Tag: Move

  • Apple looking to move production away from China, eyes Indian and Vietnamese facilities

    Apple looking to move production away from China, eyes Indian and Vietnamese facilities

    Apple is apparently accelerating its plans to migrate production outside of China. According the The Wall Street Journal, the company is looking to relocate production elsewhere, with a focus on India and Japan.

    It’s been reported that in recent weeks, Apple has accelerated its plans to shift some of its production outside China. The article noted that Apple has been informing its suppliers about the shift in production anywhere outside of China.

    Apple is also said to have expressed a desire to break away from its reliance on Chinese manufacturer Foxconn. Foxconn’s largest iPhone factory has recently been hit with issues related to stricter COVID-19 restrictions that the Chinese government has imposed as part of its zero-COVID policy. As such, the company has dealt with some workers leaving, having to hire and train new ones, and newly-hired workers protesting, the protestors stating that Foxconn failed to give them the salary benefits promised during their recruitment. Foxconn admitted the oversight and promised to pay the employees.

    Apple, in turn, has faced the possibility of being about six million iPhone 14 units short in 2022. The company is looking to move its production to other countries, and India and China have been supplying Apple with products, though the production levels have yet to reach the same capacity as that China.

    To change this, manufacturers in the two countries must start doing more than playing second fiddle to China. Manufacturers in these countries must learn to do new product introduction, or NPI. This is when Apple assigns new teams to work with contractors in translating its product blueprints and prototypes into a detailed manufacturing plan.

    Unless manufacturers in India and Vietnam are able to do NPI on their own, production will fall short. Apple has also had difficulty deploying workers to companies due to its hiring slowdown and global economic tensions. It’s up to the manufacturers to prove that they can do NPI work. Only then can Apple be assured of a steady supply of iPhone and other products despite letting go of China’s manufacturing hub.

    Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.

    Via The Mac Observer and The Wall Street Journal

  • Apple Watch announced at media event, device to be available in early 2015

    This definitely fit into the category of “one last thing…” that Apple historically concluded its keynote speeches with, but it might be worth the hype and anticipation.

    On Tuesday, Apple announced its long-awaited Apple Watch, a device that the company said will define the emerging wearable devices market.

    Per AppleInsider, the device uses a “digital crown”, a physical dial that rests on the right side of the device. Using this, users can interact with the device without a need to touch the screen, which would obscure it.

    iwatchface

    The crown button also acts as the home button, and can be pressed to return a user to the main screen. A button located below the crown allows users to quickly access contacts.

    The face is also an input, with unique “tap” and “force press” gestures enabled by special electrodes capable of sensing pressure.

    (more…)

  • Apple updates iWork to version 9.3, offers substantial updates for iOS versions of Pages, Numbers and Keynote apps

    You can’t knock a hefty update.

    Per AppleInsider, Apple on Tuesday refreshed the iOS versions of its productivity suite, with Pages, Numbers and Keynote, all of which boast improved compatibility with their Windows counterparts.

    iWork:
    The latest version 9.3 of iWork Mac lends support to the concurrently released iOS updates, including improved compatibility for Pages, Numbers and Keynote with their Microsoft Office counterparts.

    It marks the second major update of Apple’s first-party iOS apps in less than a week, following Thursday’s refresh of the iOS Remote app and adds the following changes:
    – iWork Update 9.3 adds support for iWork for iOS 1.7 apps.

    This update is recommended for users of iWork 9.0 and later.

    The download comes in at 316.7 MB, identical to the previous update, which coincided with the release of Mountain Lion in in July.

    Pages for iOS:
    Apple’s Pages for iOS update was most substantial, and along with the “improved compatibility with Microsoft Word and Pages for Mac,” the iPhone and iPad app adds Change Tracking to entire text documents. The feature was previously an exclusive to the desktop version of Pages, which allows users to collaborate and make changes to a document, with those edits being viewable to all contributors.

    Version 1.7 offers the following fixes and changes:
    – Preservation of tracked changes in documents exported to Microsoft Word or Pages for Mac.

    – In this release Pages for iOS is updated for improved compatibility with Microsoft Word and Pages for Mac.

    – Use Change Tracking to track changes to body text in a document.

    – Accept and reject individual changes as you review a document.

    – Import Pages and Microsoft Word documents with change tracking and continue to track changes to body text.

    – Preserve tracked changes in documents exported in Microsoft Word or Pages format.

    – Preserve calculations in tables when importing from and exporting to Pages for Mac.

    – Add reflections to shapes.

    – Lock and unlock objects.

    Pages for iOS version 1.7 is available now from the iOS App Store as a 245 MB download.

    Numbers for iOS:
    Numbers for iOS also hits version 1.7 with Tuesday’s update, bringing extended support for importing and exporting files with filters and rich text retention. The new version offers the following fixes and changes:

    – In this release Numbers for iOS is updated for improved compatibility with Microsoft Excel and Numbers for Mac.

    – Hide and unhide rows and columns.

    – Import and export Numbers for Mac spreadsheets with filters, and turn filters on and off.

    – Preserve rich text in tables when importing and exporting.

    – Add reflections to shapes.

    – Lock and unlock objects.

    The iOS iteration of Numbers weighs in at 244 MB and can be downloaded via the iOS App Store.

    Keynote for iOS:
    Keynote, which also hit version 1.7, offers the following fixes and changes:
    – In this release Keynote for iOS is updated for improved compatibility with Microsoft PowerPoint and Keynote for Mac.

    – Import and export all Microsoft PowerPoint and Keynote for Mac slide sizes.

    – Import and export presentation themes, complete with master slides and preset styles.

    – Play back all Keynote action builds including Move, Rotate, Scale, and Opacity.

    – Add new slide transitions including Shimmer and Sparkle.

    – Preserve calculations in tables when importing from and exporting to Keynote for Mac.

    – Add reflections to shapes.

    – New print layouts include options to print with presenter notes, with builds, and without backgrounds.

    – Lock and unlock objects.

    Keynote comes in at 304 MB and can be downloaded via the App Store.

    If you’ve tried the new versions of these apps and have any feedback to offer, please let us know in the comments section.

  • E3 2010: the Sony press conference gallery

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    For those of you interested in images from the Sony press conference, the hankering is over…:

    Before the show…

    Son'y Jack Tretton welcomes the audience.

    Killzone 3. People liked this.

    Kevin Butler gently mocks the gaming culture in a Sony ad.

    Representatives demonstrate the Sony Move with the upcoming Tiger Woods title.

    Kevin Butler demonstrates the Sony Move.

    Sony representatives demonstrate user-created content in Little Big Planet 2.

    Medal of Honor: it's coming back.

    Portal 2: it'll shatter your social life and you'll love Valve for it.

    Riveted fans watch the new Portal 2 trailer at the Sony press conference.

    The Final Fantasy 14 trailer begins…

    Sweet Tooth emerges on stage for the Twisted Metal announcement.

    Sony representatives demonstrate the upcoming Twisted Metal title.

  • E3 2010: Day 1 impressions from the floor

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    By Joshua Simmons:

    Day 1 Impressions From the Show Floor :
    After the Nintendo and Sony press conferences, I had the chance to roam the show floor. I decided to start with the West Hall, where I was immediately greeted by the Capcom booth. Although I wasn’t able to try out the Marvel vs Capcom 3 demo today, I did get a chance to get my hands on Dead Rising 2. They were demoing the single player campaign today, which little has been seen of until now. The controls were largely unchanged from the original with the main character able to pick up and use just about anything as a weapon. Not much was divulged in terms of plot other than that once again we found the hero trapped in a shopping center, presumably in Las Vegas, full of zombies. I did notice that the graphics, on the other hand, have seen a major face lift with a much larger number of zombies appearing on screen at once. Overall, the demo felt familiar and more of the same, but that’s certainly not a bad thing given the critical success of the first Dead Rising.

    Making my way out of Capcom, I found myself at the Sony booth, and in line to try the much anticipated Killzone 3. Having frequently played Killzone 2, I was able to see what kind of changes Guerilla had made to this latest iteration. So, since already possessing a general sense of traditional FPS ground combat, I decided to jump into the jetpack demo level out of the three selectable. Immediately I noticed the controls had been tightened, and were more responsive than ever while still maintaining a realisitic sense of weight that was unique to Killzone 2. Of course, weight doesn’t matter when you have a jetpack.

    Although it seems like everything has to have a jetpack these days, it really felt like Guerilla had made it their own in Killzone 3. The controls took a moment to get used to, but soon I was leaping and gliding from icebergs while gunning down Helghast with my mounted gatling gun. I really enjoy the unique design they have created for their jetpacks, and the fact that they almost change the design of the game to that of a platformer. Needless to say, I’m really looking forward to playing the full game later this year.

    Finally, having finished trying Killzone 3, I moved on to the Playstation Move booth. Playstation Move is Sony’s push into the motion controller market by using a combination of the Playstation eye camera and the glowing orb-adorned Move controllers. The Playstation eye tracks the glowing orb and constantly knows the location of the players arms, as well as track even the most subtle of movements.

    At the booth, I was able to give the Move a try by playing the Archery level of Sony’s Sports Champions. Although initially awkward to get used to, the Move gradually became more familiar after every arrow I fired. The game works by holding one controller out like your bow then taking the other over your head, while holding the Move button down, as if to grab an arrow from a quiver on your back. I was amazed to find that the game tracked this motion fairly effortlessly. After grabbing your arrow, it’s as simple as mimicking the motion of stringing and pulling back your arrow, aiming, then releasing the Move button, as if the string itself, to fire. Needless to say, within moments I was firing volleys of arrows with ease and precision while greatly enjoying the experience. I walked away from the Move booth blown away, and salivating over the future possibilities of playing medievil action games with the Playstation Move.

    The Playstation Move will be available September 19th in America, and I highly recommend picking it up to see for yourself. I didn’t have much time to see a whole lot else today, but I think I will attempt to brave the lines tomorrow and check out the new Nintendo 3DS, as well as play the new Zelda and post my impressions then.