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Soduku Seasons, Hundred PushUps, Earloomz Bluetooth, Jawbone Jambox, and $200 iTunes certificate! [Contest Winners]

March 29th, 2012 No comments

Contest WinnersIf there’s one thing iMore loves even more than iPhones and iPads, it’s giving cool iPhone and iPad accessories and apps to our awesome readers. This week we have…

Jawbone Jambox

Rachel Perkey

$200 iTunes gift certificate

fxt107

Mujjo fisheye lens

Bill Johnson

Earloomz Bluetooth earpieces

Amoody
Billie W

Hundred Pushups for iPhone

MetsFanVI
Michael S
Ofir
Patty G
Sir Brian

Sudoku Seasons for iPad

Jamie
Memori
Ron Green
Schuthrax
Tamtam

More chances to win

Contest winners will be contacted throughout the week. Didn’t win anything this time? Never win anything? We know how you feel! Luckily, we have tons more chances for you to win, so hurry up and enter everything!

Categories: iPhone 4S Tags:

How to create and accept calendar invitations on your new iPad

March 29th, 2012 No comments

How to create and accept calendar invitations on your new iPad

Your new iPad is a great way to stay organized and focused on the activities and events that matter to you most. The built in Calendar app has a lot of great features and tools to help you create, edit, manage, and share your schedule, including event invitations.

iCloud and Exchange

How to set up and send email on your new iPad

Before you can start creating and accepting proper event invitations you need to have set up either a free Apple iCloud account (@me.com address), or a Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync account (including a Gmail account set up as Exchange).

How to set up a free iCloud account on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch

How to share a Calendar event

iCloud allows you to share an event when you create it, or share it later if you choose to.

    If you’ve already created event you’d like to share with someone. Tap it and tap Edit, then skip down to step 4.
    If you haven’t created the event yet, tap the “+” sign in the bottom right corner of your calendar app, or tap and hold on a time spot on the calendar, to create a new event.
    How to edit your event on your new iPad
    Fill out at the information you need to about the event.
    Tap the Invitees button.
    How to add an invitee to your event on your new iPad
    If the person is in your address book, just start typing their name. If they aren’t, type in their iCloud (@me.com) e-mail address.
    Once you’re done adding people, tap Done.
    Now save the entire event by tapping Done again in the upper right hand corner.
    iCloud will send the event invites to everyone. Once they accept or decline, you’ll see their name and status within your calendar.

While users with other types of accounts will receive your invites, they won’t be able to accept them into their Calendar and see your changes to events if they aren’t using iCloud as well.

How to accept an event invite

If someone has sent you an event invite, you can accept them straight from your iPad with just a few taps. Depending on your settings, you might get a popup notification or email alerting you when a new invitation comes in. Your Calendar app icon will also be badged with a number representing any outstanding event invitations (similar to how Mail shows you the number of unread email messages.)

To accept an invitation:

    Launch the Calendar app.
    Tap the Invitations button to view the pending invites.
    How to accept a calendar invite on your new iPad
    You can either accept, decline, or say maybe. Your RSVP status will appear for the creatore of the event as well.
    You can always change your status on the event by going back into the event in your calendar.

Additional resources:

Everything you need to know about your new iPad
Even more tips & tricks for new iPad users
How to set up and send e-mail on your new iPad
iMore new iPad discussion forums

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Case-Mate Glam Sparkle case for iPhone review

March 29th, 2012 No comments

Case-Mate Glam Sparkle case for iPhone review

The Glam Sparkle case for iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S is just the latest in a long line of beautiful, shiny cases from Case-Mate. They sent this back from CES 2012 for me to look at and what can I say, they know my weakness and they exploit it well! From the latest brushed aluminum Barely-There to my trusty old Chrome case, Case-Mate has never failed to trap me with their sparkling wares.

And the Glam Sparkle case for iPhone really does sparkle, as the name so well implies! It comes in silver, gold, green, and pink, and it hast a multifaceted backplate that literally twinkles and glitters as it catches the light at different angles. It’s not rough to the touch, however, as the sparkles are protected by a tough layer of lacquer that’s finished silky smooth.

Like all of Case-Mate’s recent Barely-There cases, the Glam Sparkle adds almost no bulk and all the cutouts are generous so you won’t have any trouble fitting your favorite 3.5mm headphones or using any dock cable, even the chunkier media or car kit plugs. The edges don’t come up over the bezel, which is great for people like me who don’t want swiping interrupted, but no so great if you’re looking for some protection when you put your iPhone on a table face down.

Speaking of protection, what you give up in bulk you also give up in protection. This is no tank case! It will protect your precious iPhone from scratches and scuffs to the side and back, but it probably won’t help you much in the event of serious impact damage.

If all you want to do is make your iPhone look absolutely fabulous, however, the Case-Mate Glam Sparkle has you covered.

My only worry is, after chrome, brushed metal, and sparkles, how can Case-Mate top this level of shine in the next model?

The good

Incredibly sparkly, thin, and pretty
Large cutouts make it easy to use any headphones or dock cables
Minimal bulk

The bad

Doesn’t provide a super high amount of protection
Not everyone can pull off this level of sparkly!

The conclusion

Case-Mate had me at shiny. Need I say more? Just when I think I have a case that’s as shiny as it gets, Case-Mate comes up with something shinier still. If you’re a fan of glitter and glamor, and want your iPhone to make as shiny a statement as possible, this case is for you!

$18.11+ – Buy now

Categories: iPhone 4S Tags:

Now you can share your exact location with friends and family with Find My Facebook Friends for iPhone and iPad

March 29th, 2012 No comments

now you can share your location with friends and family with find my facebook friends for iphone and ipad

As if using Facebook wasn’t stalker-ish enough, now you can track your friends’ exact locations with Find my Facebook Friends. This app is very similar to Apple’s Find my Friends app that was released last year alongside iOS 5.

The main difference between Find my Facebook Friends and Apple’s app is that, you guessed it, the people you share your location with are from Facebook. Both you and your friend need to have Find My Facebook Friends installed in order for it to work.

If you’re concerned about privacy, you can rest knowing that Find my Facebook Friends gives you a lot of options when it comes to sharing your location. You can choose to only share with certain groups you have set up on Facebook or with specific friends. You can also take the opposite approach and choose to share with everyone except the groups and people that you specify. You can similarly set up Find My Facebook Friends to notify you when someone is nearby.

Another difference between Find My Facebook Friends and Apple’s Find My Friends is that in this new Facebook version, you can actually watch your friend travel on the map – you have to refresh Apple’s app to see an updated location. While stalking checking Rene’s location, I was able to see that he was driving down a road and the dot for his location was moving along the road quickly and smoothly. My biggest complaint was that if I wanted Rene’s name to pop up over his bubble, the app would force me to zoom in really close to his location. I could zoom out afterwards, but then it would automatically zoom back in. This was rather annoying.

There seems to be a few complaints of the app crashing or freezing, but that has not been my experience on my iPhone 4S and new iPad. It’s actually running pretty good on both devices for me.

$0.99 – Download Now

Categories: iPhone 4S Tags:

Steve Jobs didn’t care for the Siri name but couldn’t think of something better

March 29th, 2012 No comments

iPhone 4S hero

Dag Kittlaus, creator of Siri, recently gave a keynote at Technori Pitch and talked about how much Steve Jobs disliked the name Siri. Only after he couldn’t think of a better alternative did he finally succumb to using the name.

Dag insisted the name was great and continued to explain the meaning to Jobs. For those that don’t know, Siri actually translates in Norwegian to “beautiful woman who leads you to victory”. Kittlaus had previously worked with a woman named Siri when he first learned of the name and the origin. He was particularly fond of the name and even contemplated naming his first daughter Siri. When his first child ended up being a boy, the name didn’t quite work out the way he pictured. It did, however, find its way into a product we all know and love today.

Kittlaus had worked with Jobs for about a year before he became sick after Apple decided to purchase Siri.

“…he talked about why Apple was going to win, and we talked about how Siri was doing. And he was very excited about the fact that.. you know, he was very interested in this area in general but, you know, they’re patient, they don’t jump on anything until they feel they can go after something new and he felt that we cracked it. So that was his attraction.

I ended up very lucky, timing wise. I got to work with him for a year before he got real sick. And he’s pretty incredible. The stories are true. All of the stories.”

Up until this past October, Kittlaus worked with Apple on Siri in Cupertino. He recently has moved back to Chicago to be a part of other opportunities and be closer to his family. Hit the link below to read more.

Source: iOnApple

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TiPb asks: What iPhone and iPad apps are you using to help manage holiday mayhem?

March 29th, 2012 No comments

This holiday season is bustling and between shopping for gifts, triaging work, managing family, and trying to figure out how to cook the perfect turkey (backyard deep fry, right?!) I’ve been turning more and more to my iPhone 4 and iPad. But I need more and better apps to help me out!

What iPhone and iPad apps (and games!) are you using to deal with the mayhem make your life easier this holiday season?

Categories: iPhone 4S Tags:

Apple Remote for iPhone updated to include Airplay support

March 29th, 2012 No comments

The Apple Remote for iPhone app has just been updated to include support for Airplay and Internet radio control. It also extends the ability to control iTunes.

AirPlay video support to control iTunes on your computer to stream videos to an Apple TV
Internet radio control to play thousands of internet radio streams in iTunes on your computer
The ability to control iTunes on your computer to play Movies and TV shows that are rented from the iTunes Store
Addresses issues connecting to an iTunes library or Apple TV
Includes stability and performance improvements

If you pick this up, let us know how it works for you!

Categories: iPhone 4S Tags:

How to sell your old iPhone before upgrading to the iPhone 4S

March 29th, 2012 No comments

How to sell your old iPhone before upgrading to the iPhone 4S

So you’re getting an iPhone 4S, you’ve chosen the carrier and decided on the storage size, and now you need to figure out the ins and outs of how to sell your old iPhone (or other smartphone) before upgrading? If you don’t want to keep it around as a spare, or as an iPod touch, or hand it down to a family member or friend — if you’re looking to get some cash back — then there are a few things you can do, and a few things you need to know before getting started.

Today we’re going to show you how to cash out the old and bring in the new using a number of great services!

Getting more for your old iPhone

Before you sell your old iPhone, there are a few things you can do to make sure you get the best selling price possible.

    Jailbreak/Unlock: The iPhone usually sells for more money when it’s jailbroken and especially unlocked, meaning you have the additional options of running restricted apps through Cydia or getting service on another carrier (like T-Mobile in the US, or any international GSM carrier). If you are new to jailbreaking we suggest checking out the jailbreak forums for the best resources.
    Condition: It kind of goes without saying that you’ll get more money if your device is in better condition, but this counts even more when it comes to the iPhone. If your device is in excellent shape, you’re going to be able to ask for a higher amount. For example, an iPhone 3GS in ‘fair’ condition with wear and tear can get you around $230 while a 3GS in ‘perfect’ cosmetic condition can get you as much as $300. I’ve seen a wide range of pricing on the iPhone 4 and 3GS based on condition, so make sure you research prices and price competitively. (And giving it a good, careful cleaning before you take any photos or send it off is always a good idea.)
    Wipe your data: Before you end up selling your old iPhone, we highly suggest you run a full data wipe on your device to make sure none of your data is available to the lucky new owner. We’ve done a quick How-To post to help you with the process.

Putting your iPhone up for sale

Now that we’re passed the basics and you’re ready to put your iPhone up for sale, it’s important to weigh all the options you have before making a decision on which service to use.

There are a ton of great online services out there to help you sell your old iPhone and we won’t be able to go through them all, so we’ve filtered down the list of services for you. We’ll start with the most familiar of them all…

eBay

Selling your iPhone on eBay is a pretty simple process. If you’ve
ever used eBay for selling things in the past then you know the
selling process isn’t all that tricky, however there are still some things
to keep in mind when using eBay to sell your iPhone. For instance, eBay charges
fees for each auction based on the item you’re selling and how much it
sells for, among other things, so here are five quick tips to help you get the most out of
your auction:

    Only ship to the buyer’s confirmed Paypal address if using Paypal.
    Price competitively if using Buy It Now as an option.
    Make sure the pictures you use follow your description and are good quality — post pictures of any physical blemishes on the iPhone and be up-front in your description.
    Use a fast shipping service and make sure you include that in your
    item description.
    Use keywords in your title and in your item description to attract more potential buyers.

You may also want to consider insuring your item in case anything goes
wrong during shipping. Watch out for low-feedback buyers and also
keep in mind that Paypal charges processing fees as well.

Craigslist

Selling on craigslist is locally based, so you’ll be making a face-to-face exchange with someone in your area. I’ve used Craigslist to sell a number of things around the house, and always follow a few basic rules:

Don’t ever put your personal or home address in an ad. Ever!
I’m usually fine with putting my personal phone number in an ad, but
that’s up to you. Some find it easier to text rather than email.
Meet in a public place, preferably in the daytime.
Watch out for email scams, something Craigslist is notorious for.

It’s always a good idea to use caution when dealing with Craigslist. I’ve heard some pretty crazy stories of people getting robbed or worse when meeting with people for a transaction, so bring a friend and meet in an open, public area to avoid those types of situations.

Gazelle

Gazelle offers a service that lets you easily turn most electronic devices into cash. Simply send in your iPhone and Gazelle will send you money after confirming the item condition. The first thing you’ll need to do is tell Gazelle what you’re selling and what condition the item is in. You can choose from poor, fair, good or excellent condition, and it’s important to be honest when rating the condition so there’s no hiccups or snags along the way. It also helps if you have the box and original documentation and cables with your item, and the service will check for any water damages before giving you a quote.

An average-conditioned 16gb iPhone 4 will currently grab you about $215 where a perfect-conditioned iPhone 4 will get you as much as $250. The process takes about a week, and although you’re not getting as much money in the end it’s a great service if you don’t want to deal with a lot of hassle. You can have your payment delivered through Paypal among other methods, and you can also submit multiple items if you’re looking to get rid of a few more things while you’re at it.

SellYourMac.com

SellYourMac.com offers a similar service to Gazelle by letting you send in your old iPhone for payment with little to no hassle involved. In a nutshell, they’ll buy your old Mac or iOS device. You’re required to provide pictures along with a serial number next to your item description and condition. Once SellYourMac.com receives your iPhone they clean it, inspect it and verify that it’s in working condition before they turn around and sell it on eBay. Users can receive payment via Paypal and SellYourMac.com even says they give higher quotes than competing services like Gazelle, so you’ll definitely want to compare before making any final decisions.

Apple Recycle Program

If selling your old iPhone on any of the services mentioned above doesn’t sound appealing, Apple has set up a new iPod and Mobile Phone Recycling Program. As of this writing, Apple will give up to $200 for your used perfect-conditioned 32GB White iPhone 4 in the form of an Apple Gift card, which you can then turn around and use to purchase the iPhone 4S. In this case, you’re basically getting the iPhone 4S at no charge (with a 2-year contract, of course). If you have a black model, they’ll give you up to $180.

Apple is even including the iPhone 3GS in the Recycle Program, giving a $105 gift card if your 3GS is in perfect condition. They also offer to give you a new 8GB model of the same iPhone to swap out provided you sign a 2-year contract.

Personal transactions

Just because all these online services are available, it doesn’t mean you can’t still sell your old iPhone the old fashioned way — person to person, likely to a friend or acquaintance. Just be sure to follow all the tips suggested above, and remember that accessories like Square can even let you take credit cards right on your own device now, if cash isn’t as convenient.

Bonus tip

Include all packaging, cables and adapters if possible. If you have any extra cases or accessories you want to throw in the deal it can usually net you a higher selling price as a bundle instead of trying to sell them individually.

Any questions?

Whether it’s eBay, Criagslist or any other method for selling your old iPhone we hope this article will help you along the way. As always, let us know if you have any questions or additional suggestions in the comments below!

You can also check out our Marketplace Forum for more iPhone buying/selling action.

Categories: iPhone 4S Tags:

Screens for iOS and Mac giveaway — enter to win $50 worth of apps!

March 29th, 2012 No comments

Screens 2.0 review: The best designed, easiest to use VNC app for iPhone, iPad, and Mac

Screens VNC, the best designed, easiest to use VNC app for iPhone, iPad, and Mac, recently went 2.0 and now handles remote computing better and faster than ever before. Even better — we’ve partnered with Edovia Inc to put both the iOS and Mac versions of Screens VNC into the hands of 5 lucky readers! That’s $50 worth of apps for each winner!

For a chance to win, just leave a comment below! The contest begins now and ends Sunday, March 4 at midnight PST.

$19.99 for iPhone and iPad – Download Now

$29.99 for Mac – Download Now

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Categories: iPhone 4S Tags:

Apple TV (2010) review

March 29th, 2012 No comments

Apple TV (2010) is a bold-ish relaunch of Apple’s Macworld 2007 co-headliner and since-then hobby, the Apple TV. Mac OS X has been ditched in favor of iOS, Intel in favor of Apple A4 (ARM), matt black in favor of aluminum, syncing in favor of streaming, buying in favor of renting, and Netflix has joined what was once an almost exclusively Apple, entirely iTunes affair. Oh, and they’ve ditched the triple-digit price tag in favor of $99.

A step rather than a leap towards the clouded future ahead, is the new Apple TV enough to hold us over until we get there? Is it competitive with other TV streaming hardware and services? Will I ever stop asking questions and start answering them? You bet, after the break.

Apple TV (2010) in 10 minutes — quick start guide

Hardware

The Apple TV is tiny. Ridiculously tiny. There’s just no other way to say it and no way to really appreciate it until you’ve seen the small box and removed the even smaller Apple TV unit inside. It’s 0.9 inches (23 mm) short, 3.9 inches (98 mm) narrow, and a square 3.9 inches (98 mm) shallow. And it weighs only 0.6 pounds (272 grams). Not that you’ll need to carry it around much as this is the first member of the iOS family that’s supposed to stay put in your living room, tethered to your TV. (Though at this tiny size, who’d blame you if you wanted to keep one in your backpack or technovest). And I’m sure most of what little size there is is taken up by the internal power brick. Crazy.

It’s also black instead of the previous — and Apple’s traditional — aluminum or recent stainless steel. That seems odd but I suppose the idea here is to blend away into the shadows and corners and let the content take the center stage. Well, except for the LED light on the front, bottom-right corner.

Ports are at a bare minimum as well. Gone are the component RGB cables of the original Apple TV and only HDMI remains (and here I’ll point out how much Hollywood no doubt loves that lack of anything analog and its so-called “loophole”). Immediately below it is the micro-USB port, ostensibly for servicing the unit at Apple but likely to be used by hackers until Apple decides to open it up to 3rd party development, and then it will be used to tether to iTunes and Xcode (or maybe not, see later).

There’s an ethernet jack if you rather have a hardline than a Wi-Fi connection and a power plug since this is also the first non-rechargable iOS device.

And that’s it, aside from the bottom looking like the 2010 Mac Mini.

According to teardowns (Apple doesn’t bother consumers with details like internal stats), inside there’s an Apple A4 chipset like all other 2010 iOS devices, 256MB of RAM (same as iPod touch and iPad, half as much as iPhone 4), and 8GB of NAND Flash memory (same as the lowest end iPod touch).

Since this is a streaming-only device, and an H.264-only device, that’s probably enough storage for even an HD video, and with hardware acceleration, enough muscle to drive it. If it ever does become an app platform, however, or even simply gets a browser, that limit is bound to annoy.

Cost cutting to hit $99, no doubt.

Remote

Apple TV comes with one of the recently redesigned aluminum remote controls. It’s infrared, which in an age of Bluetooth and Wi-Fi is disappointing — to everyone except universal remote control users who don’t hide their components out of line of sight. Its got the same up, down, left, right, and enter 5-way its always had, and menu and play-pause buttons just beneath. And there’s a battery door on the reverse side.

It matches Apple’s aluminum computer line, the iPhone, and the iPad, and thanks to a touch of black on the buttons, it even manages to match the new Apple TV.

For more, see our complete Apple Aluminum Remote Control review from November, 2009.

However, since I suspect most of you here have an iPhone, iPod touch, and/or iPad, I’ll just gently remind you that Apple has just released a new version of their free, fairly awesome Remote app that works over Wi-Fi and offers way more functionality. Use it whenever possible.

Less is more

While it seems counterintuitive that a tiny box running on an ARM chipset could be any type of upgrade to something that ran on Intel Celeron, it truly is. Sure, old and new alike were and are both whisper quiet but I could have grilled my cheese sandwiches on the old Apple TV and the new one is cool as an iPad. Likewise I stood my old, wide Apple TV on its edge to slot it into my AV setup while the new one just tucked into a corner.

I’m sure some people (and their capture cards) will miss the RGP cable option and HDCP is an insult and often annoyance to consumers everywhere, but in modern living rooms it just works. Simply.

And no, Apple still doesn’t include an HDMI cable. It’s disappointing but again its typically Apple — they want to hit $99 so hard it knocks everything possible out of the box.

Software

Apple TV (2010) no longer runs a special flavor Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger – it now runs a special flavor of iOS 4. Not that you could tell from just looking at it. The old BackRow interface that ran on the original Apple TV (after the most recent updates) is duplicated almost exactly for the new Lowtide UI that runs on the 2010 model.

[Note: I'm in Canada where Apple offers no TV rentals, so the image above and subsequent images of the top level UI are missing that menu item]

When you start up you get to choose your language from English, French, German, Japanese, Dutch, Italian, Spain, Portuguese (Portugal or Brazilian), Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Korean, simplified or traditional Chinese, Russian, or Polish.

You need a working internet connection from then on, so make sure you’ve plugged in or have your Wi-Fi settings ready to input.

You’re then asked if you want to let Apple improve their products by collecting anonymous usage (and error) data. (You can change this later if you like).

Lowtide

The most noticeable change is that iTunes Store and your own content are now separate. When Apple TV debuted, Movies, TV Shows, and Podcast menus all listed iTunes Store content first, then My Movies, My TV Shows, and My Podcasts were listed under them. In a recent update Apple flipped that around and listed the “my” content first, before iTunes Store content, but you still had to switch horizontally between the tabs to go from one area of your content to another.

Now Movies and TV Shows are purely for iTunes Store content, Podcasts is tucked away under Internet, and a Computers tab holds all your “my” content, bereft of that label, in one place.

If you were a “type”-centric viewer — someone who just wanted to watch movies or TV and didn’t care if it was from iTunes Store or your existing iTunes library — than this may be a change for the worse. If you were a “get iTunes Store out of my way!”-centric viewer than you’ll be happy.

Movies and TV Shows

Movies is pretty much the same as it was before with two major exceptions. First, My Movies has moved to the Computers section as noted above, and second, the ability to buy movies is gone. It’s rental only now.

You can still buy movies via iTunes on Windows or Mac and stream them over, so it’s not a huge loss. What is a loss is that studios don’t always make movies available to rent which means there’s less movies available via iTunes on Apple TV now. That’s entirely the studios fault — they think it will force us to buy movies instead of renting — but as usual we consumers suffer for it.

Rentals are $4.99 or $3.99 for HD depending on how recent the movie is (Apple lists $3.99 and $2.99 for SD on the Apple TV website but I haven’t seen any SD titles listed on the device itself, besides the special promotions which I’ll cover in a minute). Outside the US the price is typically higher (+$1 in Canada, for example).

Every week iTunes Store has $0.99 movie rental specials, or $1.99 for HD. There were about 50 choices this week, none of them recent or mainstream titles. But for cheapy movie night, they’re yours to discover.

Because of an increase in iTunes fraud, the first time you rent content — or if iTunes just thinks there’s something weird about your IP, device, or the way the wind is blowing — they might ask you to verify the CVV code on your credit card. This is a great addition to security.

You can start watching a rented movie any time within the 30 days following the rental, and then have 24 hours to watch it as few or as many times as you want and can fit in. Outside the US, you
have 48 hours, so Americans can once again thank Hollywood for caring about them so.

Now then, the quality of the content remains terrific. Apple employs an iTunes transcoding quality czar, so what else would you expect? On my connection it took roughly 2 seconds for a movie to be “ready to watch” and it played through without pause or stammer. The 720p HD content looked excellent upscaled on a 1080p TV. Clean, crisp, and nothing in the way of artifacts or staircasing on the angular lines.

Apple TV iTunes Rental sample

Hollywood probably thinks the price is too cheap. I think it’s fair but towards the high side. They’re not competing with the dwindling video rental stores and VOD services. They’re competing with YouTube, video games, and a thousand other new forms of entertainment. Not to mention bootleg content priced a free + time and effort.

At $2 a rental I think they’d hit incredible volume, more than make up for any per-unit loses, and make bootlegging not worth the time it takes to do it.

The same goes for TV shows, in terms of how the Apple TV handles them in their little section tab, and in terms of content only it’s even more extreme. The price for a rental is $0.99 but only ABC and FOX are offering their shows right now, and they’re only offered in the US. Other networks have said $0.99 is too cheap for their content and they prefer the $1.99 purchase model. That leads me to believe most of those networks don’t think anyone would bother watching their shows more than once and thus they’d be losing out on a buck. Still, their lack of forward thinking is disturbing. Lets hope it takes something significantly less than an extinction level event among network brass to get some agile minds into power over there.

Movies: Theatrical

Don’t let the name fool you or get your hopes up — this is just the new home for Apple.com movie trailers. Still, it’s nice to be able to watch them on the TV.

Internet: Netflix

Netflix is only available in the US and (just recently) Canada. It lets you stream unlimited catalog movies and TV shows for — as of this writing — $7.99 a month (Canada only has streaming plans, the US should be getting them soon if they haven’t already). That means no very recent movies or shows, and unfortunately it also means content can be there one day and gone the next as studios make exclusive deals with cable channels for certain periods of time. Sometimes there’s also only one or a few episodes of a show, however it does seem to be filling out. Bottom line, if you have Netflix available to you there’s tons of great stuff to watch, especially on the TV side.

The interface is much better than anything I’ve seen for Netflix before, especially the terrible website-as-app they launched for iPad. It’s much easier to browse and there’s a search function that works well.

On the quality side, I wonder if Apple is using their HTTP Live Streaming technology to dynamically adjust for bandwidth because on my connection is looked great. There was very little in the way of artifacts, colors held together well (even reds), and while gradients did band in places, it was easily “HD” quality throughout.

Internet: YouTube

YouTube is the same as it was on the original Apple TV. You can browse or search for content and YouTube will stream it for you in the best quality available. Sure, Steve Jobs said Apple TV customers didn’t want “amateur hour”, but even he knows better than to deny the masses their lolcats on pianos and footballs to the groin, right? (I kid, YouTube has lots of excellent and highly professional content these days).

Internet: Podcasts

Where Podcasts previously had their own tab they’ve now been somewhat buried under Internet. You also can’t download them any more because everything is streaming-only. I’ve only ever streamed podcasts from Apple TV so that suits me just fine.

Apple doesn’t seem to sort by quality here, so you can find tiny iPod versions next to huge HD versions of the same podcast, and Apple still hasn’t found a good way to display long titles so sometimes it’s not easy to tell which one is which.

Other than that, same great free content.

Internet: MobileMe and Flickr

If you have a MobileMe or Flickr account, just like before you can enter your credentials here and Apple TV will find and show off your photos on the big screen.

Internet: Radio

Same as before. I never use it but I know some people like having their music come from the Apple TV rather than the computer they’re working on because they find it less distracting.

Computers

To start streaming content from iTunes on Windows or Mac, you need to enable Home Sharing, the system that shipped last year as part of iTunes 9. That means entering your iTunes account user name and password. Annoyingly you can’t use to virtual keyboard from the iPhone or iPad Remote app because they won’t recognize your Apple TV until Home Sharing is turned on so you have to use the tedious Aluminum Remote to enter your credentials. (!)

Once you’ve entered you credentials Apple TV will offer to remember them for iTunes Store purchases, if you want it to.

Then you can click (or tap, because the Remote app will now find the Apple TV) and you get a page with all your music, movies, TV Shows, Podcasts, iTunes U, and Photos content, all in one place.

Definitely easier than the old system of exchanging PIN numbers or syncing large files over ethernet or Wi-Fi.

Once you’re done, all the available computers on your network show up under the Computers tab, and picking one gives you a media menu for that machine: Music, Movies, TV Shows, Podcasts, iTunes U, and Photos.

Here the quality will depend on the source material, Apple TV upscaling, and your TV chipset. Old DVD rips looked fine but I could see jaggies in the angles. 720p iTunes content looked fantastic.

Apple TV streaming

Computers: Photos

Sharing Photos from your computer works a little differently. You have to start in iTunes, under the Advanced menu, and choose which photos you want to share (either a directory or an iPhone or Aperture library). If you’re using a Mac, you can even select based on criteria like Faces.

Once you apply the settings the Apple TV will churn away for a moment and then make the photos available. You can browse them individually or start a slide show with optional settings for shuffle, repeat, music, and themes (including Origami, of course).

Settings: General

As usual, Settings is the boring section where all the fun can be found.

General lets you get About info, device Name, set Network credentials, iTunes Store account, Parental Controls, Remotes, Update Software, set a Sleep After timer, choose your Send Data to Apple preferences, set Language, read the obnoxiously long legal data, and…

Restore your Apple TV.

You can do the Reset All Settings but there’s also a Restore button proper that lets you download and install a fresh copy of iOS 4.1. Over the network. Over a wireless network if that’s how you’re setup.

Let that sink in a moment. Over the air (OTA) software restore or update. Um… Can we have that for iPhone and iPad?

Settings (misc)

The other Settings let you customize the Screen Saver, set up Audio and Video, configure AirPlay (including a password), turn off Home Sharing, and Sleep Now.

Kudos once again to Apple for supporting subtitles and otherwise doing more than any other consumer electronics company on the planet when it comes to accessibility features in all their products. It’s something they never get enough praise for and competitors would do well to emulate as much and as often as possible.

AirPlay

AirPlay is only working for audio at the moment, even if you’re using an iPhone or iPad running iOS 4.2 beta. As such, functionality is the same as it was previously with AirTunes, though you can stream the audio from video content. I’ll update this section when iOS 4.2 ships and AirPlay makes its official debut.

iOS is the Future

In making iOS 4.1 for Apple TV’s Lowtide, almost indistinguishable from Mac OS X 4 for Apple TV’s BackRow does it really matter to an end user what’s powering their device?

No, but I think they’ll absolutely notice how responsive it is, how well it throws pixels across the screen, and if Apple finally follows through with the platform, I think an iOS Apple TV has incredible potential.

AirPlay could be killer — any H.264 video you’re watching on your iPhone or iPad, any time, instantly transportable to your big screen via Apple TV.

Apps could be fantastic — start me off with Safari web browser as soon as possible.

Right now it’s as good as what came before, more limited and focused in some ways (rentals, streaming), more feature rich (Netflix) and fluid in others.

Conclusion

Apple TV (2010) is a step rather than a leap, but one that circles to the side and begins to flank traditional media, hopefully cutting an angle that positions Apple’s hobby to finally break through into something more. A lot will depend on the next 12 months, how much Apple pushes it and how fast content fills out. A lot also depends on those myopic Hollywood studies who still haven’t gotten on board with volume pricing (much less subscription services, which would be killer).

If you’re a heavy iTunes Store user and iPhone and/or iPad are a big part of your digital life, Apple TV (2010) is a no brainer. It projects every
thing you have into the living room with elegance and simplicity.

If you live for Netflix than Apple TV (2010) sets the bar for 10-foot interfaces and I daresay interfaces in general (mainly because Netflix themselves have set the bar so low).

If you don’t use iTunes Store or iPhone/iPad, then there are probably other devices that better fit your file formats (i.e. xvid, mkv) and devices of choice. (Even an iPhone/iPad, an Apple AV cable, and the Air Video app…)

But I’ll be getting everyone in my immediate family one for Christmas this year. Especially with Airplay, the idea I can go to my parents or siblings or best friends’ place, pull out my iPhone, and show them the great new show or movie on my device, or this video I just found on the web, is near intoxicating. It’s the future. It’s Star Trek. And once again Apple is wrapping a compelling — if tightly controlled — vision of that future up and serving it to mainstream users on a (in this case tiny) platter.

At $99 it’s not hard to justify, and that’s probably what Apple had in mind.

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