Author: Jeff Morgan (Page 48 of 168)

AT&T blocks employee vacation days in June

iPhone 4G shot from Gizmodo.This news came out a few days back but without much substance I didn’t want to get overly excited. Now that the iPhone 4G has leaked, though, it seems appropriate to share that AT&T has blocked employee vacation requests for the month of June. You can bet that’s for the iPhone 4G release.

Historically speaking, AT&T has only ever blocked vacation days to support the extra traffic associated with an iPhone launch. There is really no other reason (c’mon, who’s actually excited about AT&T as a carrier). Come mid-June you can bet I’ll be seriously considering selling my current 3GS to pick up the 4G. Then again, AT&T hasn’t released those ridiculous rules for upgrading to the newest iPhone model so who knows, I just might get screwed. Wouldn’t be the first time, though, right?

Source: BGR

Apple’s iPhone 4G leaked

iPhone 4GIt’s amazing how one little mistake can seemingly shake up the entire world. Gray Powell, a software engineer at Apple, was out at a bar, testing what looked on the surface like any other iPhone 3GS. Even up close it was tough to tell that the shape of the 3GS was actually a case disguising a much more stylish, sleeker version of the iPhone – the iPhone 4G (this is not the official name, not yet anyway). Unfortunately, Powell left the iPhone behind when he left the bar, and because people are the way they are, someone took it home, realized he was holding the next generation of the world’s favorite smartphone, and likely sold the right to return the device to Apple to Gizmodo, which was kind enough to post pictures and leak what specs it could prior to the device’s eventual voyage home.

Enough of the story, though, and on with the phone. The new iPhone looks great. I was always a little underwhelmed by the shape and design of the previous iPhone models, including the 3GS. Something about them seems too forward thinking – they’re almost so futuristic they look retro. This new phone hits my industrial nerve and hits it hard. It’s slightly thinner than the current iPhone and lays flat instead of the current curved back. There’s a new camera on the back with a bigger lens and a flash, and the volume button is now two small, round buttons on the side. The front of the phone sports a front-facing video camera for video chat and the top has what looks to be a secondary microphone for noise cancellation. All said and done, this is what I wish the iPhone looked like now, and I’m going to struggle not to buy one when it launches.

There is sadly very little information about the OS. Shortly after the phone was reported missing, Apple remotely disabled the device via the MobileMe function, and because device firmware is model-specific, there was no way to restore the bricked handset. Gizmodo did peel the phone apart to reveal Apple stamped internals, which suggests we’re pretty close to launch, and a slightly larger capacity battery. The screen also appears to be slightly smaller but perhaps runs at a higher resolution than the current 3GS.

You can find full exclusive photo galleries at Gizmodo.

Even Mark Zuckerberg had to start somewhere

Zuckerberg's early coding.I saw this post at TechCrunch and just had to pass it along. I often wonder where people like Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg get their start. Were they just born to be badass coders or was their some kind of natural progression toward their newfound demigod status. It turns out the second is true, for Zuckerberg at least.

A TechCrunch reader who was also one of Zuckerberg’s classmates at Exeter offered up a site that Mark had written back in 2001 when he was just 16 years old. It’s…terrible. Awful. Even in 2001 it would have been way behind its time.

Check out the full post over on TechCrunch.

Palm SVP to leave, others incentivized to stay

Michael Abbott giving a presentation.Everyone knows that Palm is a sinking ship. Even Palm’s employees know it. A recent SEC filing shows us that Palm’s senior vice president of software and services, Michael Abbott, will be leaving the company some time this month. That same filing also showed some, ah, generous incentives aimed at keeping others from following suit.

Just how badly does Palm want to keep the other Senior VPs? How about a bunch of stock and a $250,000 cash bonus. If that’s not hitting the panic button I really don’t know what is. It’s probably safe to assume that Abbott was made some sort of offer to stick around, something he was willing to turn down to take all of his WebOS ingenuity elsewhere. You have to feel bad for the guy. He was an integral part of what is actually a great product (the OS, not the handsets that run the OS) but because of a serious marketing failure and some lackluster hardware Palm just never got off the ground.

Better luck at the new position, Mike.

Source: Palm

Apple bans cartoon app for satire, begs for resubmission

Smarty Bombsalot.Mark Fiore may be a Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist, but Apple didn’t want him. That is, until the world blew up at his iPad app rejection. Fiore submitted “NewsToons,” an app full of his illustrations (and commentary, of course) about the world’s events. Because it contains material of a satiric nature and, “ridicules public figures,” Apple wouldn’t have him.

Obviously this has to change. Some of the best political commentary in the world is satire. Sorry pundits, you don’t always get it right, and you usually get it with just as much bias as any comedian or cartoonist and often a lot less honesty. I don’t know how Apple expects its media platform to succeed of even be taken seriously while ruling out what has become the common language of 21st century mankind: irony.

I checked my mail today to find a package from my mother including Hunter S. Thompson’s Kingdom of Fear. I know I’ve said before that I don’t really like ebooks, but what if I wanted to read this on the iPad. What about Vonnegut’s Man Without a Country? Are these things permissible because they’ve been published by someone other than Apple so Apple doesn’t get the lawsuit if a public figure catches wind?

Whatever the reasons, Apple’s got to change. I can understand keeping control of the software and hardware functions of the device, but controlling the content consumption through arbitrary censorship? C’mon guys, how dumb do you think we are?

Source: Nieman Lab

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