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Sunday, May 15, 2011

new york times magazine

new york times magazine. The New York Times Sunday
  • The New York Times Sunday



  • roocka
    Apr 7, 03:32 PM
    Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_3_1 like Mac OS X; en-us) AppleWebKit/533.17.9 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.0.2 Mobile/8G4 Safari/6533.18.5)

    I wonder if apple said, we have $60 billion dollars. We will buy every tablet you can make for the next 3 years. If you build new factories or production lines, we'll take those too, including those of your affIliate companies..





    new york times magazine. New York Times Magazine
  • New York Times Magazine



  • babbit
    Apr 18, 03:32 PM
    LG was first (before iPhone) to release smart phone with capacitive screen and UI that looks suspiciously close to iPhone. Here is Prada:

    http://www.itechnews.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/01/PRADA-Phone-LG-KE850-1.jpg

    If Apple prevails in court. LG would be stupid not to sue Apple (and they would probably get more money considering iPhone volumes).

    The iPhone 1 was announced before the Prada phone. Patent dates showed iPhone implementation of a capacitive touchscreen phone at least a year before LG showed their Prada phone in 2006. The Prada shipped in small shipments before the iPhone, so that is their only claim that it was technically released before the iPhone even though real shipments occurred months later. Technically, if Apple wanted to, they could have sued LG.

    Also, the Prada isn't a smartphone. It can't load apps. It doesn't even have a qwerty keyboard. You input text through the phone dialer like old school SMS.





    new york times magazine. New York Times Magazine
  • New York Times Magazine



  • nanofrog
    Apr 28, 03:54 PM
    I'm not exactly sure why Apple put those "vents" in the plate, they sure don't go through the whole panel, though. The compartment to the top is indeed closed apart from a few tiny holes.
    There's not a lot of venting on the back (nor ability to install a fan in push mode), so it's likely as a means of moving additional heat out of the PCIe zone, and pull it out through the PSU (not as hot when mixed with cool air drawn in around from the front of the case past the ODD's, so it shouldn't be hot enough to cause damage to the PSU).

    Just a thought anyway... ;)





    new york times magazine. Photo: New York Times Magazine
  • Photo: New York Times Magazine



  • spetznatz
    Jul 24, 03:12 AM
    Aplogies if this has been done before, and it's a little off-topic, but this is a link to an article about OS X performance on Core 2 Extreme (Conroe)

    http://www.tbreak.com/reviews/article.php?id=461

    Basically, they've installed a "floating" copy of OS X intel onto an intel mobo with C2E.

    I thought this line was particularly impressive:

    "These last two tests were also conducted on that same PC with Windows installed and we see the Mac performing as well as Windows in Cinebench and a mere 3% slower in Photoshop which is especially impressive considering that Photoshop CS2 was running under Rosetta on the Mac. "

    Who needs to wait for CS3?

    Edit: on reflection, I'm not sure if I believe this...do you think it might be a hoax?





    new york times magazine. T The New York Times Style
  • T The New York Times Style



  • tblrsa
    Dec 15, 12:37 AM
    Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_2_1 like Mac OS X; de-de) AppleWebKit/533.17.9 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.0.2 Mobile/8C148 Safari/6533.18.5)

    I don't, either. That's why I'm polite enough to make sure my PC friends are running anti-virus software, to protect them from malware, no matter where it may come from.

    Eventually Macs will get viruses too.

    What's the big deal? It's free and it runs well on my Mac. It's just extra protection for my Mac and for my PC friends.

    The big deal is that i do not want buggy, resource stealing software on my mac. Simple as that.





    new york times magazine. new-york-times-magazine.jpg
  • new-york-times-magazine.jpg



  • Tzu
    Jul 21, 06:16 PM
    Ohhhh BABY! Merom is all I'm waiting for before I get a new Pro. My old powerbook is just limping along... must.... hold out.... for new chipsets... arg!





    new york times magazine. of New York Times Magazine
  • of New York Times Magazine



  • Erwin-Br
    Apr 23, 07:41 PM
    Having extra resolution would probably look awesome on the GUI, but I'm afraid everything else is going to look like crap.

    The graphics used on websites, for example, would become a pixel counting fest. Unless the entire web updates their graphics, of course. But that would mean slow loading times. Imagine all the smileys used on this forum would have a resolution of 512x512 pixels, or more. Yikes!





    new york times magazine. The New York Times Magazine
  • The New York Times Magazine



  • fyre57lp
    Nov 3, 09:28 AM
    I got mine yesterday and LOVE it. Navigon app + TomTom car kit = win.





    new york times magazine. The New York Times Magazine
  • The New York Times Magazine



  • Popeye206
    Apr 5, 04:34 PM
    Android is still open... They are just going to be much more tighter on what Products qualify to get the google Logo and the android name.

    I predict it's going to go much tighter than that. I keep seeing too many articles about security risks and issues with Android.... it's going to bite them hard and they will need to tighten the ship significantly or loose control.

    Open source is a great concept, but in a commercial world, someone needs to step in a set the rules and walls or it just becomes it's own monster and a total mess.

    Within the year, we'll see major changes in the Android camp.





    new york times magazine. New York Times magazine
  • New York Times magazine



  • Worf
    Mar 27, 12:33 AM
    Well if one AOL owned tech blog can't get rumors right (Engadget), I'm not believing the other way less popular one (TechCrunch).





    new york times magazine. New York Times Magazine pays
  • New York Times Magazine pays



  • maclaptop
    Apr 20, 07:38 AM
    All I am thinking about after this news is the release date of the Iphone 6.

    Me too.

    This year I'll have some fun with Android, since Apple's coasting. It's their loss and my gain.

    Besides it's very fun to check out what's up with the competition first hand.

    Thanks Apple!





    new york times magazine. New York Times Magazine
  • New York Times Magazine



  • AppleScruff1
    May 6, 01:49 AM
    I welcome this idea. Intel is a disgusting anti-competitive company that cannot play fair. Apple is forced to use Intel's chipset and IGP instead of Nvidia which may have lead Apple to a decision like this. ARM is the future as is iOS, so like it or lump it. The low end Macs would probably have ARM and others both ARM and Intel. I would also welcome a switch to AMD.

    Kind of like Apple. And you would welcome a switch to AMD? That would be three steps backwards.





    new york times magazine. New York Times Magazine
  • New York Times Magazine



  • mr.barkan
    Aug 11, 05:16 PM
    sorry if I'm repeating someone else's quote, didn't get to read all posts.

    Just wanna give my 2 cents here:

    1 - Everyone seems to be forgetting we are talking about INTEL here. Not just apple. So the rabbit hole is far more deeper. While Apple used to stick with what they got, back in the ol' Power days... there were no other "PC/Laptop" equivalent to Apple's lineup, as far as OS and app. But these days where people are talking about OSX86 and all... the other companies will be shipping Meroms, Conroes and other sorts of "Cities"... Intel doesn't really care about the Mac Mania. Because OSX is not "that" exclusive anymore. Yes, I do hate using Windows, BUT, the new laptops from Alienware, Dell, HP etc... all come with a glossy "VISTA READY" logo.

    2 - Apple should realise that since they lauched the first MBP, so we all can expect more frequent updates on all Apple lineup. Because Steve's Jeans want's to be new (and news) first, always, right?

    3 - If Merom, etc.. are 32bit, then 10.4.7 is 64bit? :confused:

    I guess thats all for now... give me your thots about all this.
    If I repeated someone, then please ignore. ;)





    new york times magazine. Sunday#39;s NY Times Magazine
  • Sunday#39;s NY Times Magazine



  • Fuchal
    Apr 23, 05:08 PM
    Uhmm, how about 640x480? Or less, with the vic 20.

    I remember my pos compaq 386sx2 that came defaulted to 800x600... In 1994.

    Back ot, why is apple dealing wih 3200x3200? Are they abandoning the tradition 4:3, 16x9 or 16:9 aspect ratio?

    iPad wallpapers are also square, so they can be rotated evenly





    new york times magazine. Moment - New York Times
  • Moment - New York Times



  • Cinch
    Jul 30, 10:26 AM
    Yeah tell me about it.

    How much does it take to break a Verizon contract again...?

    For me it is $175 which is no big deal if you are a early adopter of tech. A more likely scenario that a lot of people here ellude to is for Cingular, T-mobile, Verizon etc. to adopt the phone, in which case we'll only have to pay for the phone. Of course expect premium price, which for a stock holder is not a bad scenario!

    Cinch





    new york times magazine. from The New York Times,
  • from The New York Times,



  • -aggie-
    May 4, 04:19 PM
    We have to go forward, otherwise we'll just end up back where we started and not have leveled up.





    new york times magazine. New York Times magazine
  • New York Times magazine



  • mrsir2009
    May 4, 03:07 PM
    Since when is an operating system an "app"?





    new york times magazine. Photograph: The New York Times
  • Photograph: The New York Times



  • thertrain
    Mar 30, 06:56 PM
    The iTunes scroll bars? They are much worse, what they need is either iOS scroll bars or a complete new design for them

    If you spent anytime whatsoever with the 1st Developer build, you'll know they did away with both the Snow Leopard and iTunes scroll bars. They have adopted the vanishing iOS scrolls.





    new york times magazine. for The New York Times
  • for The New York Times



  • Thunderhawks
    May 6, 06:25 AM
    [QUOTE=Cougarcat;12523836]Yes, Windows 8 will have ARM support (http://windows8news.com/2011/01/05/windows-8-arm-press-release-microsoft/).

    Whose idea was windoof8?





    HypersonicXIV
    Apr 25, 08:42 AM
    Oh wow, I am excited just at the thought that they might hopefully be heading in this direction, regardless of when it finally happens.

    I'm a programmer and spend my day looking at text in an IDE on a couple of 27" cinema displays. When I look at my iPhone 4 and see how amazingly crisp and clear text is on the retina display and then look back to my computer screen, I weep quietly inside.

    The 27" screens are beautiful, but the retina display on my phone just shows how amazing they could be.

    I�m interested in what Apple will do with the 15� MBP. If Apple doubled the resolution of the 1440x900 display, then going from a 1680x1050 MBP to this new 2880x1800 MBP means an increase in DPI but a decrease in viewable information.

    Hopefully they will include a scaling ability as well for those who don't mind shrinking everything down to fit more on the screen as well (which would address the problem mentioned above).

    There is lots of potential for screens with such a high DPI :D





    LagunaSol
    Apr 6, 06:14 PM
    I do think the Android and potentially RIM tablet will catch on. It's foolish to think Apple will be the only major player in the long run. The market is potentially too big.

    Apple is the only major player in the MP3 player market, even though that market is huge.

    Microsoft is the only major player in the desktop OS market, even though that market is huge.

    Google is the only major player in the search market, even though that market is huge.

    Etc.





    nsjoker
    Aug 4, 02:22 PM
    of course they're adopting core 2 duo's... duh, so is every computer maker out there. intel is trying to transition very rapidly into core 2 duo and phasing out the "old" core duo. to do this they've priced the core 2 duos at exactly the same cost as the core duo's with the same clock speed/configuration. you would be stupid not to adopt. i just hope apple doesn't surcharge and tout core 2 duo as a monumental upgrade for the laptops, becase it's only incremental at best. the real gain is the conroe on the desktop processor. as long as the FSB in the portables isn't 1,000 mhz, merom won't be that much faster than yonah.





    twoodcc
    Aug 3, 11:48 PM
    Yes! This Would Favor Steve Announcing Full Line Shift To Core 2 ASAP Monday. My favorite scenario may come true. :)

    didn't i read this exact same thing earlier today?

    anyways, i hope your right, but for some reason i don't think it will. only time will tell.....





    DeathChill
    Apr 20, 08:50 AM
    You and I are thinking alike.

    Sobering stuff when Apple fails to impress.

    Right or wrong the glass iphone will be forever associated with Antennagate.

    I'm too much of an Apple enthusiast to keep an albatross like that.

    Now I will celebrate a change of brand while Jobs and company hunts for answers. :)
    I am extremely impressed with your ability to be disappointed with a product that hasn't been announced and we know nothing about.

    Also, hasn't the iPhone 4 been the best selling iPhone ever?