Category: News (Page 106 of 130)

Snow Leopard In The Wild

Mac OS X 10.6 install disc.According to Engadget, a Japanese reader sent this pic of the install disc that came with said reader’s new Mac Mini. Notice anything strange? Yup, that’s OS 10.6, version 1.0, aka Snow Leopard.

As always, the disc could be a fake, but it’s quite possibly the lamest thing to fake on the planet. So you got that under-the-hood update a week before everyone else. Neat. You do have to wonder, though, how did Apple let this one slip out? If it wasn’t a slip, we would have seen pictures from other recent purchases, no doubt. Then again, it could be that all the people who care about this sort of thing wouldn’t buy a computer the week before a new OS is set to release.

Either way, the pic probably, most likely, near definitely adds credence to the rumored August 28th ship date for the new operating system.

What’s Really Going On With Apple And Google Voice

GV Mobile for the iPhone.TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington has been one of the most prominent industry voices against Apple’s rejection of the Google Voice app. He was so miffed, in fact, that he gave up his iPhone for a myTouch 3G to be a part of initial GV Mobile testing. The FCC has since started to investigate the situation with regard to market competition and sent Apple backtracking. It’s become pretty clear over the past couple days that Apple acted alone in denying the app, and that no one, not even the FCC, is happy with their (Apple’s) decision.

Back to Arrington. He’s put together the best comprehensive analysis of the proceedings I’ve seen in the past few days. I’ve always kept an ear to the wall where Mr. Arrington decides to voice an opinion, and he has what might be some promising news for iPhone owners.

Here’s what you need to know. Several sources within Google confirmed to TechCrunch that it was indeed Apple who rejected the app – not AT&T and certainly not Google. Apple now denies ever rejecting the app, suggesting instead that it’s still under review because it could possibly take over for the iPhone’s native features, a claim that appears to be patently false.

The outcome? Arrington believes, for what seems to me good reason, that we’ll see the app pushed through in short order. Apple has been scrambling lately to revamp their approval process, making concessions for apps that have been previously denied. They’re also citing reasons for denial that are simply untrue or easily disproved. According to Arrington, that all points to approval. In his words:

Here’s what we believe Apple is preparing to do next. Their statement that they haven’t rejected the app, along with the long laundry list of complaints (none of which are true) tells us that they’re backtracking, and fast. Sometime soon, we guess, Apple will simply accept the Google Voice application. They have to – any serious investigation into the app by the FCC will show that the complaints around the app are unfounded and that it does none of the things Apple accuses it of doing. So Apple will save face by simply asking Google to ensure that the App doesn’t take over native phone, sms and other functions, and doesn’t sync the contacts to Google’s servers. Google will comply (they already have), and Apple will graciously accept the application.

That would certainly be a win for consumers, though it might be too late to win someone like Arrington back. He’s already fallen in love with Google Voice on Android. With such a ridiculous approval process and the fact that it took federal involvement to get the thing going, I can understand the angst. Unfortunately, I didn’t found TechCrunch, so no one asks me to help roll out the early iterations of what could be the best thing to happen to phones since the cell tower.

Apple To Ship Snow Leopard By August 28th

Snow Leopard Disc.There have been rumors for some time that Apple might be letting Snow Leopard out of the cage (sorry, had to) before September. Whether it’s a mistake or not, it looks like the UK Apple Store is confirming that rumor with a posted August 28th ship date.

That could mean the item ships on the 28th with delayed postage so you don’t get it until September, but that seems a little unlikely. It looks like you may see Snow Leopard on your porch as early as next weekend. A couple Engadget tipsters also pointed out that the US up-to-date program has a confirmed ship date of August 28th, despite the posted September ship date.

As you’ll probably recall, Snow Leopard is more a behind-the-scenes update than anything else, bringing all core apps up to 64-bit performance and adding that nifty three- and four-finger gesture functionality to pre-unibody Macbooks. My girlfriend is going to be so…oh wait, no. She doesn’t care at all.

Jobs Wanted A Secret Ban On Cross Hiring With Palm

Steve Jobs looking a little naughty.A couple years back, just after the launch of the iPhone, Steve Jobs was looking for any way to keep his product development team from leaving for greener pastures, including some methods that may have been illegal.

According to Bloomberg, Jobs sent an email to then Palm CEO Ed Colligan, proposing a deal in which the two companies wouldn’t hire one another’s employees. At the time, Colligan claimed Jobs and Apple had already poached 2% of Palm’s workforce to get the iPhone off the ground. Colligan was, as you might imagine, none too happy to consider a deal between his company and Apple. In an email to Jobs regarding the proposal, Colligan had this to say: “Your proposal that we agree that neither company will hire the other’s employees, regardless of the individual’s desires, is not only wrong, it is likely illegal.”

This should definitely be of interest to the Department of Justice, which has been investigating hiring collusion among tech companies for some time. Unfortunately, this probably won’t turn into good things for consumers, just a bunch of behind the scenes wrist-slapping that won’t make much of a difference.

Windows 7 To Cost Half As Much For The Brits

Windows 7 Home Premium.I don’t know what it is about the past few days, but it seems like Microsoft is just trying to piss off consumers. First we heard about the 54.2% failure rate on the Xbox 360. Next, they decide to stop shipping HDMI cables with the elite version of the 360. Today, Microsoft’s malice extends outside the realm of video games.

Apparently Windows 7 Home Premium, yes the full version, will be going for just £65 in the UK, which is around $107 dollars. The same version in the US is $200. Hell, the upgrade version in the US is $120. This all has to do with Microsoft killing the “7 E” version of the new operating system and matching the original price. The price is supposedly indefinite, though some sources suggest it may get hiked just after Christmas this year. I’d definitely pre-order one before then.

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