought to cash in on the phenomenon, including Skype, Tango, Yahoo and others. Like most of these video chat apps, ooVoo works on both 3G and Wi-Fi networks, and enables users to chat with friends on the web and on Android mobile devices.

The big differentiator ooVoo has is the ability to do multi-user chat. The app allows up to six different video chat partners to be logged into a call at once, and it does so with pretty fantastic video quality, even on mobile networks. In that respect, it primarily competes with Fring, which launched a multi-party, multi-platform group video chat app in early April.

There’s one other crucial difference: ooVoo’s user base. The company has long had a video chat application available on the desktop, where it mostly competed with Skype. But while Skype is used by many enterprise users and web-savvy professionals, ooVoo is being adopted by a very young user base, a trend being accelerated with the launch of its Android app. I have two teenaged sisters, and anecdotal evidence from their usage of the app shows that ooVoo is pretty cool with youngsters.

In a phone interview a few weeks ago, ooVoo CMO Matt deGanon confirmed my suspicions that the app has become a popular way for teenagers to keep in touch. According to him, about 57 percent of all ooVoo users are under the age of 25, and the overwhelming majority of that group are under 18. Surprisingly though, those teenagers aren’t necessarily using the app to just speak with their friends; deGanon said young ooVoo users were using the app to connect on social networks and meet new people live.

ooVoo has more than 25 million registered users now, but the launch of the iPhone app will surely drive that much higher. After announcing availability of the iPhone app to its 1 million Facebook fans, it has seen registrations at about three times its usual level, and expects to hit a record for registrations today.

How USB memory sticks and cards are made…


I saw this and had to share a video by Lexmar on how they make their USB keys and SD cards.

5 Alternatives to Skype on iOS and Mac


Posted 05/10/2011 at 2:59pm | by J.R. Bookwalter on MacLife

No Skype

As you’ve no doubt heard, Microsoft has snapped up popular VoIP developer Skype for a whopping $8.5 billion. If you’re not too fond of your favorite video chat software now being in the hands of the Borg, you’ll be happy to know there are other choices available.

It’s hard to believe that Skype has been around less than a decade, with most of that time being spent as under the ownership of another company — first eBay in 2005, then Silver Lake in 2009. Tuesday marked a new era for the little VoIP company that could, with Microsoft acquiring the company outright for $8.5 billion and big plans to set up its own Skype division in Redmond.

As with any such acquisition, there’s a bit of anxiety brewing among longtime users of the Skype service, particularly after the company’s Mac client got an unwelcome, Windows-style update recently. Could worse updates be in store? Here’s a look at a handful of Skype-esque services you might consider if Microsoft doesn’t improve things.

5 Skype Alternatives

FaceTime

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Available on the Mac (99 cents via the Mac App Store) as well as iOS devices, Apple’s own FaceTime service is a great free alternative to Skype — assuming you don’t need text chat, file transfer or the ability to connect over 3G. In the case of the iPad 2, it’s one of the only native video chat services currently available, and the price is certainly right.

‘Yahoo! Messenger’ Goes Universal, Adds Video Calling for iPad 2


Thursday May 19, 2011 9:31 am PDT by Eric Slivka on MacRumours
Yahoo yesterday released an update to its Yahoo! Messengerapplication for iOS devices, going universal with an iPad-specific interface and adding voice and video calling capabilities for the iPad 2.

What’s new

– iPad-optimized layout
– Voice & video calling for iPad 2
– Improved spam management: block one or all add requests from a single view
– Fixed multiple bugs including the unexpected sign-out issue

Yahoo! Messenger is a free application.

Workplace Culture at LinkedIn, Facebook and Google: 4 Lessons For You


Thu, May 5, 2011 by: Kristin Burnham in Best Practices

I spent this week in Silicon Valley visiting LinkedIn, Facebook and Google headquarters, meeting with many people involved in the day-to-day operations of their products.

Visiting these campuses for the first time, I was struck by how different the atmospheres of these three relatively new businesses seemed, compared to more “established” businesses I’ve interviewed and visited. It was visible how dedicated—and happy—the employees were. You could see how each company prized innovation. And it was apparent at each site how much they value those people who work there.

[For LinkedIn tips, tricks and analysis, check out CIO.com’s LinkedIn Bible.]

Here are four characteristics I’ve culled from my visit that really set these companies apart. How does your business compare? Could it do better?

1. They value innovation. It’s no secret that many IT departments are stretched—for time, for money, for resources. But one common thread that weaved through each of the three businesses I visited was that they all schedule time—usually in regular intervals—to innovate.

Whether it’s called “hack day” or a “hackathon,” the general idea is to get teams of employees together, typically after work hours, to brainstorm new ideas and solutions. This could be anything from a new way to make internal processes work better to a new product that the business could turn around and sell. The key is that nothing is off-limits.

Everyone told me that these events are always popular among employees—and it doesn’t just have to be the IT department that’s involved: Extend it to the whole company, and offer rewards for the best “hack,” whether it’s bragging rights or a gift certificate to a favorite local restaurant.

2. They encourage failure. Sort of. When I met with Facebook CIO Tim Campos, there’s one thing he said that stuck with me, and it coincides with the above observation of valuing innovation. He said:

“One of the things that is really powerful in an organization—what innovation effectly is—is a license to fail. When you’re willing to tolerate failure, people are willing to do things differently. If you’re not willing to tolerate failure, you have to do things in the tried-and-true way, which is not innovative.”

[For more on Facebook tips, tricks and analysis, check out CIO.com’s Facebook Bible.]

Think about your company’s culture and its tolerance for failure. Are employees encouraged to think outside the box and try new things? Or is failure reprimanded and looked down upon?

3. They make work fun. I’ve written before about how important the element of “fun” is in a work environment: it can boost employee productivity, creativity and happiness, which leads to a longer retention of quality employees.

Facebook, Google and LinkedIn are inherently fun places, and it’s apparent from the moment you walk in the door. Google, for example, has a jumbo-sized Android phone in its lobby where employees can take a break to play Angry Birds. LinkedIn gave each of its departments a stipend to decorate their cubes with a theme, and then judged whose was the most creative. And at Facebook, employees zip from meeting to meeting through the hallways on skateboards.

While these “fun” features obviously may not be practical for your business, consider what your company does—or could do—to keep employees happy at work.

4. They trust their employees. Perhaps the most surprising characteristic was how trusting the businesses were of their employees. Facebook, for example, stocks supply cabinets with computer batteries, keyboards, headphones and more, much like traditional companies stock theirs with pens, paper and Post-Its.

Their philosophy: Trust that because employees are happy at work, they will take only what they need. One way they keep honesty in check is by denoting

on all supply cabinets how much each of the supplies costs. Pairing a price with the product, they say, erases the notion that everything is free and makes them aware of what it costs the company.

How is your company fostering innovation? Do they encourage failure? What could your company do better?

Kristin Burnham covers consumer technology, social networking and Web 2.0 for CIO.com. Follow Kristin on Twitter @kmburnham. Follow everything from CIO.com on Twitter @CIOonline and on Facebook. Email Kristin at kburnham@cio.com

iPhone 4S Arriving This Fall With More Carriers?


By Darrell Etherington May. 13 on Gigaom

Apple’s next iPhone will be called the 4S, and won’t offer much beyond minor cosmetic changes, better front and back cameras, an A5 dual-core processor and HSPA+ support, according to Jefferies & Co. analyst Peter Misek (via Forbes ). The information comes from industry checks performed by the investment banking firm.

Apple is also likely to announce Sprint, T-Mobile and China Mobile as new carrier partners, according to Misek’s research note. T-Mobile expansion is already expected if the AT&T / T-Mobile merger goes through. The addition of Sprint would mean Apple’s reach would extend to all major U.S. carriers, and China Mobile signing on would mean that the iPhone would become available to over 600 million potential subscribers.

While analyst expectations are not always the most dependable source of information, this report is in keeping with what we’ve been hearing about Apple’s next iPhone revision. Rumors abound that we won’t see any new hardware introduced at WWDC this June, and fall has been widely cited as the most likely candidate for an iPhone update. The iPhone “4s” name has also surfaced before, back in April when it was used to describe a prototype handset being circulated by Apple among developers with an A5 chip for use in creating next-gen games. Supplier checks also often reveal clues about future Apple products, since the third-party supply chain isn’t as easily guarded as Apple itself.

Misek also claims that LTE chipsets from Qualcomm aren’t yet ready for mass production of the next iPhone, so we won’t see LTE support in the next hardware revision.

Take this report with a grain of salt, but if Apple decides to repeat what it did with the iPhone 3G and 3GS with the iPhone 4 and its successor, this does match with what I’d expect to see from a hardware update. What do you think about this latest next-gen iPhone rumor?

Microsoft’s Skype Buy Could Be Good News for Apple Video Chat


By Darrell Etherington May. 10 on Gigaom

Microsoft announced today that it will acquire Skype for $8.5 billion in cash. Skype will form a new business division within Microsoft, and Skype CEO Tony Bates will become president of said division. Despite Microsoft’s position as a longtime Apple competitor, this deal could improve the state of video chat on Apple devices.

Microsoft, will, of course, most likely prioritize its own software and hardware when it comes to new Skype features and improvements. Redmond has already announced that it plans to bring Skype to Xbox and Kinect, Windows Phone 7 and other Windows devices, and that it will also be integrated with existing Microsoft communities like Lync, Outlook and Messenger. But Microsoft is also quick to note it will “continue to invest in and support Skype clients on non-Microsoft platforms.”

There’s plenty of reason to believe that isn’t just an empty statement. Microsoft might erode its existing Skype subscriber base by ignoring or closing down support for platforms where the service is popular, including Apple devices. And Microsoft has been good about creating and maintaining software for Apple hardware recently; Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 is a huge improvement over its predecessor, and finally brought Outlook to OS X. Microsoft also provides some interesting iOS products, like Photosynth, which it has yet to release on Windows Phone 7.

The company is clearly keen to capitalize on the opportunities provided by making its software available on competitor platforms, and much of Skype’s value lies in its ability to connect users across a wide variety of platforms. The whole reason I (and many others, I suspect) have a paid Skype account to begin with is that we know it’ll work with basically whatever hardware people I’m trying to contact happen to have. If Microsoft just wanted Skype’s tech in order to keep up with Google and Apple’s video communications tech, it would’ve bought a much cheaper video chat startup and saved itself a few billion dollars. Since it must want the network, too, it’ll keep up development on platforms other than its own.

And since Microsoft is planning to significantly expand the reach of Skype by building it into incredibly popular devices like the Kinect and Xbox, this deal should actually benefit Apple customers who are also Skype users. That’s because it’ll expand the potential user pool considerably, and make it that much more likely that the person you’re trying to reach through Skype for voice and video chat will have access to hardware that’s equipped for the task.

I use FaceTime and iChat for video calls between Macs on occasion, but I know just as many households with Xboxes and Kinects as I do ones with Macs or FaceTime-capable iOS devices. In theory, Skype’s expanded availability should just about double my potential iPhone and Mac video calling audience.

The update cycle for Skype’s Mac and iOS clients might suffer in comparison to their Windows counterparts as a result of this deal, but Microsoft won’t drop support entirely, and the VoIP service’s reach will increase considerably. It’s one more step towards making video chat usable and useful to more people, which is a good thing for those hoping video calling catches on.