Showing posts with label iPad Mini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPad Mini. Show all posts

What Do iOS 8 And The New iPhones Mean For You?

Well, Apple’s new operating system (iOS 8) and iPhones (6 and 6 Plus) are officially out. What does the OS update mean for you? Should you get one of the new phones? We’ll try to help you answer those questions throughout the course of this article.

What do you think of the new devices? The new OS? .


First things first. Here’s what iOS 8 looks like.
Just kidding. If you don’t want to, you don’t even have to keep the new U2 album in your iTunes library
If you found it, and were less than thrilled, just know that was Apple and the band being “punk rock” and “disruptive”.

Okay, let’s move along. iOS 8

Apple calls the new version the biggest iOS release ever. It features major updates to apps like Messages and Photos, new content sharing capabilities, and new connections between apps and devices.
“Quickly find and edit the photos you take,” Apple says of the release. “Add your voice right in a text message. Let your health and fitness apps communicate with each other, with your trainer, and even with your doctor. We’ve also provided developers with deeper access and more tools. You’ll have new keyboard options and even more ways to share your content. And you’ll be able to use iCloud and Touch ID in ways you never have before.”
The new Photos app has new search features and smart albums that take care of your photo organization, makes your shots look better, and has new editing tools.


Messages lets you tap to record and send voice or video message. You can also share your location easily.


The iOS 8 interface gives you a new way to respond to notifications as well as shortcuts for those you talk to most. There are also new Mail management features.


The virtual keyboard adds contextual word suggestions as you type, even recognizing who you’re typing to and whether you’re in Mail or Messages.


There’s a Family Sharing feature that lets up to six people in your household share each other’s purchases from iTunes, iBooks, and the App Store. It lets families keep up with each other’s photos, calendars, and locations, as well.


iCloud Drive lets you work on any file from any device, and the OS connects with Macs in a deeper way than was previously possible. You can start an email on one device, for example, and continue it on another. You can even answer phone calls from your iPhone on your Mac or iPad, and send SMS messages from any of these devices.



Also included is an activity tracker, heart rate monitor, and other health and fitness apps that communicate with each other.


For developers, the iOS 8 SDK has over 4,000 new APIs, and includes new sharing options, widgets, custom actions and document APIs.
iOS 8 became available on Wednesday, and is available for iPhone 4s, iPhone 5, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, iPod touch 5th generation, iPad 2, iPad with Retina display, iPad Air, iPad mini, and iPad mini with Retina display.
iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus became available on Friday, but even before that, the the reviews from the tech blogs were overwhelmingly positive.


The iPhone 6 is a “thin, sexy phone with a killer camera,” says noted tech journalist David Pogue.
The device is “the best smartphone you can buy,” according to Walt Mossberg at Re/code.
“The iPhone 6 is a great upgrade for current iPhone owners, or for anyone, really. It manages to provide a much larger display in a phone that’s still small enough to handle easily,’ he writes.
The sentiments are echoed throughout the…echo chamber. Most have just about the same amount of praise for the iPhone 6 Plus, but some do find it to be just too big.
John Gruber, who is perhaps the most well-known blogger of all things Apple, says, “If you simply want a bigger iPhone, get the 4.7-inch iPhone 6. That’s what it feels like: a bigger iPhone. If you want something bigger than an iPhone, get the 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus. It feels more like a new device — a hybrid device class that is bigger than an iPhone but smaller than an iPad Mini — than it feels like a bigger iPhone.”
He adds, “If you don’t want a bigger iPhone — and in recent weeks I’ve heard from numerous readers who still pine for the 3.5-inch display iPhones — you might be disappointed by this year’s iPhone lineup, and should consider sticking with the iPhone 5-class models.”
Read Gruber’s take for probably the most comprehensive review of the devices out there so far.
But all of that was from the media. What do average people think about the devices? Well, here’s a real-time feed of the iPhone conversation on Twitter, so see for yourself:
In light of recent celebrity photo leaks, the security of Apple devices has come into question, which is probably why Tim Cook wrote a letter for the company’s website addressing security and privacy concerns. Here are a couple of excerpts from that:
Security and privacy are fundamental to the design of all our hardware, software, and services, including iCloud and new services like Apple Pay. And we continue to make improvements. Two-step verification, which we encourage all our customers to use, in addition to protecting your Apple ID account information, now also protects all of the data you store and keep up to date with iCloud.
We believe in telling you up front exactly what’s going to happen to your personal information and asking for your permission before you share it with us. And if you change your mind later, we make it easy to stop sharing with us. Every Apple product is designed around those principles. When we do ask to use your data, it’s to provide you with a better user experience.
Our business model is very straightforward: We sell great products. We don’t build a profile based on your email content or web browsing habits to sell to advertisers. We don’t “monetize” the information you store on your iPhone or in iCloud. And we don’t read your email or your messages to get information to market to you. Our software and services are designed to make our devices better. Plain and simple.
One very small part of our business does serve advertisers, and that’s iAd. We built an advertising network because some app developers depend on that business model, and we want to support them as well as a free iTunes Radio service. iAd sticks to the same privacy policy that applies to every other Apple product. It doesn’t get data from Health and HomeKit, Maps, Siri, iMessage, your call history, or any iCloud service like Contacts or Mail, and you can always just opt out altogether.
Cook also makes it a point to note that Apple has never worked with a government agency from any country to create a backdoor in any of its products or services, and has never allowed access to services (and “never will”).
The NFC feature of the new iPhone models only support Apple Pay, which is the company’s new payment mechanism for users to pay for good and services in the physical world (as well as online). Still, the company already has 220,000 retail locations on board for that.
In case you’re wondering how the phones stack up against their Android counterparts, here’s a comparison with the Samsung Galaxy S5.
Oh, and don’t forget, if you get an iPhone, you’ll be able to use that Apple Watch when it comes out.
keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I'll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the high Tech RoadShow inventions of today.Enhanced by Zemanta
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LG Display iPad mini Retina to Challenge With 8-Inch G Pad Slate

Apple partner LG may soon challenge the company’s rumored iPad mini with Retina Display that is widely believed to be coming this fall with its own 8.3-inch G Pad tablet featuring a high resolution display and quad-core graphics. Choosing to go with an 8-inch tablet model may alow LG to command more premium pricing as there is now a downward pricing trend for 7-inch slates thanks to more affordable $199 models from Amazon and the recently unveiled $229 Nexus 7 from Google. The 8-inch market is largely occupied recently by Apple’s iPad mini, the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0, and the Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.0.

A report on Greek blog TechBlog suggests that the 8.3-inch LG G Pad will have the same 1920 X 1200-pixel resolution display as the Asus-made Google Nexus 7 tablet. The device will also feature the same slim side bezels as the Nexus 7, Galaxy Tab 8.0, and the iPad mini.

The backside of the tablet is said to be made of aluminum to give the slate a premium feel, something that is embodied by Apple but is missing on recent tablets introduced from Google and Samsung.

Additionally a quad-core processor and 2 GB of RAM are said to be on tap for the G Pad, which could debut as early as next month at the Berlin-based IFA show.


As shown, LG’s Optimus Pad LTE



One of the key features with the larger 8-inch display is that it’s still portable. According to Phone Arena, the tablet’s portability is highlighted by the fact that it is still thin and slim enough to fit into the back pocket of pants.

And lastly, while the 8-inch form factor may scream tablet, the device may still think it’s a phone. Though not quite a phone, the tablet does allow users to make voice calls, though likely the voice calling feature may be stripped from the device if the G Pad arrives in the U.S. Various tablets have offered this ability in the past, but U.S. carriers have not supported voice calling on a tablet when these slates arrive in the States with 3G or 4G capabilities.

LG’s most recent tablet introduction was nearly two years ago with the LG Optimus Pad. Most recently, company executives have hinted that the company would be returning to the tablet market before the year is over, giving an IFA introduction some credibility.

.keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this

blog I'll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the high Tech RoadShow inventions of today. Enhanced by Zemanta
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Samsung Planning Galaxy Note 12.2 With Retina Display

Samsung is purportedly arranging an even largergalaxy Note tablet for dispatch later in the not so distant future with a high determination screen. As indicated by Korea's ET News, the South Korean engineering titan is chipping away at a Galaxy Note 12.2 tablet. The slate will, as its name infers, have a 12.2-inch show alongside a screen determination of 2560 X 1600. 

The determination would pose as a viable rival well to Apple's Retina Display screen on the fourth era ipad, which has a determination of 2048 x 1536 pixels. 

The screen is purportedly being made by Sharp utilizing the IGZO engineering, which will help with battery life and sharpness. IGZO screen was at one point supposed to be going to the fourth era ipad and the iphone 5, yet that never appeared. We saw the innovation demoed at the Consumer Electronics Show and left really awed with Sharp's putting forth. It ought to additionally be noted that Samsung has an interest in Sharp.verizon Wireless Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Buttons 

Verizon Wireless Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Buttons
Verizon Wireless Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Buttons
Likewise with the Galaxy Note arrangement, Samsung will probably utilize its S Pen dynamic digitizer for the tablet, which itself is focused around Wacom engineering. The S Pen would take into consideration Galaxy Note 12.2 managers to compose and draw on the screen while additionally empowering them to exploit remarkable applications based on the S Pen. 

The 12-inch showcase size is additionally reputed to be going to a bigger estimated ipad tablet one year from now. Mac so far has not remarked or proclaimed any arrangements for the 12-inch ipad, nor do we have a name for the slate. Presently, Apple offers an ipad little with a 7.9-inch show and in addition a customary measured ipad with a 9.7-inch screen. 

The ipad little is reputed to be getting an invigorate this fall with a higher determination Retina Display screen. The current Galaxy Note is accessible with a 5.5-inch, 8-inch, and 10.1-inch showcase size.
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there is already an iPad Mini installed in a car dashboard

Yes, there is already an iPad Mini installed in a car dashboard
What's that? You had dreams of being the first person in the world with an iPad Mini installed in your 2012 Toyota's dashboard? Well consider those dreams dashed, as Tampa, Florida's Soundwaves is way ahead of you. Like, "they already did it" ahead of you. That regular old iPad you've got in your car? Boooring.
The folks at Soundwaves had a dashboard setup fabricated ahead of the Mini's launch this morning, and filmed themselves performing the installation (see for yourself below the break). Beyond having a freakin' iPad embedded in the dashboard being sweet unto itself, this installation also works in concert with the in-car speakers and a separate music control device. Now all the guys at Soundwaves have to do is install, like, six more iPads in the car and Xzibit will be totally on board.


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Apple iPad Mini is a One-Handed Wonder

As much as I love my new iPad — and it is the device I gravitate towards during non-work hours — there’s always been one nagging problem. Whether reading iBooks at a cafe or watching videos on the couch, you just can’t hold the 10-inch tablet in one hand.
Well, you can, but you’re going to notice the weight of it. Keep holding it that way, and you’ll either develop a pretty muscular forearm or a serious case of RSI. But you probably won’t ever be comfortable.
That’s the main reason why the iPad Mini, launched Tuesday in San Jose, is a big deal. Hold it in one hand, as I did, and your forearm relaxes. It may not simply be a large smartphone, but it certainly feels as light as one. It’s 53% lighter than its new cousin, the 4th generation iPad.
And the trade-off is a smaller screen than the regular iPad, right? True, but Apple really has done everything in its power to increase the screen size. The screen extends so far width-ways that there’s very little daylight between it and the edge of the device.
That may potentially result in a few accidental thumb-to-touchscreen moments. It didn’t in my case. Apple’s expectation is that you’ll hold the iPad Mini around the back or by its “chin” — the name for the strip of black with the home button at the bottom of the device. This does in fact feel quite natural
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Small Can be Beautiful

So the screen has roughly a third more real-estate than comparable 7-inch tablets. Is it enough?
Not for me, personally. I’ll stick with the larger 10-inch iPad size, even at the cost of two-handed discomfort. As I’ve often said, there’s just something magical in that screen size, where it fills just enough of your field of vision to take it over entirely.
But I knew that going in.
After spending some time with the iPad mini, I was impressed with just how much of your field of vision the 7.9-inch tablet can fill. For those looking for a lighter, cheaper tablet, this will be the right device.
My first impression of the screen, visually speaking, was that I was holding an iPad 2 — just holding it a little further away than usual.
It turns out that’s an apt comparison. The iPad mini has exactly the same number of pixels as the iPad 2. That means it isn’t technically a retina display — but when you squeeze that many pixels into a smaller space, it comes damn close.
You have to wonder if Apple could have gone the extra mile and made the iPad mini a full-on Retina device. It wouldn’t have taken that many more pixels to push it over the edge. But that’s a common behavior for this company — leave the next level just out of reach, ready for the upgrade (likely next year, around the same time as the fifth-generation iPad).
In all other respects, the iPad mini beats the iPad 2 hands down. Browsing, loading apps, playing games, all seemed significantly faster with the Mini’s chip and “twice as fast” (according to the Apple boast) Wifi. And those apps and sites don’t suffer from being on a small width screen, as they do on an Android tablet; they’re simply scaled down.

About That Price

Is it worth $329 for the basic 16GB model? That’s going to depend entirely on your budget. It’s certainly not a price tag to wow the average consumer, considering its Android competitors are heading in the $100 to $200 range.
But it does give you an entree into the iPad world. If you’re going to be spending a lot of time with your tablet, then to my mind, it’s worth paying a $129 premium for significantly more real estate. You will feel the difference on just about every website.
If you chose the iPad mini over the regular iPad and get the iPad mini’s special smart cover, you’ll have something over regular iPad owners. The smaller smart cover is a thing of beauty, with no annoying hinges or metal strap that twists the wrong way as it does in the regular model. The magnets are built straight into the cover.
And of course, you’ll be able to tote your iPad mini around in one hand, with nary a twinge in your forearm.
Will you be opting for the iPad mini when it arrives later this month? Let us know in the comments.
More from Apple’s iPad Mini event:
keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I'll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the
high Tech RoadShow Blog inventions of today. Enhanced by Zemanta
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