• The Revolutionary iPhone Shuffle

    Parody, off-course :D

    Apple never stops innovating, and just three weeks after they introduce the iPhone, Apple tops itself by introducing the iPhone shuffle!
    the iPhone Shuffle

    via Digg
    [tags] iPhone, Shuffle, iPod, Apple, Digg, links, fun, humor[/tags]

     
  • Searches for iPhone already beat the iPod

    From Techmeme we find an interesting article that shows us the graphs of iPod vs iPhone searches on the American Online market.

    As you can see for yourself, ipodvsiphone, iPhone searches started as early as August 2006 but were close to nothing; same in September, October, November. December started to spread some more rumors, but still an insignifiant number of searches compared to the ones for the iPod. However… January came and with it a HUGE peak in internet searches.

    The lean guys from weblogs.hitwise.com also give us the list of the sites receiving all this huge traffic. On the first position, off course, Apple Computer, followed by Apple iPhone Blog – now that’s a lucky site owner. Surprinsingly, MySpace is on the fifth position, tightly behind Engadget – I say surprisingly, since after all Engadget IS the most trustful ressource for everything gadget related.

    Hmm… quite interesting, ain’t it? We’ll just see what the future brings, and whether the search in interest for the iPhone is more than just a temporary fashion. I guess we’ll have to wait until August for this…

     
  • The unlikely iPhone Accessories

    iPhone accessories

    via JoyOfTech

     
  • iPhone runs Leopard?

    Via TUAW (the unofficial Apple Blog) we hear that Andi Ihnatko from Chicago Sun Times has been playing a bit with the real iPhone. Here are, briefly, some of his insights:
    1. the touchscreen works great, but it’s skin-sensitive: won’t work with gloves, nor with screen protectors.
    2. the virtual keyboard seems to work great, despite what some critics would expect:

    After 30 seconds, I was already typing faster with the iPhone than I ever have with any other phone. I suspect that true e-mail demons will need to adapt to the lack of tactile feedback, though.

    3. the iPhone software will be most probably be available on iTunes, and only Apple partner developers will be allowed to create it. This is directly answering everyone’s questions. (though not all of them – I’m still curious if iPhone Widgets will be installable from the net)
    4. the iPhone widgets are NOT Dashboard Widgets, though they have some part in common.
    5. the OS is the stripped-down Leopard (OSX 10.5), and the cool animation effects we’ve seen on the keynote are made via Core Animation.
    6. no Flash plugin for now. Damn!

     
  • How will the iPhone software apps work

    Colin, a student blogger passionate about Mac development, has written an impressive and insightful article about the architecture of the Cocoa software that runs on the iPhone.
    While all of his theories are just that – theories,(since Apple has not disclosed so far any details about iPhone software programming), they are still very well-conceived. Basically, Colin’s remarks make a lot of sense:

    - there are no “Windows”, only full-screen “Views”, and whenever you switch the app you actually commute the view; something similar happens with the Pocket PC
    - the GUI library is a stripped-down version of Cocoa – no scroll-bars, since they’d take up vital screen space, full-width horizontal toolbars.
    - the Cocoa controls are themed with big bold fonts and lighter colors

    The Screen is another thing to take into consideration. Clearly whoever is using the iPhone can switch the view from portrait to landscape at anytime so your app needs to take advantage of that. Im guessing here 1 of 2 things happens

    Colin does something even more exciting: he mocks-up an iPhone simple app, trying to figure out how things might look and the ways we could develop them.

    All in all, a very exciting article. Now all we have to do is:
    1. wait for the iPhone to come out
    2. wait for some brilliant hacker to manage to install custom-made apps on the iPhone
    3. wait for some (other) hacker to put together some development tools for the iPhone.

    The sad part, off course, is that it should have been Steve’s Job (Pun intended) to open up the platform and the 2 and 3 points as well. Sadly, this is not the case…

     
  • Steve Balmer laughs at the iPhone

    Steve Balmer, Microsoft CEO, and his reaction to the iPhone. I guess we’ll see who’ll be laughing once the iPhone is available. In the meantime, the LG Prada seems to laugh harder :P

    via cybersurge

     
  • 50% profit for the iPhone?

    According to Gizmodo, analysts have speculated that each of the shiny iPhones will generate nearly 50% gross margin.

    “iSuppli estimates the 4Gbyte version of the Apple iPhone will carry a $229.85 hardware BoM and manufacturing cost and a $245.83 total expense, yielding a 50.7 percent margin on each unit sold at the $499 retail price,” said Andrew Rassweiler, teardown services manager and senior analyst for iSuppli. “Meanwhile, the 8GByte Apple iPhone will sport a $264.85 hardware cost and a $280.83 total expense, amounting to a 53.1 percent margin at the $599 retail price.”

    Off course, nobody even looks at the huge costs of R&D, the pattents, the marketing, the design, the sales force. I’d say their real margin is around 30% and will grow up as the sales rise.

     
  • An even better multitouch phone coming soon nearby

    According to this blog , Jeff Han, the inventor of the multitouch screen that everyone raved at during February 2006 has in fact turned down Apple’s offer. His plans? To turn his new company, Perceptive Pixel, into a major player. It seems that Apple’s iPhone multitouch is in fact based on the technology from Synaptics.

    Han’s technology seems to be the basis for LG’s PRADA phone which is coming in fast steps, and although iPhone has the buzz right now, I guess the PRADA is going to be a major success; smaller, maybe more feminine, less gadgety and the first to hit European stores.

    Read the rest of this entry »

     
  • iPhone history

    The iPhone has been kept a secret for over 2 year. No wonder so many rumors have been spread all around the net. The guys from Everything iPhone have gathered together some of the most impressive fake iPhone prototypes.

    Some more pictures after the fold, or directly at the link above.

    Read the rest of this entry »

     
  • iPhone – reinventing email as well…

    I simply love how they took email and made it absolutely lovely. And usable.

     
  • Apple keynote collection

    From Lifehacker we heard about one of the coolest torrents around: apparently you can find the complete archive of Steve Jobs keynotes ever since his return to Apple.
    Maybe not as exciting as an action flick, but a nice piece of history to have around. After all…

    It’s worth downloading just to see how much Apple has changed and/or innovated in one decade.

    Here is the direct link to pirate bay’s page. And, please, people, if you donwload it, then seed it as well…:)