Tuesday, August 16, 2011

TextExpander for iPhone, iPad updates with Dropbox support

SmileOnMyMac, has updated their popular iPhone and iPad app, TextExpander, with Dropbox support. TextExpander allows you to create abbreviations for frequently used chunks of text. Many other apps, such as Twitter apps and notes and to-do apps, support TextExpander so that it’s able to be used natively in those apps.

Details and screenshots after the break.

[App Store link]

With TextExpander touch, you create a library of abbreviation shortcuts for snippets of text that you use frequently, such as addresses, URLs, and standard replies. Tap that abbreviation, and it automatically expands to the full snippet. (You can even insert today’s date automatically with the default abbreviation “ddate”!)

You can use your TextExpander touch snippets directly in over 100 apps that support it, including Twittelator, TwitBird Pro, Elements, Simplenote, WriteRoom, Circus Ponies NoteBook, DEVONthink To Go, BusyToDo, Things, and Zendesk. See www.smilesoftware.com/applist for a complete list.

Update includes:

TextExpander is available on the iPhone and iPad for $4.99.

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Best free iPhone apps for Facebook

Facebook may see new competition in the form of Google+ and Twitter but it still boasts over 750 million active users. Interestingly, the social networking site is also highly frequented by smartphone users (57% according to Ofcom). iPhone users, in particular are more inclined to browse the web than those of rival platforms.

No small wonder then as to why numerous Facebook apps have come about since the inception of the iPhone. Facebook compliments the iPhone in sense that it allows users to maintain multiple social connections without having to reveal sensitive information or even the phone number. However, before installing any Facebook apps make sure that you go through the privacy settings to ensure that you do not accidently reveal anything that you are not comfortable with. You can do this by accessing the setting on the iPhone or your Facebook page.

The following are the best free Facebook apps for the iPhone.

Facebook for iPhone

The official Facebook app is quite decent and features all the necessary functions you would need to properly access your Facebook. The latest version also addresses various bugs and even improves the chat feature.



BlipSnips

This app allows users to shoot video clips through their iPhone and then directly post it on Facebook. Users will also be able to tag their friends.



Vonage

This VoIP app allows users to call each other via their Facebook page without revealing the phone number.

Video Call for Facebook

Facebook recently manage to integrate Skype into the chat feature. This app allows users to make video calls to their Facebook friends through the iPhone.

NearbyFeed

This app allows users to “check in” to a particular place and find other friends in the area. Depending on the privacy settings, you will be able to figure out where your friends are and what pictures they have posted while the immediate area.

Apple takes battle with Android to the next level

Apple is one of the most powerful tech firms on the market right now. For a moment, it was the most valuable company in the USA (surpassing Exxon Mobil) but its recent assault on its major rival makes it look increasingly weak. Over the past few months, Apple has filed lawsuits against Samsung, HTC, Motorola and other Android users, accusing them of violating Apple’s patents. The targets may be varied, but it ultimately boils down to Apple Vs Google. The archrivals have been targeting each other for a long time now, and are being forced to compete on each other’s turf. Apple’s onslaught may seem like a strategic move to cut out the opposition, but critics are saying it smacks of desperation.
 

Apple has a good reason to be worried, already; Google boasts 550,000 Android enabled smartphone activations per day as of June. Apple could only respond with 366,000 daily activations. Moreover, even news of the upcoming iPhone 5 and the iCloud, both of which have tremendous pre-release demand, will not change the long-term trend of Android domination.
 
Apple has already managed to win some victories through injunctions of rival handsets such as the Galaxy Tab 10.1, created by Samsung. It also has plans to stop Motorola from rolling out its own Android enabled tablets and smartphones. It has already managed to bog down HTC over a wide range of its increasingly popular smartphones. Apple is ready for war, and has already spent billions acquiring new patents in the hopes of either crippling or slowing down the rise of Android.
 
It has taken Google awhile to catch up but all indications are suggest that the company is getting set to respond in kind. Apple, itself is becoming increasingly vulnerable to lawsuits as well. Meanwhile, regulators in the US and Europe may soon intervene to restore to some sanity in the industry, which might adversely affect Apple because it has already invested so much into the patent wars.
 
Ultimately, even consumers may feel the consequences of this war, with rising prices, lack of choice, and slower pace of innovation. If every single application or function is patented, then it becomes increasingly complicated to go through the legal hurdles to get products out fast. If companies are forced to pay high royalty fees, then prices could also rise.
 
Patents were meant to increase innovation and reward parties for their efforts. However, the current system is being used and abused by both sides in a war that neither side is big enough to win.
 

Perfect RSS Reader for iPad now available

Perfect RSS Reader, by Connect Technology Co, is a Google Reader client for the iPad – and it claims to the be the best.

I am loving Perfect RSS Reader! The UI is beautiful and the use of popups is perfectly integrated. I definitely agree with their claim and Perfect RSS Reader has taken a place on my dock.

Details and screenshots after the break.

[App Store link]

The best RSS client for Google Reader.

Perfect RSS Reader is available on the iPad for $1.99.

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

More Uninteresting iPhone 5 Parts Surface

href="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/headphone.jpg">class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-23095" title="headphone" src="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/headphone.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="182" />href="http://www.macpost.net/841/more-iphone-5-replacement-parts-appears-online/">MacPost has found supplies they believe to be replacement iPhone 5parts. While it’s not immediately obvious, those two plastic things above are the black and white version of a headphone port — adding weight to what we all already assumed, that the phone will come in both href="http://www.truesupplier.com/oem-apple-iphone-5-genuine-earphone-audio-jack-replacement-black-pr-27057.html">black and href="http://www.truesupplier.com/oem-apple-iphone-5-genuine-earphone-audio-jack-replacement-white-pr-27056.html">white versions.

They also have replacement camera lenses, and the on/off flex cable.

These sorts of parts have a history of leaking in the build-up to a major announcement. They don’t actually reveal much that’s interesting, and they’re not large enough to show us anything about the final shape of the device.

But yes, there will be both black and white versions. Hopefully at the same time.

[via href="http://www.macrumors.com/2011/08/16/white-and-black-iphone-5-parts-leak/">MacRumors]

 

Apple Releases Mac OS 10.7.1 Lion Update

Apple today released Mac OS 10.7.1, an update to Lion.

href="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Screen-Shot-2011-08-16-at-5.37.48-PM.png">class="alignnone size-full wp-image-23110" title="Screen Shot 2011-08-16 at 5.37.48 PM" src="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Screen-Shot-2011-08-16-at-5.37.48-PM.png" alt="Mac OS X Lion Update" width="511" height="620" />

According to Apple, the 10.7.1 update includes general operating system fixes that enhance the stability and compatibility of your Mac, including fixes that:

If you are currently running Lion, then I’d venture to say you’ll want to grab this update.

Starbucks Now Giving Away Free Apps

href="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/StarBucksShazam_270x393.png">class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-23098" title="StarBucksShazam_270x393" src="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/StarBucksShazam_270x393.png" alt="" width="270" height="393" />

Starbucks has been giving away individual songs for years now, all it takes is picking up that little card or hitting their WiFi connection, and you’ll soon grab a single from an artist you’ve never heard of, and in two days you’ll completely forget the song until it turns up completely out of place in your iTunes library. Well, now href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-27076_3-20092682-248/starbucks-serves-up-free-iphone-apps/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple">they’ve branched out into apps!

Just like with music, when you pick up your coffee at a Starbucks, you now might see a “pick of the week” card, but with an app icon on it instead.

The first app up for grabs is Shazam Encore, href="http://appshopper.com/music/shazam-encore">which goes for $5.99 — a much better deal than the usual $0.99 song bargain.

We don’t know if this will be permanent, a replacement to the music program, will run concurrently, or alternate. Just keep your eyes peeled at your local Starbucks!

Rearrange your status bar icons with ArrangeStatusBar [jailbreak]

ArrangeStatusBar Jailbreak

ArrangeStatusBar is a simple little tweak that allows you to rearrange your status bar icons to whatever your liking may be. This may be great for users that currently migrated from another OS and are used to a different configuration. Maybe you’re used to the signal bars being on the right of the screen like they are in Blackberry OS.

Once installed, just hold down on a status bar icon and move it in whatever position you’d like. And if you ever want to restore to the default arrangement again just go into Settings followed by ArrangeStatusBar and tap Reset StatusBar and your status bar icons will fly back to the normal positioning.

One update I’d like to see made is an option to completely remove icons from the status bar. I really have no need to see the iPod or carrier banner. I’d rather replace it with something more useful.

Any other updates you’d like to see?

Is Apple Installing LTE Readers In Their Stores? [updated]

href="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/4g-apple-store.jpg">class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-23106" title="4g-apple-store" src="http://cdn.everythingicafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/4g-apple-store.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="359" />

One of the big rumors about the next generation of iPhone is if it will be LTE or not. The big draw would be much faster internet browsing — let’s face it, 3G can feel pokey — but at the same time, it’s expensive and a battery suck. The general feeling among commenters is that this year won’t see a 4G/LTE iPhone, but that next year migh.

However, an anonymous commenter href="http://www.engadget.com/2011/08/16/why-is-lte-equipment-being-installed-in-an-apple-store/">just emailed Engadget a shot of what they claim is LTE equipment being set up in an Apple Store.

Frankly, I have no idea what that bunch of wires is, or if that’s even an Apple store. Engadget’s source claims that it’s 4G LTE device that AT&T themselves are installing and that it functions on the  700MHz and AWS bands, which AT&T and T-Mobile use.

This comes on the back of BGR posting yesterday that an LTE iPhone href="http://www.bgr.com/2011/08/15/exclusive-4g-lte-iphone-currently-in-carrier-testing/">was being tested by carriers.

Don’t consider this proof of anything yet, but it’s certainly worth keeping an eye on.

UPDATE: href="http://9to5mac.com/2011/08/16/verizon-lte-is-also-being-installed-in-apple-stores/">9to5Mac says Verizon is doing this too…

New History App Turns Your iPhone Into a Personal Tour Guide

The days of being stuck in boring group history tours may be coming to an end. Historypin is now available for the iPhone, onclick="javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.ipadngravy.com');" target="_blank" title="iPad" href="http://www.ipadngravy.com">iPad and iPod touch.

href="http://www.iphonealley.com/application-news/new-history-app-turns-your-iphone-into-a-personal-tour-guide/attachment/history-pin" rel="attachment wp-att-21652">src="http://www.iphonealley.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/history-pin.png" alt="" width="451" height="281" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-21652" />

The Historypin app was created by the non-profit group onclick="javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wearewhatwedo.org/');" target="_blank" href="http://wearewhatwedo.org/">We Are What We Do. It allows users to share historical pictures and info with other users by “pinning” photos and stories to a user-generated map. The app uses Google Maps and Street View technology to show you what an area used to look like by overlaying a photo on your live camera view.

For example, if you search French Quarter, New Orleans 19xx on your iPhone, Historypin uses your camera view to display nearby images of what the area looked like in that year. You can then select the image and overlay it onto the modern view of the location you’re currently looking at. It’s like having your own personal tour guide wherever you go.

Historypin isn’t just for traveling, it can remind you of what your old neighborhood looked like when you were a kid, or show you that mountain your dad claims he had to climb to over get to school.

The app also allows you to digitise old photos by taking a picture of them. This helps you share your memories with other Historypin users and add to the Historypin user-generated map.

Google Catalogs for iPad now available

Google has released their newest app, Google Catalogs, for the iPad. It features digital versions of catalogs across many popular categories, including fashion and apparel, beauty, jewelry, home, kids and gifts.

Details, screenshots, and video after the break.

[App Store link]

A new, rich, and engaging way to interact with all your favorite catalogs. Flip through pages of beautiful catalogs, discover inspiring photos and videos, save products that catch your eye, and create collages to share with your friends.

Some of the names you’ll find are: Anthropologie, Bare Escentuals, Bergdorf Goodman, Crate and Barrel, L.L. Bean, Lands’ End, Macy’s, Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom, Pottery Barn, Saks Fifth Avenue, Sephora, Sundance, Tea Collection, Urban Outfitters and Williams-Sonoma.

Google Catalogs is available on the iPad for free.

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Why would AT&T be installing LTE equipment at Apple Stores? [Updated]

Why would AT&T be installing LTE equipment at Apple Stores

A while back TiPb heard something that sounded so outlandish, so beyond the realm of possibility, that we decided not to publish it — that AT&T’s 4G LTE launch hero device could, in fact, be the iPhone. It still sounds outlandish, even though there hasn’t been word one about which phone AT&T will launch with, but given the availability of the logical Qualcomm LTE chipset, it still seems beyond the realm of possibility.

But BGR recently caught glimpse of LTE references in a carrier-test build of iOS firmware, and now Engadget has heard that LTE equipment in the 700MHz and AWS frequencies is being installed in major Apple Stores in the US… by AT&T.

I’m not getting my hopes up, nor should you. AT&T could still launch an Android device and Apple could still wait for 2012 for an LTE powered iPhone 6. But as Hans Gruber said in Die Hard, Christmas is the time for miracles.

UPDATE: 9to5Mac says Verizon is also installing LTE equipment at Apple Stores. [9to5Mac]

[Engadget

LinkedIn for iPhone receives a makeover

LinkedIn for iPhone has been completely rewritten with a new look. It’s now faster and simpler to access your groups and stay up to date with your networks.

Details and screenshots after the break.

[App Store link]

Get on-the-go access to your professional network with LinkedIn for iPhone. Find and connect with more than 120M members worldwide, read the latest industry news, keep up-to-date with your groups, and share content with your network from anywhere.

LinkedIn is available on the iPhone for free.

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

iPhone 5 pre-orders to start September 30?

iPhone 5 pre-orders to start September 30?

Mark Gurman from 9to5Mac is reporting that Apple currently plans to start iPhone 5 pre-orders on September 30, and further that their independent sources match what TiPb heard about the actual launch date currently being scheduled for October 7. (They also heard, like we did, that this was moved up from a previous October 14 date).

Apple currently plans to begin pre-orders for their next-generation smartphone in the final days of September. The company has still not finalized the pre-order start date, but is debating between Thursday, September 29th and Friday, September 30th. The 30th seems more likely at this point according to one of our sources. Pre-orders for the new iPhone starting in late September will also mean that Apple’s fall event will take place in September; which would seem to counter NewsCorp’s Kara Swisher’s combative insistence of an October iPhone 5 event.

It’s once again worth noting that since Apple is so secretive, they can and will change launch dates up until the last possible minute in order to best meet production and marketing needs. So don’t go engraving these dates in aluminum just yet — just jot them down in Calendar for now.

[9to5Mac]

New and updated iPhone and iPad apps for Tuesday, August 16

Every day, TiPb gets flooded with announcements for new and updated iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad apps and games. So every day we pick just a few of the most interesting, the most notable, and simply the most awesome to share with you!

Tweetbot: Now with mute filters! [$2.99 for iPhone - App Store link]

Pocket Budget: Tracking of expenses & incomes has never been easier. Just few clicks and you know where your money is spent and how you can improve your cash-flow. Now with password protection with hint feature to keep your data secured. [$2.99 for iPhone - App Store link]

2 Sugars: A lovingly crafted list maker that makes noting down your co-workers’ drink requests quick and easy. [$0.99 for iPhone App Store link]

xDownload: A useful, easy-to-use application that gives you the power to pull all you want into a background-downloading queue. [$2.99 for iPhone - App Store link]

Vertex Blaster: Blast your way through a never-ending onslaught of relentless enemies in this addicting, action-packed arcade shooter! [$0.99 for iPhone and iPad - App Store link]

Any other big app or game releases or updates today?

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Why would AT&T be installing LTE equipment at Apple Stores?

Why would AT&T be installing LTE equipment at Apple Stores

A while back TiPb heard something that sounded so outlandish, so beyond the realm of possibility, that we decided not to publish it — that AT&T’s LTE launch hero device could, in fact, be the iPhone. It still sounds outlandish, even though there hasn’t been word one about which phone AT&T will launch with, but given the availability of the logical Qualcomm LTE chipset, it still seems beyond the realm of possibility.

But BGR recently caught glimpse of LTE references in a carrier-test build of iOS firmware, and now Engadget has heard that LTE equipment in the 700MHz and AWS frequencies is being installed in major Apple Stores in the US… by AT&T.

I’m not getting my hopes up, nor should you. AT&T could still launch an Android device and Apple could still wait for 2012 for an LTE powered iPhone 6. But as Hans Gruber said in Die Hard, Christmas is the time for miracles.

[Engadget

Snooze Pays To Charity While You Sleep In

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Are you a perennial snooze-button abuser? Find it impossible to get out of bed, and just keep mashing that magic button for a few more minutes of sleep? Would you keep pressing it if you were losing money? Ah, that got your attention! href="http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id449742726">Snooze is a free iPhone alarm app, and every time you hit the snooze button, $0.25 will be sent to charity, a nonprofit in the LetGive network.

Okay, so it’s not quite as evil as that. Every time you hit the button, it records how much you should pay out, and then twice a month you’re given the opportunity to do so, but if you really don’t want to, you don’t have to.

But it kind of defeats the purpose if you don’t.

[via href="http://gizmodo.com/5831100/snooze-for-iphone-lets-you-donate-money-every-time-you-hit-the-snooze-button">Gizmodo]

HTC ramps up the patent suits against Apple

HTC ramps up the patent suits against Apple

Apple sued HTC, HTC counter-sued Apple, and now HTC has sued Apple, again over 3 additional patents in both Mac, and iPhone/iPad platforms. (HTC currently pays Microsoft a reported $5 per Android device licensing fee.)

The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Delaware seeks to halt Apple’s importation and sale of infringing products in the United States. It also seeks compensatory damages, triple damages for willful infringement and other remedies.

It comes a day after Google announced its intent to purchase Motorola Mobility and their 17,000 and growing patent portfolio.

Time to flex a little green robot muscle, is it?

[Reuters]

Found Footage: The Best Fake Apple Store In China

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Fake Chinese Apple Stores have been getting a lot of play recently, but check out this incredibly cool little “Apple Shop” from  Zhongshan. Yeah, it looks a bit like a converted gas station, but all-in-all, it’s pretty freaking swank!

At least they’re not pretending to be officially an Apple store, just heavily influenced by it, with blue polo shirts and huge Apple logos everywhere.

The store was definitely a bit sketchy with their products, selling grey market Hong Kong iPhones, modded to replace their black cases with white.

Still, full points for style!

[via href="http://micgadget.com/14648/the-most-phenomenal-fake-apple-store-in-china/">MIC Gadgets]

Daily Deal: Incipio dermaSHOT Case for AT&T iPhone 4 only $8.95!

For today only, the TiPb Store has the Incipio dermaSHOT Case for AT&T iPhone 4 on sale for only $8.95! That’s a whopping 55% off. Tight fitting, high density silicone with a silky anti-static coating in your choice of black, magenta, purple, or yellow — What’s not to love? Go get it before it’s gone! (Heck, at this price get a couple!)

Were Apple’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 lawsuit photos misleading? [Updated]

Were Apple's Galaxy Tab 10.1 lawsuit photos misleading?

Webwereld took a look at the visual evidence presented against the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 that got it banned from sale in most of the European Union, and has called shenanigans. Jerry from Android Central explains:

In Apple’s images, the Galaxy Tab 10.1 has been shown with a different aspect ratio (1:36 as opposed to the actual 1:46 — the iPad is 1:30), causing it to more closely resemble the dimensions of the iPad. This accounts for a full eight percent difference in the “short” side of the Tab, and you can see the result above. If that weren’t enough, the Samsung logo has been removed from Apple’s image, and of course it’s shown with the app drawer open instead of the normal home screen view.

Certainly seems like someone has some explaining to do!

Update: MacRumors sums up that the photo above, obviously, was only part of Apple’s evidentiary offering. [MacRumors]

As John at Edible Apple and others have pointed out, Apple’s evidentiary submission is not limited to the inaccurate comparison photo, as Apple did also offer a number of other exhibits in support of its case, including some showing actual side-by-side photos of the iPad 2 and Galaxy Tab 10.1 rather than just promotional images. Consequently, it stands to reason that the judge’s decision was not based entirely on the flawed comparison, although the inclusion of inaccurate information in Apple’s submission certainly is a curious one.

[Webwereld via OSNews, Android Central]

BlackBerry Torch 9860 gets reviewed

BlackBerry Torch 9860 gets reviewed

Kevin Michaluk of sibling site CrackBerry.com has just posted his BlackBerry Torch 9860, and just like his BlackBerry Bold 9900, it's jam packed with detail.

Now, if you were as confused as I was by RIM's new naming conventions, let's try to help -- this Torch is pretty much what the Storm used to be, a full screen, touch screen BlackBerry, with no slide-out keyboard like the original Torch (and no SurePress like the original Storm, thankfully.) Of course, there's also still a Torch with a slide out keyboard. (Could they have at least called that a Torch Pro, like HTC would have?)

Either way, this is in fact the closest thing to an iPhone RIM makes. So how does it stack up?

It's a smooth device that will certainly be a seller. How big of a seller is yet to be seen. Users that want the big screen and don't mind not having a physical keyboard will be in BlackBerry heaven. Once you adjust to using the virtual keyboard there really isn't much bad to be said about the 9860. But if you're like me, you want to get things done efficiently and in my opinion, having a keyboard really helps that cause, even if I have to sacrifice potential display real estate for a screen. I know I'm in the minority on that one these days - you should definitely head to your local store and try out the Torch 9860 and come to your own conclusions. If playing videos, viewing photos, snapping pictures and web browsing are tops on your list, then I can say the Torch 9860 may be just what you're looking for. With the boosted processor and increased RAM, the OS trucks along fast enough to keep up with pretty much anything you can throw at it.

Once again I'll ask -- if you're walking into a store this fall, iPhone 5 on one side, Android phone de jour on the other, would you walk past them for a BlackBerry Torch 9860? Check out Kevin's review and let us know.

[CrackBerry.com]

Steve Jobs biography moved up to Nov. 21, covers previewed

Steve Jobs biography moved up to Nov. 21, covers previewed

The first authorized Steve Jobs biography, Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson, has seen its release date move up from March 6, 2012 to November 21, 2011, and its covers shown off (above). In a private email to Fortune‘s Philip Elmer-Dewitt, Isaacson explained:

“The cover is the Albert Watson portrait taken for Fortune in 2009. The back is a Norman Seeff portrait of him in the lotus position holding the original Macintosh, which ran in Rolling Stone in January 1984. The title font is Helvetica. It will look as you see it, with no words on the back cover.”

Isaacson further denied that the change in schedule had anything to do with Jobs’ health, or anything other than the book being done, edited, and ready to go.

Book description after the break.

[Fortune, Simon & Schuster]

Based on more than forty interviews with Jobs conducted over two years—as well as interviews with more than a hundred family members, friends, adversaries, competitors, and colleagues—Walter Isaacson has written a riveting story of the roller-coaster life and searingly intense personality of a creative entrepreneur whose passion for perfection and ferocious drive revolutionized six industries: personal computers, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing, and digital publishing.

At a time when America is seeking ways to sustain its innovative edge, and when societies around the world are trying to build digital-age economies, Jobs stands as the ultimate icon of inventiveness and applied imagination. He knew that the best way to create value in the twenty-first century was to connect creativity with technology. He built a company where leaps of the imagination were combined with remarkable feats of engineering.

Although Jobs cooperated with this book, he asked for no control over what was written nor even the right to read it before it was published. He put nothing off-limits. He encouraged the people he knew to speak honestly. And Jobs speaks candidly, sometimes brutally so, about the people he worked with and competed against. His friends, foes, and colleagues provide an unvarnished view of the passions, perfectionism, obsessions, artistry, devilry, and compulsion for control that shaped his approach to business and the innovative products that resulted.
Driven by demons, Jobs could drive those around him to fury and despair. But his personality and products were interrelated, just as Apple’s hardware and software tended to be, as if part of an integrated system. His tale is instructive and cautionary, filled with lessons about innovation, character, leadership, and values.

Poll: Is your iPhone home button having problems?

Simple question: is your iPhone home button still working as it should? Ever since iOS 4 and the reassignment of double click to the fast app switcher, it seems like we’re click, click, clicking the home button more than ever, and that seems to be creating problems more and more often.

A lot of you have written in, or posted in our iPhone Forum to tell us your home button is causing you problems, and even more of you are hitting our how-to fix home button problems, and how to use Activator to get around home button problems daily tips in search of solutions. Even our illustrious editor, Rene, had to get his original iPhone 4 swapped out at the Apple Store because the home button was causing him grief.

Apple has been experimenting with multitasking gestures for iPad, and we’ve even seen rumors that they’ll do away with the home button completely.

Is you home button not working the way it should? Is it a hardware problem that’s just not registering clicks, or a software issue that’s misreading the number of clicks? Let us know in the poll above and then give us the details in the comments!

Comment