iPhone 4S Due in September with T-Mobile, Sprint, and China Mobile Support?

May 13, 2011 - 4 Comments

iPhone 4S looks like iPhone 4

The next gen iPhone will be called “iPhone 4S” and will be released in September with an A5 dual-core CPU and improved cameras, according to an industry analyst cited by Forbes:

“According to our industry checks, the device should be called iPhone 4S and include minor cosmetic changes, better cameras, A5 dual-core processor, and HSPA+ support,”

Most of this information is nothing new, but this is the first time the device has been called “iPhone 4S” rather than iPhone 5. These claims also back up several rumors from earlier in the year that the next iPhone would be an incremental hardware upgrade and not feature any dramatic cosmetic changes.

Other interesting news out of the Forbes piece is that the iPhone will pick up some new carriers, notably Sprint and T-Mobile in the USA, in addition to the largest cell provider in the world, China Mobile.

“industry checks indicate Apple will likely announce Sprint, T-Mobile, and China Mobile as new carriers.”

Gaining access to China Mobile’s 600 million strong subscriber base could be a significant gain for Apple. China Mobile has a substantial offering of prepaid phones and SIM cards, and past reports indicate that Apple is interested in the prepaid market, although there is no certainty that these items are related.

For those wondering about LTE service in the new iPhone, the report indicates this won’t be happening this year due to issues with the required chipset. Instead, MacRumors notes that LTE likely won’t make it to the iPhone until 2012.

By Matt Chan - iPhone, News - 4 Comments

Sort top by CPU Usage to Make it More Useful

May 13, 2011 - 4 Comments

How to sort top command by CPU Use

The top command is a great way to get a quick overview of how your system is performing and how apps are using your resources. If you are unfamiliar with it, it’s basically a command line task manager like Activity Monitor and it shows processor usage, memory usage, disk activity, load average, and other helpful system resource details. A common complaint with top is that by default the apps settings don’t sort processes by CPU use, which for many of us is one of the most useful ways to detect an errant process or to keep track of system resources. Fortunately, thanks to a few easy customizations to the top command, you can quickly run top to monitor all processes from the command line and sort them by CPU use from top to bottom.

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By William Pearson - Command Line, Tips & Tricks - 4 Comments

The Perfect Apple Fan Doormat: The Slide to Unlock Mat

May 13, 2011 - 6 Comments

Slide to Unlock iOS Doormat - Black

If you’re an Apple fan and you’re looking to geek out your front porch in a fun way, grab one of these iOS inspired “Slide to Unlock” doormats for your front door! Or the back door, or the office, or anywhere, that’s OK too. It’s just like the screen you’ll find on a locked iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch, except, of course, it’s a door.

There’s a few variations of this thing snazzy doormat floating around, the two of the nicest ones are black or brown and made of natural fibers like a traditional doormat, the other is black and a bit hardier made from rubber. Like most great things online, you can get your hands on one of these great Slide to Unlock doormats right now from none other than Amazon and have it shipped to you ASAP.

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By Paul Horowitz - Fun - 6 Comments

Drag & Launch Apps from Finder Window Sidebars

May 13, 2011 - 5 Comments

Drag Apps to Finder Window Sidebar

Just like you can drag your own folders into the sidebar, you can also drags apps into Finder window sidebars for quick access.

Once apps are in the sidebar, if you click on them they will launch, which makes desktop windows serve a dual purpose as both file manager and a quick application launcher.

iOS to Gain ‘Chameleon-Like’ Reactive & Environmentally Aware Features & Screen Savers?

May 12, 2011 - 5 Comments

iPod and iOS with environmentally aware screensaver

An upcoming iteration of iOS may include further abilities to respond and react to environmental stimuli, according to a patent granted to Apple. The patent describes sensors that make a device aware of its speed, direction, temperature, and orientation on Earth, in addition to utilizing a microphone and camera to detect changes in the surrounding environment, and more importantly, adjust items on display based on these factors.

The patent was discovered by PatentlyApple, who describes the feature as “Chameleon-like” and suggests these adjustments could be geared towards fashion, of all things:

Apple’s patent covers systems, methods and computer-readable media for displaying dynamic tags or screen savers that change based on detected characteristics of the user’s environment. In particular, the patent covers dynamic tags that could serve as a fashion accessory by changing based on characteristics of the user’s environment.

PatentlyApple then elaborates on how the camera could detect colors and then adjust items on the screen accordingly:

…the electronic device could dynamically change the appearance of the tag based on the evolution of the sensor outputs. For example, if the electronic device determines from the camera that the color schemes of the user’s room have changed, the displayed tag could adjust to reflect the new detected colors.

The patent goes on to provide a description of the technology in use, describing a raindrops screensaver that adjusts its behavior based on environmental factors. The patent drawings clearly show a device that looks like an iPod nano (on a side note, this indicates that future iPod nanos may include cameras) but PatentlyApple says that other devices are clearly specified (emphasis mine):

It should be noted that while Apple’s patent illustrations are all related to a future version of an iPod nano, the fact is that the patent states that their invention will also apply to the iPhone, iPod Touch (PDA), iPad (tablet) and other devices which includes a laptop, gaming device and even medical equipment.

Can you imagine these kind of reactive features being used in future screen savers, apps, and games across Apple’s entire portable lineup? Some apps already take limited cues from things like the microphone, and many apps use the built-in accelerometers to adjust behavior on screen, but this looks like it has the potential to expand on these reactive concepts dramatically.

PatentlyApple is on a roll today, first finding a patent for futuristic virtual Apple keyboards that puff air to emulate the feel of pressing buttons, and now with this. Pretty impressive stuff, assuming Apple ever implements this technology in upcoming products.

Head on over to PatentlyApple to see more drawings and to read more about this, it’s a good read as always.

By William Pearson - iPad, iPhone, Mac, News - 5 Comments

Future of Mac & iOS Keyboards? Apple Patent Shows Virtual Keyboard with Air Feedback System

May 12, 2011 - 6 Comments

Virtual keyboard shoots air at fingers for real touch feedback

Apple has patented a very unique keyboard design that uses micro-perforations to shoot air at the users fingers upon touch, providing tactile feedback to whoever is typing. What makes this patent even more interesting is that not only could it apply to standard keyboards, but also virtual keyboards on iOS devices, as PatentlyApple elaborates:

flowing of air could also be implemented in a virtual keyboard, wherein each key location is merely a defined region on a solid surface, where contact with that surface region will generate a defined input signal.

Such virtual keyboards may have no moveable surfaces. In such configurations, notwithstanding the absence of a moveable surface, the flowing of air through apertures in the surface may be used to provide a tactile resistance to a user’s actuation motion and/or to absorb at least a portion of the actuation force.

In other words, typing on future Apple touch screens may actually provide a sensation of typing on a real keyboard, thanks to little puffs of air hitting your fingers as you touch the display. Other interesting aspects of the patent indicate that the tiny perforations could also be used to illuminate the keyboard with LED backlighting, and that the entire system could also apply to deformable, flexible keyboards and surfaces (future mouses?).

Apple patent for crazy keyboard with air holes

How amazing is this, even as a concept? One of the biggest gripes about virtual keyboards are the lack of tactile feedback, making it much harder to touch-type at any speed with much accuracy. This patent looks to be trying to solve that problem.

As always with Apple patents, don’t get your hopes up, this could be a long ways out if it ever makes an appearance at all.

Check out PatentlyApple for more schematics and analysis of the patent.

By William Pearson - iPad, iPhone, Mac, News - 6 Comments

Twitter 2.1 for Mac OS X Includes a Developer Console

May 12, 2011 - 3 Comments

Twitter 2.1 for Mac developer console

Twitter developers have a compelling new reason to update to Twitter 2.1 for Mac: the developer console!

You can enable the developer features through Preferences > Developer tab > “Show Developer Menu”. Unfortunately for tinkerers and those just looking to casually poke around, you’ll need Twitter apps API keys to actually use and access the dev console.

Other notable changes in Twitter 2.1 are some significant UI tweaks, font size adjusting, AppleScript support, the ability to spin tweets off into new windows, and of course various bug fixes. It’s a worthwhile upgrade, even if you aren’t a developer. You can download Twitter for Mac directly from the Mac App Store, it’s free.

Screenshot and tip via Twitter @rsms

By Paul Horowitz - Development, Mac OS - 3 Comments

Safari User? You Can Play Free Angry Birds From the Chrome Web Store Too

May 12, 2011 - 5 Comments

Angry Birds is free for Safari too

If you’re a Safari user, you can also play the new full featured web version of Angry Birds for free directly from your browser. This is because both Safari and Chrome are based on WebKit, which allows Chromes web store free version of Angry Birds to, theoretically at least, play on any other webkit browser.

Click to play Angry Birds in Safari (or Chrome)

Ironically, several users are noting that problems with graphics or audio in the Chrome version are resolved when playing in Safari. I tried it out and everything works fine in Safari 5, so give it a go… if you’re curious like I was, it does not work on the iPhone or iPad, because the game requires the Flash plugin for audio, otherwise it’s mostly HTML5 goodness.

Thanks to reader jm who pointed this out!

By Paul Horowitz - Games - 5 Comments

Relaunch Finder… from the Mac OS X Finder

May 12, 2011 - 5 Comments

Relaunch Finder from Mac OS X

Don’t want to dig out the Terminal or Activity Monitor to relaunch the Finder? No sweat.

Hold down Option and then right-click on the Finder icon in the Dock. You’ll now see an otherwise hidden “Relaunch” option, select it and Finder will quit and relaunch. It only takes a few seconds to reload.

Relaunching the Finder is sometimes necessary for troubleshooting reasons, but it’s also required for many Mac OS X interface tweaks to take effect, including many defaults write commands.

On the other hand, if you’re already in the Terminal with a defaults write command, maybe it’s easier to just type the standard:

killall Finder

This also causes the Finder to relaunch, as does killing it in the Activity Monitor… but if you don’t have to leave the Finder, why bother?

PS: For those wondering about the wallpaper, it’s this wood picture from my recent awesome wallpaper post.

By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 5 Comments

iPhone Stuck in Recovery Mode? Get Out Quickly with RecBoot

May 11, 2011 - 23 Comments

iPhone Stuck in Recovery Mode Escape with RecBoot

Whether you’re just trying to update iOS firmware, downgrade, or jailbreak, it’s not terribly unusual for an iPhone to get stuck in Recovery Mode. You’ll know you’re stuck because the phone displays the classic USB to iTunes logo, and iTunes gives you the Recovery Mode detected message. Sometimes you can escape just by hardbooting the phone, but if that doesn’t work you can use a tool like RecBoot.

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By Matt Chan - iPhone, Tips & Tricks - 23 Comments

Video Chatting in the Dark? Brighten Video Chat with a Blank Browser Window

May 11, 2011 - 4 Comments

white browser window to brighten a dark video chat

If you’re video chatting at night or in an area with limited lighting, you can brighten your face by opening up a blank white web browser window. This is obviously a really simple tip, but it’s kind of fun to see how surprisingly useful blank browser windows can be (like speeding up Safari on the iPhone 3G).

The simplest way to create a blank browser window is to open up about:blank which works in every modern browser.

The idea is probably taken from Photo Booth, which uses an all white screen as a virtual flash of sorts to brighten your mug when you take a picture (you can disable that by holding down the Shift key). I’m guessing it won’t be long until some developers start creating wrappers for FaceTime, iChat, and Skype to have this in some form of native app.

Not a bad tip via Lifehacker

By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 4 Comments

Download & Play Angry Birds for Free with Google Chrome

May 11, 2011 - 44 Comments

Download and play Angry Birds for free with Chrome

Sick of Angry Birds yet? Too bad, because now you can download and play Angry Birds completely for free with the Chrome web browser. This was just released at Google IO 2011, and the game should run on any OS with the Chrome browser. If you somehow avoided downloading Angry Birds, Rio, and the 56,000 other variations for Mac, iOS, Windows, Android, and whatever else, now you have no excuse to not be assimilated.

Grab the free download from the Chrome web store

You’ll need to be using the Chrome (or Safari!) web browser to download and play this. The game is practically the same although there’s an extra set of Chrome specific levels for some new gameplay. Angry Birds Chrome plays reasonably well although sound doesn’t appear to work (in Mac OS X at least) and if you have more than a few browser tabs open the gameplay gets choppy, but for a web game it’s pretty good and it does make sense to exist in a browser. Happy gaming.

By Paul Horowitz - Games - 44 Comments

Launch & Run Multiple Instances of Any Application in Mac OS X

May 11, 2011 - 15 Comments

Run Multiple Instances of Any Application in Mac OS X

You can run multiple instances of any application in Mac OS X with a little command line magic. Using the ‘open’ command to launch GUI apps from the Terminal, we can run a new instance of any app, even if it is already running.

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Run Firefox on a PowerPC Mac with TenFourFox

May 10, 2011 - 7 Comments

Run Firefox 4 on PowerPC Macs

TenFourFox is an essential web browser for any Mac OS X user that is still using a PowerPC machine. It’s a fork of Mozilla that is practically identical to Firefox 4, the only difference is that it includes support for PowerPC chips, meaning you’ll get all the CSS3 and HTML5 support that Firefox 4 comes with, and perhaps more importantly, most Firefox add-ons are supported.

The developers have a pretty funny attitude about the project, here’s part of their explanation as to why TenFourFox was created:

…we were horrified when Mozilla delivered the one-two punch of dropping both support for Tiger and our beloved Power Macs from Firefox 4. A quad 2.5GHz G5 isn’t worth using to surf the web? Really? And you guys still support Windows XP?

Sure sounds ridiculous when they put it like that, doesn’t it?

TenFourFox is completely free and has builds optimized for PowerPC G3, G4, and G5 architecture.

System requirements to run TenFourFox are a PowerPC G3, Mac OS X 10.4.11 or Mac OS X 10.5.8, 100 MB of disk space, and 256MB of RAM. Performance is apparently really fast, although they do caution that video playback will be poor on PowerPC Macs that are slower than 1.2GHz.

What are you waiting for? Breathe new life into that old Mac. Long live PowerPC!

By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 7 Comments

Ad Blockers for Chrome, Firefox, and Safari

May 10, 2011 - 19 Comments

Block Ads in Firefox, Chrome, and Safari

While some web ads are unobtrusive, others are really annoying. If you’re tired of seeing web ads, you can install adblock extensions in every major web browser and never see another ad again.

Obligatory notice: blocking ads prevents web publishers from supporting themselves, ad revenue is what pays the bills for websites like this one and countless others. Read on for responsible ad blocking tips.

Read more »

By William Pearson - Tips & Tricks, Troubleshooting - 19 Comments

iPhone Used to Find Land Mines

May 10, 2011 - 3 Comments

Finding Landmines with an iPhone

Computer scientists from Harvards School of Engineering and Applied Sciences have come up with an incredibly unique use for the iPhone; finding landmines. Actually, it’s an iPhone app, and it works by using audio signals from traditional metal detectors to create a visual image of metallic objects in the ground, making it easier for minesweepers to differentiate between a deadly landmine and a harmless piece of metal.

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By Paul Horowitz - iPhone, News - 3 Comments

Generate Random Passwords from the Command Line

May 10, 2011 - 12 Comments

Generating a random password via command line

Some of the most secure passwords you can use are those that are randomly generated. From the command line, you can randomize potential passwords in a multitude of ways, which can be used as secure passwords of generated characters.

We’ll cover several primary methods of generating random sequences and then show you how to combine commands to make the generated passwords even more random.

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By David Mendez - Command Line, Tips & Tricks - 12 Comments

How AT&T Detects Unofficial Tethering and How to Stop It by Acting Like Android

May 9, 2011 - 80 Comments

How AT&T Detects Tethering from iPhones

You probably know by now that AT&T isn’t a fan of unofficial iPhone tethering, and they are now auto-updating accounts to paid tethering plans when they detect an iPhone users unauthorized tethering activity.

How AT&T Detects Unofficial Tethering from the iPhone
So how does AT&T know you are tethering in the first place? Apparently it’s very easy to detect from iPhone users, as AndroidPolice explains:

Jailbroken iPhones typically use the same tethering technique as a standard iPhone, the one that’s already present in iOS. This method exposes tethering activity quite readily, because the iPhone, when in tethering mode, sends traffic through an alternate APN (AT&T access point/router) for the express purpose of identifying the traffic as tethered data. This makes it extremely easy for AT&T to identify whether or not an iOS device is utilizing tethering, and just how much of their data is consumed via tethering.

In other words, AT&T simply looks at who is using tethered data through these APN’s, and then they cross-check these user accounts to see if they’re paying for a tethering plan. It’s that simple.

Read more »

By Paul Horowitz - iPhone, News - 80 Comments

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