Wednesday, 26 December 2012


Samsung Files Lawsuit Against Apple over Notification Center in Korea::



A report says that Samsung has filed a new lawsuit in its home country of Korea against Apple over its iOS Notification Center. The company claims that the feature, introduced on iOS 5, infringes one of its patents.

Of course, patent lawsuits have become commonplace between the two tech giants in recent years. Typically, however, Samsung has used its standards-essential, hardware-related IP to go after Apple. But this time it’s software-related…
PatentlyApple says the delay in launching the lawsuit may have been due to the fact that Google’s patent pending notification patents had not been granted. That changed last month when one of their notification patents was granted under the title “Priority inbox notifications and synchronization for mobile-messaging application.” PA notes, “This may have been enough for Samsung to get the lawsuit rolling.”
Not much else is known about the lawsuit at the moment. But Google has been known to help out its partners. It was reported back in August that Google was lending support to Samsung in its lawsuit with Apple, offering advice and searching for prior evidence.
This will be an interesting one to watch, so we’ll keep an eye on it and keep you posted.

Sunday, 23 December 2012


Why Apple Needs a Really Expensive iPhone::

Some pundits are predicting, and others are advocating, that Apple launch an iPhone that’s much cheaper than the current iPhone in order to keep up with Android phone sales.
This is crazy talk.
Apple doesn’t need a cheaper iPhone. They need a more expensive one — much more expensive. Here’s why.
Android Gets Big Market Share with Small Profits
Android phones are selling in vastly higher numbers than iPhones. So high, in fact, that Google Chairman Eric Schmidt says the market share numbers are comparable to Microsoft vs Apple in desktop operating systems in the past 20 years.
The difference Schmidt didn’t mention is that Microsoft always made money from Windows.
The main reason Android is selling so well is that most Android phones are very cheap.
Sure, a tiny number of handset models like the Samsung Galaxy S3 are both very good and profitable. But the high-end, best-of-breed Android phones aren’t the ones driving massive marketshare numbers for the Android platform.
Those big Android market share and unit shipment numbers are being generated by China. In the world’s most populous country, with a population of more than 1.3 billion people, roughly 2/3 of the phones sold are Android phones. In fact one-third of all Android phones sold in the entire world are sold in China. And a huge chunk of the phones sold in the third world these days are Chinese-made Android phones. For example, one of the most popular phones sold in Kenya right now is a Chinese Android phone called the Huawei IDEOS that costs $80 unlocked.
These phones for the masses are not profitable Samsung Galaxy S3s, but instead no-name, no-margin Chinese-made pieces of junk, for the most part. They use Android in part because it’s free.
You’ll also note that, although there are hundreds of companies making Android phones, Apple makes far more money in mobile phone profits than all of them combined.
To say that Apple should make a cheap phone in order to keep up with Android market share is madness.
It’s like saying Ferrari should make a low-cost family car to keep up with Toyota. It’s like saying Starbucks should make cheap, low-quality coffee in a can to keep up with Folgers. It’s like saying Nordstrom should open a floor of cheap, discount clothing to keep up with J.C. Penny.
Apple is a premium, aspirational brand. It successfully targets the most profitable sweet spot in the market.
To slug it out in the muck with cheap Chinese phones for small margins would not only tarnish Apple’s image, it simply wouldn’t be worth the tech support, supply chain and manufacturing trouble.
Instead of a cheap, low-margin phone Apple should come out with an expensive, high-margin phone. A satellite phone.
Why Apple Should Sell a Satellite iPhone
A satellite phone lets you make calls from anywhere — while hiking, traveling, sailing, or when your carrier just sucks and becomes unavailable. They’re great to have, but they can be expensive.
If you think satellite phones are ugly, boxy, heavy gadgets from the 90s with horrible, fat, swing-out antennas, then you may be unfamiliar with the TerreStar Genus phone.
The Genus is a Windows Mobile smart phone, so nobody wants to buy it. It looks to me like a BlackBerry phone with extra heft in the back, presumably for the satellite antenna and electronics.
The TerreStar Genus costs $800 unlocked on Amazon.com. It works like a normal GSM phone, but you can switch to satellite mode for both voice and data.
It’s on the AT&T network, and the charge for the satellite feature is an extra $24.99 per month above the regular amount you would pay, plus 65 cents per minute for each satellite call.
The phone enables users to switch into satellite mode, which supports voice, texting and data.
The TerreStar Genus is not a great phone, and the satellite service isn’t great, either, nor is it global (it’s North America only).
The point is that a relatively compact, satellite-capable smart phone is possible, and the rates for usage are more reasonable than you might expect.
Apple isn’t in the business of cheap products that do the same things other phones do. Apple is in the business of re-inventing industries.
Apple needs to re-invent the satellite phone industry. (Yes, I’m suggesting that Apple needs a space program.)
Just to give you a sense of scale and proportion, Apple could probably buy any one of the existing satellite phone providers  for less than $3 billion. (Apple has more than $125 billion in cash.)
Better yet, Apple should develop it’s own high-speed, high-capacity global satellite network, which it could do for less than $5 billion, I would imagine.
Note that running its own satellite system would be expensive. But it would make Apple a wireless carrier, and a global one — for decades.
So the company would not only be able to get large profits from each handset, it would be able to earn hundreds or thousands of dollars from each user in carrier fees.
I would guess off the top of my head that Apple could sell a satellite iPhone for, say, $1,500 unlocked, or $600 to $800 with a contract.
The price should be whatever it costs Apple to make the phone, plus a fat margin of $500 or more.
While Android phones scramble to match the iPhone feature for feature, rendering it somewhat ordinary by comparison, a satellite iPhone would be almost impossible for competitors to beat.
Plus, a super high-end iPhone would be an aspirational item that elevates the image of the entire iPhone brand.
And who would buy such a phone and pay such prices for handsets and service?
  • Business travelers with expense accounts
  • People who live outside cell coverage areas
  • People who work or live on boats
  • World travelers
  • Government workers
  • Military people
  • NGO workers
  • Emergency workers
  • Contractors
  • Digital nomads
  • Journalists and bloggers
  • Posh rich people
  • People who enjoy outdoor recreation 
  • Apple fans who want the very best of everything 
The reality is that Apple’s iPhone — once the industry’s new hotness — is quickly becoming old and busted as the rest of the industry copies, catches up or exceeds the iPhone in specs and features.
The solution to this problem is not for Apple to come out with a cheap piece of crap.
The solution is for Apple to do what it does best: re-invent an industry, seize control of its ecosystem, think big and come out with the very best product in the world.
Apple needs an expensive satellite iPhone. And the high-margin, big-spending, jet-setting world needs one, too.
Would you buy a satellite iPhone?

Wednesday, 19 December 2012


How to Make Siri Bring Up Directions in Google Maps, No Jailbreak Required! (Video)



Many users cried out for joy when Google released their Maps app for iOS, offering another solid option for when Apple’s iOS 6 Maps app doesn’t do the trick. However, considering that Apple has build support for their own Maps into iOS 6, using Siri to get directions sends users to Apple Maps. Unfortunately, there doesn’t seem to be a way to use Siri to provide Google Maps directions instead…or is there?


The folks at JailbreakNation have devised a clever workaround to trick Siri into using Google Maps for directions rather than Apple’s controversial Maps app – and best of all, all it takes to make the magic happen are two little words: via transit. Instead of asking Siri to just find directions to a certain address, add the words “via transit” onto the end! Siri will present a list of navigation apps on your iPhone. Just tap Google Maps and you’ll be routed to their app instead of Apple’s!
Kudos to JailbreakNation for the clever tip!

iOS 6 Update Numbers Jump After Introduction of Google Maps App::

There was a jump in the numbers of users who upgraded to iOS 6 last week, even though it’s been months since that version of the operating system was released. What could have caused that?

This growth in iOS 6 upgrades may not be as random as it sounds. According to TechCrunch, which got data from mobile ad exchange MoPub, iOS adoption has bumped 30 percent since Google Maps released its app for iOS. MoPub surveys more than 1 billion ad impressions a day across more than 12,000 different apps and got its data from seeing users upgrade to iOS 6.
“We observed since the launch of Google Maps for iOS 6 a 30 percent increase in unique iOS 6 users, and we think it’s related to Google Maps,” MoPub’s CEO told TechCrunch. “It verifies the hypothesis that people were actually holding back to upgrade until Google Maps was available.”
Google launched its Maps app for iOS last week, and has announced that it was downloaded more than 10 million times in just the first two days in the App Store.
Apple debuted its new mapping service and app in iOS 6 in September, evicting Google Maps in the move. Many users have complained about Apple’s inaccurate data, lack of details, warped images, and incorrect directions.

Instagram Responds to Privacy Outcry: ‘…it is not our intention to sell your photos’::


Following concerning reports regarding Instagram’s new privacy policy, which was thought by many to allow them to use individuals’ personal photos in ads, or even sell those photos for a profit, Instagram has now clarified what their new privacy policy actually means.

Their response to the concerns can be found on on the official Instagram blog, confirming that users still own their photos, that private photos will remain private, and that they aren’t intending to sell anyone’s personal photos:
…Our intention in updating the terms was to communicate that we’d like to experiment with innovative advertising that feels appropriate on Instagram. Instead it was interpreted by many that we were going to sell your photos to others without any compensation. This is not true and it is our mistake that this language is confusing. To be clear: it is not our intention to sell your photos. We are working on updated language in the terms to make sure this is clear.
[...] Instagram users own their content and Instagram does not claim any ownership rights over your photos. Nothing about this has changed. We respect that there are creative artists and hobbyists alike that pour their heart into creating beautiful photos, and we respect that your photos are your photos. Period.
[...] Nothing has changed about the control you have over who can see your photos. If you set your photos to private, Instagram only shares your photos with the people you’ve approved to follow you. We hope that this simple control makes it easy for everyone to decide what level of privacy makes sense.
They also aren’t going to be using anyone’s photos in advertisements. It was all a huge (and very poorly worded) misunderstanding. You can check out Instagram’s entire response at their blog. Instagram also noted that they plan to revise their privacy policy, and post an updated and clarified version on the site in the near future.

Apple Releases iOS 6.0.2 for iPhone 5 and iPad mini::


iOS 6.0.2 Software Update
This update contains improvements and bug fixes, including:
• Fixes a bug that could impact Wi-Fi
For information on the security content of this update, please visit this website:
The update is available immediately as an over-the-air update, as well as through iTunes on a Mac or PC. Direct download links can be found below:

Wednesday, 12 December 2012


iPhone 5 Ranks as Time Magazine’s 2012 Gadget of The Year::


Time Magazine has once again published their top 10 gadgets of the year – and this year, the iPhone 5 took the top spot. Surprise, surprise! Then again, it’s no secret that the iPhone 5 has been immensely popular, and one of the most desired gadgets of 2012…

Time’s Harry McCracken had plenty of good things to say about the iPhone 5:
The iPhone 5, which starts at $199 with a two-year contract, is one of the most artfully polished gadgets anyone’s ever built, with a taller screen than previous iPhones built into a thinner, lighter case. The camera, with a particularly well-done panorama mode, is another highlight. There are lots of nifty smartphones out there, including the iPhone’s impressive archrival, Samsung’s Galaxy S III. But when it comes to melding hardware, software and services so tightly that the seams fade away, Apple still has no peer.
Samsung’s Galaxy Note 2 also made the list, coming in at number 8. The full list is as follows:
  1. Apple iPhone 5
  2. Nintendo Wii U
  3. Sony Cyber-Shot RX100
  4. Raspberry Pi Model B
  5. Lytro Light-Field Camera
  6. Apple 15″ MacBook Pro with Retina Display
  7. Microsoft Surface with Windows RT
  8. Samsung Galaxy Note 2
  9. Nest Learning Thermostat
  10. Simple.TV

Lack of Retail Presence “Killing” the Microsoft Surface::


Sales of the Microsoft Surface are apparently suffering from a lack of retail presence. To attempt to remedy this problem, Microsoft has decided to expand availability of its iPad competitor beyond Microsoft’s own stores.

Panos Panay, general manager of the Surface project, revealed that Microsoft’s tablet will go on sale at North American retailers this week, according to The Telegraph. Availability is also expected to expand to third-party stores in Australia this month, while more countries will follow suit soon after.
No retailers were specifically named by Panay, but Staples separately announced it will begin stocking the Surface as of today.
Until now, the Surface has only been available in Microsoft’s retail and online stores. Consumer interest has appeared to be limited, as Detwiler Fenton, a Boston-based brokerage firm, said in a research note recently that Microsoft is likely to sell just 500,000 to 600,000 Surface RTs in the December quarter, far less than its previous expectations of one million to two million units.
A survey conducted on Black Friday found that the Microsoft Store at Mall of America in Minneapolis saw 47 percent less traffic than the Apple Store across from it.
It appears that the plethora of other tablet options available everywhere has proven Microsoft’s strategy of “come to the company store” for prospective Surface customers is not working out. The Microsoft Stores have not as yet proven to be a “destination” in a mall such as a store like, let’s say… The Apple Store has proven to be.
Microsoft Chief Steve Ballmer was quoted last month as saying sales of the Microsoft Surface had gotten off to a “modest” start.

Google Chairman Eric Schmidt: Android is “Clearly” Winning the Mobile Wars::


Google chairman Eric Schmidt, well known for being outspoken on all manner of tech issues, especially where Apple is concerned, sat down to an interview with Bloomberg recently. As usual, Schmidt had a lot to say – including that Android is clearly winning the mobile platform war!

Booming demand for Android-based smartphones is helping Google add share at the expense of other software providers, Schmidt said yesterday in an interview at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York. Android snared 72 percent of the market in the third quarter, while Apple had 14 percent, according to Gartner Inc. Customers are activating more than 1.3 million Android devices a day, Schmidt said.
“This is a huge platform change; this is of the scale of 20 years ago — Microsoft versus Apple,” he said. “We’re winning that war pretty clearly now.”
The core strategy is to make a bigger pie. We will end up with a not perfectly controlled and not perfectly managed bigger pie by virtue of open systems.”
Schmidt’s comments aren’t entirely without merit, of course – Android has certainly seem tremendous growth since it first launch (arguably as a result of completely redesigning Android for touch devices when the iPhone was announced). But that doesn’t make a clear win – and it leaves out some very important factors, such as the fact that Apple produces a grand total of 5 devices (three iPads, and 2 iPhones), compared to the hundreds of devices running Android.
Android’s success also has much less to do with it being an “open platform” than it has to do with Android’s “we’ll sell to ANYBODY” licensing agreements with manufacturers. Schmidt also called Google+ a viable competitor to Facebook, which seems blatantly incorrect – Google+ still hasn’t taken off at anywhere near the level of other social platforms (500 million total users in a little over 14 months, versus Facebook’s one billion monthly active users).
iDownloadBlog also rightly points out that while Google has captured a great deal of global market share, Apple still controls the majority of mobile platform profits:
It’s nice to claim the world’s leading shipments, but then again the iPhone (along with the iPad in tablets) is still the world’s best-selling individual smartphone model which accounts for the vast majority of the mobile web traffic share.
More importantly, Apple owns the profits. In fact, if you ask people like Kantar, the iPhone in the US is beating Android to market share. Elsewhere, Apple’s handset is pretty much #1 in key usage statistics, the stuff like web share, e-commerce and so forth. 
Finally, it’s also worth noting that Apple is still developing their platform in many parts of the world, and the iPhone is available in fewer markets than Android. In the U.S., Android’s marketshare is much closer to Apple’s iOS.
The full hour-long interview can be viewed over at Bloomberg. What do you think? Is the war over? Has Android won? or is Schmidt just tooting his own horn?

Seven Missing Features in iTunes 11:


Apple released iTunes 11 to the masses today, and while it includes some great new features, we here at MacTrast thing they missed a few tricks – and they’ve also left out a few features from previous versions of iTunes! We’ve rounded up the top 7 features we think they missed!

1) iTunes Radio:


In previous versions of iTunes, Apple included a Radio tab in the left-hand sidebar, complete with a full collection of internet audio streams of all varieties. In iTunes 11, the Radio feature appears to be missing. While you can still stream audio if you have the stream URL, iTunes no longer provides a directory of presets. You can also no longer set up radio shortcuts, forcing you to track down the stream URL again every time you want to listen.

4) Cover Flow


 Remember Cover Flow? That slick way of viewing and flipping through your album art just like you were shuffling through a box of old vinyls? With iTunes 11, Cover Flow has gone the way of the Dodo. While some argue that it was time for Cover Flow to die, I still enjoyed it – and I can’t be the only one!

3) iTunes DJ:


For years, iTunes has included a feature called iTunes DJ, which allowed you to choose and play random songs while giving you a number of ways to control the actual play order. That feature has now been replaced by a new feature called “Up Next.” While Up Next is clever, it’s not quite the same as the iTunes DJ we’ve come to know and love.

5) Genius Sidebar



Apple’s default view in iTunes 11 has removed the useful left-hand side bar, which has been with iTunes for years, and makes it simple to quickly view connected devices and navigate through your media. Fortunately, you can get it back with a simple setting change – but what you can’t get back is the other right-hand sidebar, which was used to offer quick Genius recommendations based on the currently playing track. Some of those recommendations are now much harder to get at.
Will the right-hand sidebar be missed? I already miss it – and I’m sure others miss it as well.
2) Multiple Windows:


iTunes 11 is all about simplicity – much like the iPhone and iPad interface. But along with that comes a lessened ability to use iTunes like a power user, breaking various functions (like the App Store, listening to streaming radio, or iTunes Match) into their own separate windows while continuing to work in the main interface.
Being limited to just one window can feel crippling to those that were use to spreading things out in iTunes. Ah, the price we pay for simplicity

6. Gapless playback editor

The ability to play numerous songs back-to-back with no break in between has always been a landmark feature of iTunes – and it’s important for playing back live albums, or other albums that were ment to be played continuously, such as The Wall by Pink Floyd. While gapless playback itself works in iTunes 11, you can no longer tweak the gapless settings for your existing albums, which can disrupt the experience of listening to certain works of art the way they were meant to be heard!

7. Wishful Thinking

These next two features were never included in iTunes – but many think they should have been, and iTunes 11 would have provided a great opportunity to introduce them! I’ve lumped these both into  collective Missing Feature #7.
  • 1) iBooks Reading / Previewing Ability
Sure, you can download a preview of an iBook to you iOS device, but how great would it be to be able to read a quick chapter of a book you’ve been reading on your iPad while you’re taking a break while working on a project on you Mac? Amazon has had a Kindle reader available for computers for quite awhile. I’m just saying it’s time for that to happen with iBooks.
  • 2) Selective iOS Device Restores
One of my long-time gripes with the iTunes and iCloud restore processes for iOS devices is that it’s an “all or nothing” approach. You have to restore all of a device’s settings or content, or none at all. The ability to restore only settings (such as folders and home screen arrangement), or even select which settings or content you would or wouldn’t like to restore, would be extremely helpful. Setting a device up “new” just to waste time adjusting many of the  settings back the way you had them on a previous device is an obnoxious chore that I wouldn’t mind doing without.
All in all, I feel that iTunes 11 is a step forward – but I do fear that Apple has chosen to remove a fair bit of functionality in their never-ending quest for simplicity (or at least what they consider simplicity). Are there other features you’ve noticed are missing in iTune 11? Do you find the exclusion of any of these features to be bothersome – perhaps so much that you wish you’d never upgraded? Let us know in the comments!
And don’t worry – you can always downgrade to iTunes 10.7 if it really gets you down!

Sunday, 9 December 2012


iPad Grabs 71% Share of Chinese Tablet Market::



The iPad is dominating the Chinese tablet market, according to new data from Chinese research firm Analysys International. Of 2.6 million tablets sold in China during Q3 2012, Apple’s iPad grabbed 71.42%, taking first place by a wide margin.

The country’s home company Lenovo, which acquired IBM’s personal computing business in late 2004, came in a distant second place with 10.52 percent of the market for the quarter. Another Chinese company, Eben, took third with 3.61 percent, followed by Korean company Samsung and Taiwanese firms Acer and Asustek. A variety of other firms, including Google-owned Motorola Mobility, each secured less than 1 percent of the market.
Market share for what Analysys calls “business use tablets,” was significantly different. The iPad made no penetration in this market. The figures for this sector showed: Eben taking the top spot with 41.07%, followed by Samsung (19.66%), Asustek (9.17%), ViewSonic (4.37%), and Lenovo (3.89%).
The 2.6 million tablets sold in China during the third quarter reflected an 11.1% increase for the quarter, and 62.5% year-over-year.

Wednesday, 5 December 2012


7 Men Sentenced After Chinese Teen Sold His Kidney For an iPad::



According to Bangkok Post (via MacGasm), 7 men have now been sentenced for the crime by a Chinese court, after five of those men were reportedly charged in June of this year. The sentence is a result of a trial which began in August