Posts Tagged ‘apple’

Metro 2033 review on PC: inching towards sunlight

// March 18th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

When you pull a gas mask over your head in Metro 2033 , you adjust a dial on your watch to let you know how many minutes of breathable air you have left before you asphyxiate. Your flashlight has a charger that you have to manually pump to make sure you can see where you’re going. Every bullet you find can be used as currency, but you’re also operating in an incredibly hostile environment. Every round you fire limits your ability to buy what you need. In other words, you are going to have to try very hard to survive, and the game reminds you constantly of how brutal and desperate your existence is. The game takes place in Moscow, after the bombs drop. You live in a small pocket of civilization underground, but the attacks from mutants have been growing in frequency. If that wasn’t enough, there is something worse in the tunnels. Something that sings beautiful songs, and then steals your mind. This is not your average first-person shooter. Read the comments on this post

iMacs expected to boost desktop market growth in 2010

// March 17th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Mobile computing has taken over as the main driver of growth in PC sales for the past year, with notebooks overtaking desktops in late 2008 and sales of desktops declining for the last two years. However, Caris & Company analyst Robert Cihra is expecting desktops to show a small positive growth this year, due in large part to brisk sales of Apple’s iMac . Cihra still expects notebooks and netbooks to account for 90 percent of overall growth in the market for the current year. But the increased demand driven by emerging markets, a slight increase in corporate IT spending, and “power gamers” should result in a 3 percent uptick in desktop sales over last year. “[B]elieve it or not,” Cihra wrote in a note to investors, “we estimate Apple’s iMac accounting for a full one quarter of ALL desktop market growth in calendar year 2010.” The number isn’t so surprising when you consider that the iMac pushed an impressive 70 percent year-over-year growth in desktop Mac sales for 2009. Contrast that with a 12 percent drop in overall sales of desktops for the same time frame. Apple’s second fiscal quarter sales are already looking healthy , with sales up 36 and 43 percent year over year for January and February respectively. Those figures led Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster to peg Mac sales at about 2.9 million for the quarter. That’s less than the recent record quarters of late, but would still mark a 31 percent year-over-year growth compared to the second quarter last year . Sales of iMacs resumed in earnest recently after

iWork.com improves public URLs, adds iPad compatibility

// March 17th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Apple’s iWork.com document sharing and collaboration service still carries the beta tag that it has worn since it was introduced with iWork ‘09 last January. (Perhaps it’s just another hobby, like Apple TV?) Still, with the iPad ready to launch in a few weeks, Apple has added a few improvements to iWork.com. One improvement is an update to the way documents can be shared publicly . A simple toggle turns public sharing on or off as needed, and a “Show URL” button rolls down a drop-down sheet with the URL selected for easy cutting and pasting. The new public URLs don’t show comments or notes, according to Apple . The company also noted that it makes sharing documents via social networks easy, though adding buttons to “Tweet this!” or “Post to Facebook” would more likely get users to post documents to such sites. The other improvement is that Apple has created interfaces that are optimized for iPads, iPhones, and iPod touches . Functionality on Apple’s mobile devices is quite limited, but you can access documents that you have shared via iWork.com and view them within Safai. On the iPad, documents can be edited using the new iPad versions of Pages, Numbers, or Keynote if they are installed. Both new views have interfaces optimized for touch input, but the iPad’s screen makes viewing documents much more pleasurable. Read the comments on this post

NBP: Time for a new copyright notice!

// March 17th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Critics of the National Broadband Plan released yesterday by the FCC are already complaining that the document goes far beyond its broadband mandate. They may have a point; we’re not quite sure how the NBP wandered its way into Copyright Town, but the Plan does make several suggestions for US copyright law, including a new copyright label for educational use. The good news is that the Plan refuses to indulge in discussions of ISP filtering and graduated response schemes to address digital copyright infringement. We’ll see if the FCC’s network neutrality proceeding can display the same discipline in light of intense lobbying on the subject from major copyright holders, who want the agency to “encourage” ISPs to start filtering traffic somehow . Read the comments on this post

Ars Premier now available in $5 month-to-month subscriptions

// March 17th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Last week was an important waypoint here at Ars. It has been just over six months since we launched version 2.0 of our Ars Premier Subscriptions . There’s been a steady stream of new subscribers each day, and the program is outperforming our wildest expectations. Two weeks ago the staff had an opportunity to talk with a wide spectrum of readers about a number of topics. One of the things we took away from those conversations was that many Ars readers wanted to join and support the site directly, but weren’t able or willing to put down $50 all at once. Read the comments on this post

Survey: Macs cost notably less to support than Windows PCs

// March 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Macs are often the black sheep in the many enterprise environments which have been dominated by Windows for nearly two decades, but the growing consumerization of IT is slowly changing that perception . Though Macs often have a higher up-front price than many business-class PCs, Macs are usually believed to have a lower total cost of ownership (TCO) due to lower support costs. A recent survey of IT professionals in large enterprise environments that have a mix of Macs and PCs overwhelmingly agree that Macs cost less than PCs to support. The Enterprise Desktop Alliance , which seeks to make it easier to integrate Macs in Windows-centric IT deployments, surveyed IT admins from companies that made large deployments, including universities and government agencies. Responses included in EDA’s analysis include those from environments with a mix of Macs and PCs that had a total of 50 servers or over 100 Macs. A majority of respondents said that Macs cost less in terms of time spent troubleshooting, user training, help desk calls, and system configuration. Admins generally agreed that costs related to software licensing and supporting infrastructure were the same between the two platforms. Two-thirds of those managing mixed environments plan to increase the number of Macs deployed in 2010. Twenty-nine percent cited lower TCO as a “key reason” for deploying Macs. Almost half cited lower TCO, ease of support, or a combination of the two as leading factors in Mac adoption. User preference and increased productivity were considered important factors as well. “As a greater percentage of enterprise applications become OS-neutral, the cost to support a more diverse hardware and OS mix will decrease, making Macs a more viable choice for a greater number of users who continue to demand them,” noted Michael Silver, vice president and research director at Gartner, in a recent report on PC trends. Macs tend to be popular among C-level execs, as well as with those in creative departments and developers (especially cross-platform developers). Apple has historically done little to actively develop a traditional strategy to target enterprise deployment. Instead, the company tends to focus on consumers first, and lets individuals drive enterprise demand for its computers and mobile devices. It does, though, make continual small improvements that make it easier to integrate Macs , iPhones , and soon iPads into many corporate environments. Read the comments on this post

General relativity passes a large scale test

// March 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

General relativity, our current best understanding of gravity, has passed yet another test—this time on a much larger length scale. Ever since relativity’s first confirmation in 1919, when Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington observed that the light from distant stars was shifted by the mass of the sun, direct tests have been confined to length scales smaller than our solar system. No test to date has stringently probed general relativity’s applicability to the length scales of the universe itself. A paper that is published in the current edition of Nature reports on research that incorporates gravitational lensing, galaxy clustering measurements, and growth rates of large scale structures to measure a single parameter that can be compared to the predictions of general relativity. To probe the effect of gravity at large length scales—on the order of two to 50 megaparsecs (MPc) at a redshift of 0.32—the authors describe a variable E G that incorporates three physical parameters and can be used to differentiate between competing theories of gravity. Read the comments on this post

Unsurprisingly, IE9 won’t be supported on an obsolete OS

// March 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Internet Explorer General Manager Dean Hachamovitch all but confirmed today that the next version of Microsoft’s Web browser, Internet Explorer 9 , will not be supported on Windows XP. Hachamovitch stopped short of explicitly saying that XP would not be supported, but said that building a “modern browser” required a “modern operating system.” IE9 will be heavily dependent on hardware acceleration, courtesy of its use of Direct2D and DirectWrite; neither API is available on Windows XP. That IE9 would use these features has been known since last year’s PDC, and so the lack of XP support should come as a surprise to few. Nonetheless, there are sure to be some who will gripe that the newest browser (not likely to hit until next year at the earliest) won’t be available for a decade-old operating system. Read the comments on this post

Mac, iPod sales grow once again in February

// March 15th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Mac sales were up 43 percent year over year during the month of February, according to a note from Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster. As seen by  Apple Insider , Munster forecasts that Apple will reach somewhere between 2.8 and 2.9 million sales in the March 2010 quarter, a number slightly above most Wall Street estimates. Similarly, iPod sales saw positive growth in both January and February, with a five and 10 percent increases respectively. February marks only the second month since October of 2008 that iPod sales have seen year-over-year growth, as the sales of traditional iPod models have been steadily (and expectedly) decreasing while Apple ramps up the hype on the iPod touch. This strategy has been working, as Apple reported in a recent earnings call that it had seen 100 percent growth in iPod touch sales year over year.  With estimated iPad sales looking impressive already, it would come as no surprise if Apple saw decent overall sales numbers for the month of March.  However, whether or not the iPad will eventually pilfer sales from Apple’s portable line and cut into overall margins remains to be seen.  Read the comments on this post

Wearable computing expert now Apple "prototype scientist"

// March 15th, 2010 // No Comments » // Tech News

Apple has hired an expert in “human-computer interaction for mobile applications” to complement its research and development in mobile computing, according to a new report from Computerworld . Richard DeVaul, known for his work in the field of “wearable computing,” is Apple’s newest senior prototype scientist. DeVaul originally studied architecture, anthropology, and physics at Texas A&M before working on a masters degree in visualization science. Before finishing his masters thesis on “novel dynamics constraints approximation algorithm for computer animation applications,” DeVaul left Texas A&M to pursue an MD and later PhD degree in Media Arts and Sciences at MIT. While at MIT, he also worked as a research scientist at MIT’s famous Media Lab. DeVaul’s PhD dissertation revolved around a project called ” Memory Glasses ,” which were designed to provide the wearer with context-sensitve cues to assist in memory recall. Much of the research focused on determining how to determine context, including using GPS location and accelerometer data—something that Apple’s mobile devices can already provide. Research into how to present recall clues also showed that subtle, even subliminal information could prove useful in assisting memory—the same kind of subtle clues and interactions that are evident throughout the iPhone OS. After DeVaul finished his PhD, he spent the last six years working as the CTO and president of AWare Technologies , which he also co-founded. AWare originally focused on mobile monitoring technologies for athletic and military applications, as well as motion analysis for Olympic teams. The company later focused on adapting its technology to fitness tracking applications, including developing the StepTrak Lite activity tracking iPhone app. AWare’s FitAWare system is similar in some respects to a system that Apple recently applied to patent that generates workouts that users can use to compete with each other as a sort of game. Apple has also teamed up with Nike in the past on the Nike+ run-tracking system as well as a system to track exercise on certain gym equipment , both of which interface with iPods and some iPhones. As Apple’s senior prototype scientist, DeVaul reports directly to SVP of industrial design Jonathan Ive, ostensibly developing and building prototypes of mobile—and likely wearable—computing devices. Reportedly only seven people besides Ive and CEO Steve Jobs will even know what he is cooking up inside Apple’s research labs. DeVaul will likely explore ways to make computing devices that are ever more mobile and constantly accessible, a job that fits Apple’s direction as a mobile devices company . Read the comments on this post



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