Monday, January 11, 2010

Rumor Has It: Multi-touch in the iWorks for Apple Tablet

Rumor Has It: Multi-touch in the iWorks for Apple Tablet: "

The New York Times reporting on tablets at CES offers up a tantalizing rumor concerning Apple’s imminent device, that the company has been developing a multi-touch version of iWork.


According to the New York Times, conversations with former engineers at Apple indicate pervasive use of multi-touch technology for the tablet that will require a “complex new vocabulary of finger gestures.” For example, opening an application might mean swiping downward and rotating multiple fingers—ouch. Considering the number of functions one performs with a mouse or trackpad and Mac, the potential for confusion—not to mention a new class of ergonomic injuries—makes you have to wonder how this will work.


The answer to that is FingerWorks. The company manufactured several keyboard and touchpad devices incorporating gestures before being acquired by Apple, including a membrane keyboard that allowed multi-touch input over its entire surface. That’s important because the New York Times spoke with another former Apple employee, one who said the company has “spent the past couple of years working on a multi-touch version of iWork.”


If this rumor is true, it would seem that Apple not only thinks differently, but is actively engaged in making that vision a reality, rather than waiting on third-party developers. If this rumor is true, and that “if” is huge, then the world of personal computing may be about to undergo a paradigm shift not seen since the GUI replaced the command line.




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iPhone Touchscreen Bests Nexus One, Droid in Accuracy Tests [Comparison Shopping]

iPhone Touchscreen Bests Nexus One, Droid in Accuracy Tests [Comparison Shopping]: "

Product development firm Moto Development Group tested the touchscreens of four popular cellphones—the iPhone, Motorola Droid, Nexus One, and Droid Eris—to determine which had the best performing touchscreen. At the end of the day, the iPhone came out on top.

Although we usually use sophisticated tools to test touch screen accuracy, MOTO has also developed a simple technique anyone can use to evaluate the resolution and accuracy of a touchscreen device. All you need is a basic drawing program (download one if necessary), a steady hand, and a few straight lines drawn very slowly on the screen.

On inferior touchscreens, it's basically impossible to draw straight lines. Instead, the lines look jagged or zig-zag, no matter how slowly you go, because the sensor size is too big, the touch-sampling rate is too low, and/or the algorithms that convert gestures into images are too non-linear to faithfully represent user inputs.

As more great smartphones continue to roll out on more networks, a lot of people are looking to upgrade—and while touchscreen performance is far from the only measure of a smartphone, it's certainly an important part—especially for those smartphones without hardware keyboards. For a more money-focused comparison, check out BillShrink's cost and feature comparison to get up to speed on various features and costs. Moto's test is unscientific, to be sure, so if you put your own phone through their test, let's hear how your results compare in the comments.






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What iPhone 4.0 Needs: Multitasking and Tools To Monitor Battery Used by iPhone Apps

What iPhone 4.0 Needs: Multitasking and Tools To Monitor Battery Used by iPhone Apps: "The arrival of the Nexus One and the subsequent buzz it has generated has got the iPhone users debating once again on the merits and demerits of their own phone. One of the biggest demands that the iPhone users have had is the ability to multitask. This has been one..."

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Dear Apple: What we want to see for iPhone 4.0, part 1

Dear Apple: What we want to see for iPhone 4.0, part 1: "

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A week ago we asked you, the TUAW reader, to help us tell Apple what you want in the next iPhone: the OS, the apps, the hardware. Within two hours, I had over two hundred emails in my inbox. Within four days, the email total topped 1,100. As I was shifting and sorting through all your suggestions, one thing became clear: you love the iPhone, but you want to see it better, more intuitive, and more versatile - and you know how the iPhone can accomplish those goals.




This is the first of a series of letters to Apple on your behalf, telling the gang in Cupertino what would make their wonder-phone even more wondrous. This letter strictly focuses on the iPhone OS in general - the home screen, navigation, and settings. Future letters will deal with hardware and applications.



There were so many suggestions, I needed to whittle them down. To do that, I tabulated how many times a feature request was made. If more than 50% of you mentioned it, it made it into the letter. If you guys want to see the others (most were one-offs or had less that 15% of you requesting it), perhaps I'll add an extra letter onto the series at the end of its run.







Remember, if you made suggestions about any of Apple's built-in apps (Mail, Maps, Stocks, Calendar, etc) or hardware, you won't see those here, but in an upcoming letter dealing specifically with those areas.



I hope Apple is listening, because the readers of TUAW have spoken, and this is what they have to say:



Dear Apple,




While it's clear the iPhone is the best smartphone on the market right now, you have a lot of
competition creeping up. We want to help you blow them out of the water with the iPhone OS 4.0. Here are our suggestions:



1. The lock screen needs to change.



90% of us want a new lock screen. We think the current screen that only shows the date and time, and only the most recent missed call or SMS, is not particularly helpful. If you get a text message, then a calendar alert, and then a push notification, the only one you see is the push notification message. Being able to swipe through them or have a table list would be far more useful. But even then, we still have to enter our four-digit unlock code to see if we've received any new emails. From the new lock screen we want to see all the calls we've missed and the number of new emails and texts we have. We want to see which apps have sent us push notifications, and what appointments are coming up. We want a brief overview of all the new data we've received to be presented to us before we have to enter our unlock code.



Let's extend the features of that new lock screen to ...



2. A new home screen. The iPhone is the smartest phone on the market. Make is smarter. Introduce a location-aware home screen.



Over 90% of us also want a new home screen - and we want it location aware. Let's say we live in London, but travel to continental Europe many times a month. We'd love to turn on our iPhones in the country we just landed in and see the local weather, currency, transit maps, and news displayed right on our home screens. Not only would it save us time and money, it would save something just as valuable to an iPhone owner - battery life. If all these things were displayed on the home screen the first time you turn on your phone, you wouldn't have to open five different applications to get what you want.



Imagine a 'Genius Location' feature as well: the iPhone would show you (through an app like Yelp - or a new Apple-branded app) what restaurants or businesses are around based on your 'likes' in your home town. We know you were granted a 'Transitional Data Sets' patent for a location-based home screen back in February 2008 - let's hope this sees the light of day in iPhone OS 4.0.






3. That new home screen? Let us access it by vertically swiping.




Imagine this: no matter what home screen page you're on, if you swipe up you are presented with a 'feeds screen' that works much like an RSS page. This feeds screen could be set based on in-app preferences so we could fully customize it. Ours might show our latest Facebook posts, last five emails received, our To Do notes, our Mint.com balance, missed calls, text messages, and upcoming iCal events. The guys at teehan+lax have a pretty cool mock-up of this feeds screen, but the killer feature would be how you could access it from any app page - by vertically swiping.



4. Overhaul app navigation.



85% of us think it takes too long to swipe through all our pages of apps. Even though iTunes 9 made a step in the right direction by allowing the user to organize apps and home screen pages visually, there has got to be a better way. Swiping through ten screens to get to the last apps page is tedious.



Wouldn't it be cool if you could press the home button and see all the home pages on one screen? The guys at Ocean Observations think so. Check out this concept video of what this feature would look like (their 'Cover Flow Multitasking' concept is quite cool as well). Don't want to do it their way? Give us stacks, give us folders, give us App Store-like category views. Just give us something that makes it easier to get around our deluge of apps.



5. 85% of us want multitasking and 3rd party background apps (but not at the cost of battery life).



There's not much more to say on this matter, but Palm does it, and if you can find a way around their battery drain, we want it!



6. Almost 80% of us want Flash, even if it's a bad idea.



No, not camera flash (we do, but that's for the next letter). We want Adobe's Flash Player, though Flash on the Mac is a giant performance and stability headache. Get your heads together with Adobe and make it happen (and fix the Mac version while you're about it, please).



7. We love that you introduced landscape mode across virtually all apps in iPhone OS 3.0, but 70% of us want the ability to selectively turn it off.



Give us a setting to switch off the automatic 'turn to landscape mode' when the device is turning. Why? When we lay in bed on our side we can't read our mail. The app is always turning and that's really annoying. A system-wide 'ignore orientation' switch would be a good start; app-by-app options would be better.



8. When we leave an app, we want it to remember where we were.



If we click on a link in an app that takes us to Safari or if we switch apps to copy/paste, 70% of us want the app to remember where we were in it when we come back to it. Some apps do this, some don't. Make this an OS-level feature so they all do it.




9. 65% of us want the ability to remove Apple-branded apps.



That Stocks app? Cute, but the Yahoo! Finance [iTunes] app is so much better. We don't need both on our phones.



10. 60% of us want a universal 'documents' folder.



We want one location, accessible to all apps, to store documents on the iPhone. Whether we need to send that PDF via IM through Nimbuzz or via email through the built-in Mail app, it's no problem. Either one can do it because the docs are all stored in one place, accessible to all apps. (We realize this breaks the sandboxing model that prevents one app from blowing away data belonging to another one, but we have every confidence you can make it work.)



11. Better Support for Codecs and Add-ons.



It's not just Flash, you know. WMV and AVI still rule on lots of sites. Let us see them (60%).



12. The iPhone is a hard drive with a screen, so....



Give us Disk mode in the OS. 50% of us want to use our iPhone as an external USB/Wi-Fi hard drive.



FYI, Apple, this is just the start. We've got so many more thoughts to share with you about the next iPhone's hardware and apps. So get ready, and thanks for listening. You'll soon be hearing from us again.



Sincerely,



The loyal readers and iPhone owners of TUAW.


TUAW Readers: The next letter will be published one week from today on Sunday 1/17. We'll be telling Apple what we want from the next iPhone's hardware. Want a different enclosure? Camera flash? RFID? OLED? Email me at tuawiphone [at] me dot com (by mid-day, Friday, January 15th at the latest)!



A big thanks to the 1100+ of you who contributed to this article. iPhone homepage sketch by reader 'Fab.'

TUAWDear Apple: What we want to see for iPhone 4.0, part 1 originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 10 Jan 2010 21:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Thursday, January 7, 2010

Light Blue Optics' Light Touch turns any surface into a color touchscreen display (video hands-on)

Light Blue Optics' Light Touch turns any surface into a color touchscreen display (video hands-on): "


Ever heard of a small company called Light Blue Optics? Probably not. But it's companies like LBO that make events like CES truly worthwhile. Tucked away in a small suite overshadowed by the million dollar spreads owned by industry giants like Samsung and Sony is a tiny startup looking to attract the attention of OEMs with its full-color holographic laser projection technology. The Windows CE-powered Light Touch represents the company's very first effort to create an interactive projector that allows users to interact with the displayed image as they would a modern touchscreen display. Despite our skepticism, we came away suitably surprised -- impressed even. Granted, our hands-on was performed in a lowly-lit room on par with the lighting you might find in a fine restaurant. Still, the 15 lumens were effective at lighting videos and the touch sensitivity was far more accurate than we expected -- so good that we were quickly typing out phrases on the QWERTY with few mistakes (admittedly taking a reasonable amount of care to strike the right 'key'). The projector only supports single-touch at the moment though multi-touch is just a software tweak away. See the video after the break and prepare to be suitably amazed at watching a laser projector create a touchscreen display.

Continue reading Light Blue Optics' Light Touch turns any surface into a color touchscreen display (video hands-on)

Light Blue Optics' Light Touch turns any surface into a color touchscreen display (video hands-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Jan 2010 08:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, January 4, 2010

iSlate specs "revealed." We also have a bridge to sell you.

iSlate specs "revealed." We also have a bridge to sell you.: "

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We are publishing this purely for the sake of community interest. PhoneArena.com has published photos of 'internal Apple documents' that claim to list the specifications of the impending Apple iSlate. The two-page document 'reveals' that the iSlate will run 'Mac OS X Clouded Leopard' on a 7.1-inch multitouch display with fingerprint-resistant coating, 2.26GHz Core 2 Duo processor, 2GB DDR3 RAM, 120GB hard drive, and... a built-in projector.



PhoneArena admits they don't know if the document is real or not, but I'll tell you the top two reasons why it's a fake:

  1. The document is still up. If it were real, Apple legal would be on them like a bear on honey.

  2. After just refining OS X 10.5 'Leopard' with 10.6 'Snow Leopard', Apple is not going to confuse customers with another OS X called 'Clouded Leopard'


Read over the document yourself. What do you guys and gals think of the specs? Are the documents fake, really fake, or really really fake? Tell us in the comments!





TUAWiSlate specs 'revealed.' We also have a bridge to sell you. originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 07:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Upcoming Tech in 2010

hey Gang

It's 2010 and there is a lot of buzz out there about tech. Will google launch a phone? Will Apple FINALLY release a tablet, and how will it WOW us? Check out www.mactastictv.wordpress.com cause i update that with all kind of tech news daily. CES is this week, so it should be an amazing week in the area of tech news.

WHY ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT THIS BOB?

1. I love tech
2. Tech is the future. You want to know how to reach more people for Christ, then we need to know the cutting edge things that will make us more productive, relevant, and wicked cool.

That's my stance, what's yours?