Category: News

  • Additional evidence emerges for both front and back cameras on next-gen iPhone

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    This could be interesting.

    Per The Unofficial Apple Weblog, a Twitter post from user @chenks shows the hidden metadata of an iPhone OS 4.0 screenshot states that the picture came from the phone’s “Back Camera.”

    The image brings up a stronger possibility that the upcoming iPhone could feature a front-facing camera as well as the conventional back-facing camera.

    If so, applications such as Skype, iChat and others could come into their own via video conferencing on the iPhone.

    Stay tuned for additional details as we get them.

  • Hulu confirms, quickly retracts, vow of HTML5 support for iPad

    Video streaming web site Hulu both posted and quickly retracted a blog post yesterday, the edited form stating that the web site doesn’t see using HTML5 in its immediate future.

    Per AppleInsider, Eugene Wei, vice president of product with Hulu, said that his company’s contractual requirements make the transition to HTML5 too difficult. The current player on the website, built with Adobe Flash, does a great deal more than stream video.

    “We continue to monitor developments on HTML5, but as of now it doesn’t yet meet all of our customers’ needs,” Wei wrote. “Our player doesn’t just simply stream video, it must also secure the content, handle reporting for our advertisers, render the video using a high performance codec to ensure premium visual quality, communicate back with the server to determine how long to buffer and what bitrate to stream, and dozens of other things that aren’t necessarily visible to the end user.”

    The statement would seem to finally put to rest lingering rumors that Hulu might convert to HTML5 for an iPad-friendly site. But it does not mean that iPad users will not be able to access Hulu.

    The company is still expected to bring its service to the iPad eventually, through software in the App Store much like the ABC and Netflix streaming players. It is believed Hulu on the iPad will be a pay-only service that would require a monthly subscription.

    But the existing, popular ABC application shows programs like “Lost” and “Desperate Housewives” for free, with ad support. And that free product has apparently caused concern for Hulu, which is rumored to introduce a US$9.95-per-month subscription plan later this month, on May 24th.

    It is believed that Hulu will incentivize its subscription plan with Apple’s iPad, and also offer a “window” where content is available to subscribers, both on computers and the iPad, before it can be seen for free by the general public. Rumors have suggested Hulu’s business partners have pressured the service into subscription plans to “train” viewers that they should pay for online access to content.

    Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.

  • Roxio Toast Titanium 10.0.6 update released

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    Late Thursday night, Roxio released version 10.0.7 of its Toast Titanium authoring software. The new version, available here, adds the following fixes and changes:

    – iPad video export profile now available as device setting for video exports.

    – TiVo recordings (US only) can now be exported at 640×480 resolution.

    – Resolves issue where text entered may appear outside text field.

    – Resolves issue where DVD-Video volume with in name may be handled incorrectly.

    – Resolves issue which may cause application to crash.

    Toast 10 Titanium requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later to install and run and retails for US$99.99.

  • Apple awards CDMA iPhone contract to Pegatron

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    Apple has apparently awarded a contract for building a CDMA iPhone to Pegatron Technologies.

    The news arrives from Taiwanese newspaper DigiTimes, which back in February announced that the company had won the contract for building the expected next generation UMTS iPhone 4. Previous iPhones have been built by Foxconn, which also builds Apple’s Mac mini, iPods and the iPad, and is the company’s main supplier.

    Rumors surrounding the possibly of a CDMA iPhone model that Apple could sell through Verizon and Sprint have regularly surfaced throughout the iPhone’s entire history, and have recently blossomed as speculation about the end of AT&T’s exclusive contract in the U.S. has reached a fevered pitch.

    Pegatron is a three year old Taiwanese company formed during a restructuring of Asustek, which resulted in a split between Asustek’s own Asus-branded products, its PC-related manufacturing performed under the Unihan name, and contract manufacturing under the Pegatron name.

    Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.

  • Valve releases Steam gaming client for Mac OS X

    You’ve been hankering for it and Valve finally came through.

    The Steam gaming client, Valve’s Mac OS X port of the gateway to its online game store, allows users to purchase, download, and manage games for your computer. Per CNET, the program offers networking options for locating and joining online game servers, chatting, and providing in-game communication enhancements.

    Valve offers access to over 1,000 games via Steam, and for OS X the debut will see Left 4 Dead, Left 4 Dead 2, Team Fortress 2, Counter-Strike: Source, Portal, and the whole Half-Life series available. Many of these games are run using Wine-like compatibility layer for OS X, which has been seen in applications like Codeweaver’s “Crossover” and “Crossover Games” packages.

    The client is available as a 2.7 megabyte download and requires Mac OS X 10.5 or later and an Intel-based Mac to install and run.

    Current Steam release titles for the Mac include Civilization IV (Colonization, Warlords, and Beyond the Sword editions), And Yet It Moves, Chuzzle Deluxe, Bejeweled 2, Bookworm Deluxe, Galcon Fusion, Bob Came in Pieces, World of Goo, Altitude, City of Heroes: Architect Edition, Machinarium, Torchlight, Braid, Brainpipe, Football Manager 2010, Zuma Deluxe, and Quantz, though Valve has stated that new Mac ports will