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

Thursday, 4 October 2012

Camera+ Arrives on the iPad




Camera+ -- one of the most popular photo apps for the iPhone -- is now available for the iPad.
The iPad app comes a little over two years after the original app. In that time, Camera+ [iTunes link] has gone on to sell over 9 million copies, making it the most popular paid photo app in the App Store.
Today, tap tap tap, the crew behind Camera+, has released the long-anticipated iPad version [iTunes link] of the app.
So why would you want a photo app on the iPad? Not so much for taking pictures as for editing them.
Sure, Camera+ can help users take better photos with the iPad (especially if you use the improved rear camera on the retina iPad) But the real benefit is that the app syncs seamlessly with Camera+ for iPhone.
Camera+'s Lightbox syncs between devices using iCloud. If you take a photo on your iPhone, so long as iCloud sync is enabled, you can see that same image on your iPad. Moreover, any edits made to the photos will be synced across devices. Deleting a photo from one Lightbox will remove it across the board.
Camera+ for iPhone has also received an update for the iPhone 5's screen -- a welcome update for users such as myself who use it as a replacement for Apple's default camera app.

The Joys of a Bigger Screen

One of the best parts of the new iPad is its retina display. Even now, six months after its release, I still find myself marveling at the clarity of photographs on it.
This is where Camera+ for iPad really shines. The iCloud integration means the full-sized images are viewable within the app. Thanks to the high resolution display, I can view nearly full-sized images from the iPhone 5 within Camera+, each detail beautifully displayed.
From there, you can start playing around with various settings that adjust how an image looks. This includes Camera+'s excellent "Clarity" mode -- which just makes images and colors pop.
A new feature for the iPad is the ability to layer effects on top of one another. That means I can add a fade effect and cross-process, and adjust the intensity of both. (Apps such as Snapseed have had that ability for a long time. Still, it's great to have it in Camera+ too.)
I can't wait to spend more time with Camera+ on my iPad. In its first iteration, the app already pairs seamlessly with Camera+ for iPhone and offers users a great way to edit photos and share them across various social networks.
And yes, you can take photos using the iPad and Camera+. You just might look silly doing it.
Camera+ for iPad and Camera+ for iPhone are both on sale for $0.99 in the App Store. What are you favorite photo apps for iOS? Let us know in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.

 



CruxSkunk iPad Keyboard Exposes the Mirage of Kickstarter [REVIEW]



CruxSkunk iPad Keyboard

The CruxSkunk is a Kickstarter project that's finally coming to fruition. Priced at $229, it's an iPad keyboard that aims to mirror the Apple design aesthetic.
Microsoft's Surface tablet has yet to prove itself, but it won a lot of goodwill with its novel keyboard cover, betraying a weakness in the iPad camp: Although there are many keyboard accessories for Apple's tablet, none has really emerged as the one that rises above the pack.
That's exactly what the CruxSkunk wants to be. A Kickstarter project, the keyboard aims to be none other than the perfect complement for your iPad. It's just 0.74 of an inch thin, made of solid aluminum and has a design that's tailored to match the Apple aesthetic. It also mirrors Apple pricing -- at $229, it's damn expensive as keyboard accessories go.
That said, Kickstarter's founders recently posted a note reminding its users that the site -- filled with beautiful, ambitious projects -- is not a store. It was a necessary reality check, and I can see what they were getting at with the CruxSkunk now that I've been using one for the past few days. While it has a lot going for it, if you buy it thinking you'll turn your iPad into a MacBook Air, you'll be disappointed.

Skunking the iPad

The CruxSkunk got a lot of positive press, including from Mashable, when the Kickstarter campaign began, and why not? It's a gorgeous design idea, taking the aesthetic of Apple's MacBook laptops, mainly the aluminum material and chiclet-style keys, and fusing them into an iPad keyboard. It even has Mac-centric buttons, labeled Command and Option. No backlight, though, and no extra battery power for your iPad, since it connects via Bluetooth.
The iPad fits into an open frame attached to the keyboard. Don't forget to slip the plastic holders over the iPad in the lower corners -- like I was doing for the first day after I got the CruxSkunk -- or your iPad will fall out. With the holders in place, your iPad is secure, and you can even rotate the keyboard almost 360 degrees to use it as a simple stand -- handy in a plane seat.
After putting my iPad in place, I started the pairing process. It's a little annoying that the CruxSkunk uses a code for Bluetooth pairing, but I can forgive that. I can even overlook that it took about a half-dozen attempts before I was able to pair the Skunk with my iPad successfully.
What I can't abide is the poor quality of the keys. For starters, a few keys on my review unit occasionally got stuck in the frame when I depressed them, continuously entering data until they were unjammed. On top of that, at least one of the keys on my sample ("2/@") didn't work properly -- a flaw that would necessitate a return.

Mystery Keys

There are function keys along the top, but my unit didn't come with any instructions, so I had to discern for myself what they did. The home button is easy enough, but I still don't know what some of the other keys do -- mainly because when I pressed them, they didn't do anything.
Some did work, including home, photo frame, screen off and screen on. But that button with the globe icon that looks like it should launch Safari or network settings? No idea. Search? Forget it. At least the music volume controls did what they were supposed to.
Overall, though, the whole thing just feels unfinished, like someone grabbed the CruxSkunk when it was about 75% through the production process before it got some polishing and quality assurance. With a MacBook keyboard you get smoothed-out edges and key displacement that's clearly tuned to tenths of a millimeter, but the CruxSkunk has uncomfortably sharp cuts in the metal and keys that just feel ... cheap.

The Mirage of Kickstarter

This betrays the weakness of Kickstarter, which I also encountered to a certain extent with theHiddenRadio: There's a world of difference between a great idea and the successful execution of that idea. And the idea of the CruxSkunk is certainly great. Of course it would be fantastic to build a MacBook-style keyboard for an iPad.
But think about how much design and engineering went into MacBook keyboards. They're made by a company that's been building computers for well over 30 years and has billions of dollars in the bank. The brand is iconic, has millions of customers and employs some of the best industrial designers and engineers in the world.
Am I being too hard on the CruxSkunk, made by a few guys on Kickstarter? I don't think so -- especially since it promises right on the campaign page that it's made "in the exact same process that Apple machines its MacBooks and iPads. The aluminum parts are then sandblasted and anodized to give them the same finish as your iPad."
Not quite. And this is where the warning from Kickstarter's founders hits home: Although the CruxSkunk sells the idea of pairing a MacBook-like keyboard with your iPad, in reality it's not even that close. Yes, Kickstarter is most definitely not a store -- it's an idea for a product that might, if you're lucky, end up creating an object that's somewhere in the ballpark of what was originally promised.
So if you can approach the CruxSkunk with those realistic expectations, you might like it, and the idea still has merit. But judging from the perch where that idea resides, it falls short.
Will you be buying or skipping the CruxSkunk? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.

 



Does This Video Show the iPad Mini?


The model, first posted by Macotakara, shows Apple's new Lightning connector on the bottom of the device, in the same spot as the new iPhone 5. The headphone connector, however, remains on top.
If this video is accurate, the iPad Mini will serve as a middle-ground between the iPhone or iPod Touch and the current iPad -- it's expected to measure approximately 7.85 inches.
Rumor has it the device will be announced in October, but there still hasn't been an official word from Apple on its existence.
Does an "iPad Mini" make sense for Apple? Would you buy one? Share your thoughts in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.

 



iPad Mini Launch Event Coming Oct. 17 2012[REPORT]




Invitations to Apple’s next big event, announcing the highly-rumored iPad Mini, will be sent out on October 10. The event will follow a week later on October 17th, with the launch of the device coming shortly after on November 2nd.
All this according to a report in Fortune, which cites an Apple investor who has heard the dates from “multiple sources.”
Rumors have been circulating about an iPad Mini for some time, with many of those rumors pointing to an October product announcement.
Purported leaked photos of the pint-sized tablet show a 7.85-inch device with aluminum-back casing similar to the current iPad, a rear-facing camera, and Apple’s new lightning connector. The front of the tablet is thought to look much like the current iPad, with a black -- or potentially white -- bezel surrounding the screen and a home button at the bottom.
The iPad Mini is also expected to be less expensive than the current iPad, putting it against tablet's such as the Nexus 7 and Kindle Fire in the marketplace.
Traditionally secretive about it products, Apple has not acknowledged plans to create a smaller version of the iPad -- nor has it officially indicated plans to have an event of any kind in October.
Will we see a smaller iPad later this month? Give us your prediction in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.

 



The iPad Mini Will Be Less of Everything


Most pundits believe Apple's 7-inch tablet, the iPad Mini, will see light of day on Oct 17. Now with the date fast approaching, they've switched gears to guessing when the event invites will go out (most think Oct. 10th).
I have some iPad Mini predictions of my own, but not the ones you may think.
The tiny tablet -- which Apple has never officially acknowledged -- will be less of everything. It will be the iPad Retina's stunted little brother.
It will offer less screen real estate than the 9.7-inch iPad and fewer overall pixels (though it is sure to be another retina-resolution display).
It will be a consumption device. The full-sized iPad has always been both consumption and creation. People write stories, build presentations, make music, and create artwork on the big iPad (along with reading, browsing the web and watching movies).
The iPad Mini will be about reading books, browsing the Web, listening to music, watching movies. It will support many, but not all, of the iPad's apps, but will not have the same horsepower.
I fully expect the iPad Mini to run the Apple A5 chip (instead of the more powerful A6) chip and top out 32GB of storage. It'll probably feature a half megabyte of memory (RAM).
It'll have an accelerometer and gyroscope, but probably not a magnetometer. More importantly, it won't have GPS or 3G.
7-inch devices are usually for the home and its ever-present wi-fi, or used where there's Wi-Fi available (maybe even tethered to a device such as the iPhone 5).
Many people download and consume books, movies and music while the 7-inch devices are offline (airplane use is a good example, though more people are starting to GoGo those devices, too).

Less = More

Despite all this, the iPad Mini will be a perfect example of "less is more." By managing all the parts and capabilities, Apple will finally be able to offer a $199 tablet. As I've said before, the Cupertino tech giant has to offer a sub $200 tablet to remain competitive -- at least in the 7-inch tablet space.
That space is now crammed full of worthy competing devices from Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Google. The Kindle Fire HD, Barnes & Noble Nook HD and Google Nexus 7 are strong entrants that benefit from solid, growing and, in the case of Amazon, well-established ecosystems.
This is the competitive landscape I thought the iPad would face in early 2011, but has finally arrived in 2012, albeit in a form factor I thought consumers didn't want.
Steve Jobs thought the same thing; he was adamantly against a mid-sized iPad. Current Apple CEO Tim Cook venerates Job's memory, but that doesn't mean he won't go his own way: "Steve taught us to not focus on the past," said Cook earlier this year, "Be future-focused."
I think it's now safe to say the future of tablets includes 7-inch devices.

A Nice Museum

So, now that we all agree that the iPad Mini is coming, that it will likely launch this month and that it will truly be a subset of the full-sized iPad, let's talk about how Apple will unveil it.
Apple will launch the iPad in New York City ... at the Guggenheim museum.
Now bear with me here: There is some logic to this odd idea.
At the beginning of 2012, Apple launched iBooks 2 and textbooks (and other digital tomes) built with the brand new iBooks Author. It was an unusual event, focused almost solely on software and content, though Apple demonstrated the new digital books on the iPad 2 and the authoring software on some large-screen iMacs.
I liked the ease of use and how beautiful the finished books looked on the iPad. It reminded me of what I sometimes miss when I read books and magazines on an e-ink-based Kindle.
Wouldn't it make sense for Apple to unveil the device so perfectly designed for consuming those digital books in the very same venue? Indeed it would. There's also the fact that Apple has almost never done two major hardware product roll-outs with two full-scale events in less than two months.
Part of the reason Apple might not do two large-scale West Coast events in less than 60 days: it is somewhat sensitive to what media outlets have to shell out to fly staffers to these events. A lot of tech media happens to reside in NY.
There's also the simple fact that having a big event for a product that is a lesser version of its big brother will seem somewhat anticlimactic.
I just don't see Apple gearing up for another major event so soon after the iPhone 5 and iPod update rollouts. Apple is also busy dealing the largest PR kerfuffle of Tim Cook's administration:AppleMapsGate. Celebrating while the company licks its wounds just doesn't seem right.
A smaller event run by content guy Eddie Cue, Apple's senior vice president of Internet Software and Services, will likely focus more on the special content ecosystem designed just for the iPad Mini -- with less oohing and aahing about the hardware.
That could avoid the impression that Cook and his key lieutenants are not focused on resolving the iPhone 5's biggest issue.
I could be wrong, of course. There might not even be an iPad Mini. But all the signs tell me there is, and that this launch will be fundamentally different from its predecessors.
What do you think? Am I 100% right, 50%, or completely off my nut? Let me know in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.





New York Times' HTML5 App for iPad Is No Substitute for Native



The New York Times's web app for iPad, native iPad app and the NYTimes.com on iPad. (Click to zoom.)
Not everyone prefers to get news through apps on their tablets. In fact, 60% of tablet news readers say they get most of their news through web browsers, while only 16% say they get most of their news through apps on their devices, according to a recent Pew Research Center study.
To accommodate those readers, The New York Times launched an "experimental" web app on Tuesday built specifically for viewing in the web browsers of iPad devices. Users can save the app to their home screens by going to app.nytimes.com and selecting "Add to Home" in Safari.
The nice thing about web apps is that users never have to update them, but that's about the only advantage the NYT's web app offers over the native version.
Unlike the NYT app available in the App Store, which offers a selection of top news items to anyone who downloads it, only subscribers with tablet access can view content on the web app.
The layout is less complex: Stories are stacked vertically, with a headline, byline, lede and photo thumbnail (see photos, below). It is difficult, therefore, to pick out the most important news items quickly. Users must scroll to read a full story, whereas the iPad app is paginated. There's also no way to save articles for reading later, though most of the same sharing options (e-mail, Facebook and Twitter) are available.
Stories are stacked vertically on topic pages. Article layouts are similar on the web and native iPad apps.
Users can navigate by section (such as Top News or Opinion), and see a list of the most recently published as well as trending stories. Both apps allow users to choose between a larger and smaller font size.
The web app certainly improves upon the experience offered by NYTimes.com on iPad, which requires a lot of pinching and swiping to navigate. But it offers little to subscribers who already access the NYT through the native app available in the App Store.
Thumbnail image courtesy of iStockphoto, LivingImages

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The iPad Mini Will Have 3G [REPORT]



We're two weeks away from the launch of the iPad Mini, if sources familiar with Apple's plans are to be believed -- and that means it's prime time for leaked specs, videos and photos from unlikely places.
The latest: pics obtained by a Ukrainian website,ukrainianiphone.com, purportedly of iPad Mini parts ready to be assembled at Foxconn. Check out the pertinent picture:
The areas marked 1 and 4 aren't too surprising; they merely show the Mini will have a headphone jack on the top (unlike the iPhone 5), and will use a Lightning connector.
It's areas 2 and 3 that suggest the iPad Mini will have 3G service: 2 is what the 3G antenna housing looks like, while 3 is the tray for your Nano-SIM card. This also suggests that the Mini may not follow the new iPad or iPhone 5 into speedier LTE territory, but perhaps those components simply weren't available to the photographer.
There had been some speculation that the iPad Mini would be Wi-Fi only. That would help keep the price down in the $200 range, allowing the Mini to compete with the Kindle Fire HD (indeed, the comparable 7-inch Fire HD has no 3G service, only Wi-Fi.)
But if the Foxconn pic is to be believed, Apple isn't playing that game. It wants your Mini to be connected everywhere there's 3G data service. And that will drive the price up, likely into the $350 range.
That makes sense from the standpoint of other Apple products: the new iPod Touch is $300, and it would be odd for an iPad Mini to undercut the smaller, iPhone-sized Touch.
Are you looking forward to the iPad Mini? What would you pay for one, and do you need it to have 3G service? Let us know in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.

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