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  | We've had Digital Rights Management (DRM) preventing us from copying data for a while. Soon, we may also have to get used to the idea of digital charge management - technology that stop us using gadgets we don't own.
Here's the idea: unless you are the rightful owner of a device, DCM will make sure you can't charge it up once the batteries run down.
It's actually a pretty clever approach. Every portable gadget - MP3 players, cellphones and PDAs - has a charging circuit that recognises when the charger jack has been plugged in. It then begins trickling a current to the battery. But that process can be interrupted, reckons Apple.
Apple's trick - described in this patent application (pdf) - is to use a 'guardian' circuit to spot when someone is trying to use a cellphone with an unauthorised synching system.
If codes buried in the synching or download software do not match those assigned to a particular gadget, the gadget's battery charging circuit is disabled. Result: a shiny device becomes unusable.
Some people might object to such a restriction and, of course, there is a risk that the ID codes will be misread and an expensive and perfectly legitimately-owned gadget might end up an expensive paperweight. But, if Apple can ensure that doesn't happen, I think it has a great idea on its hands.
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  | iPhone on Vodafone UK rumour grows iPhone in UK makes call on Vodafone while iPhone nano rumour grows Jonny Evans
The identity of Apple's UK iPhone launch partner remains an open question as the latest rumour claims a hacked iPhone has been successfully used on Vodafone's UK network. It's claimed that a UK user this week made the first known phone call on the Apple mobile on Vodafone's network.
The hacker purchased a prepaid AT&T card in the US, and was then able to have that SIM card enabled by Vodafone staff through the expedient of putting it inside a device already supported by the UK network. He then swapped the now-active SIM into his iPhone, which he activated using easily available hacking tool, IASign (developed by DVD Jon). These claims are being rejected in many quarters, but led EnGadget to speculate that Vodafone may quietly be preparing the market.
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  | Apple's MacBookPro 85W MagSafe adapter finally shrunk
It only took 'em a year and a half to do it, but the ginormous monstrosity that is Apple MacBookPro 85W MagSafe power adapters have finally seem to have been reduced to a more manageable size. (Scale comparison above.) The same $80 that before got you the rather large 1st gen A1172 brick will now bring you home a 2nd gen MA938LL/A model that's sized closer in size to a MacBook 60W adapter, but still manages to crank out enough juice for your sil
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  | Apple store Fifth Avenue sells 5 Macs an hour AppleInsider reports on Apple's five biggest US stores Jonny Evans
Apple's five US flagship retail stores contributed 13 per cent of the company's total retail revenues in its current quarter, AppleInsider reports. The report claims the five stores contributed over $105 million to the $810 million in total sales generated by the company's US retail arm.
The relatively new store on Fifth Avenue in New York City comes in for particular note. Apple has been selling five Macs an hour and an iPod every two minutes in that store alone, the report claims. Apple's other outlet in downtown SoHo NYC and its shops in LA, San Francisco and Chicago also generated positive results, adding $63 million to Apple revenues, the report informs. The five US stores sold 30,000 Macs and 127,000 iPods in the quarter, the report adds, with the Fifth Avenue store selling five times as many iPods as computers. The report (penned by Gary Allen of ifoAppleStore) also claims Apple has plans for "at least four" more major shops, in Sydney (Australia), Glasgow (Scotland), Boston (Mass.), and one more in Manhattan (New York).
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  | Wozniak on the future Wozniak talks to Macworld about Apple, Steve Jobs and the future robotics Peter Moon, IDGNow (Brazil)
Steve Wozniak isn't perhaps as well known as his Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, but "Woz" invented the Apple I in 1976 and the Apple II in 1977, which was one of the best-selling PCs of that time. In this interview, Wozniak, who turns 57 on 11 August, talks about how he met Jobs, his most cherished inventions and why he believes thinking robots and artificial intelligence will never happen. IDG: You said in your autobiography that you and Steve Jobs had complementary personalities. While you were the technical mind, he got the business vision; while you were shy he was extroverted. When and how did you first meet?
Wozniak: We first met during my college years, while he was in high school. It was 1971 when a friend said, you should meet Steve Jobs, because he likes electronics and he also plays pranks. So he introduced us. We both loved electronics and the way we used to hook up digital chips. Very few people, especially back then had any idea what chips were, how they worked and what they could do. I had designed many computers so I was way ahead of him in electronics and computer design, but we still had common interests. We both had pretty much sort of an independent attitude about things in the world, we were both smart enough to think things up for ourselves and not have followed the common disregard of the day, like counterculture. Steve was more apart of the counterculture thinking and I was really disclosed to it. IDG: Are you still friends? Do you meet him regularly and still exchange opinions about technology? Wozniak: Yes, we're still friends. We talk regularly but not much about things related to technology anymore. IDG: Why did you quit Apple? Wozniak: Being the sort of designer I was, I was designing things all on my own, working alone, and now the company grew to a point that it had organized engineering departments. I could still hang around and do any project I felt like, but I wanted to do real things with people in order to change the world and bring new products. So I didn't leave Apple. I just went to start other companies, and I stayed in Apple as an employee. I never left being employed at Apple. Up to this day I still get a small paycheck to settle royalties. IDG: Do you think Apple was right by not licensing the Macintosh operating system? Wozniak: That's very hard to say even now. Consider the iPod, what it means to Apple even in terms of money. To make Apple such a great company in the computer field we also had to consider a lot of things. If Apple had licensed the operating system would we still be as large and as good creating such great products? You can never look back and decide how the future would have turned out for Apple. A lot of our biggest assets are customer loyalty and a lot of customer loyalty comes from people who believe in what Apple was, partly because it was the company that made the whole thing, the operating system, the hardware, the application, services . It's the greatness of products that come through when we get control over all the aspects of the computer. IDG: Do you think the PC era is over? Wozniak: Well, that's a good question. A lot of people could sprout out random ideas. Basically, if you're a human being, you want to get some things done in the world for some reason. If you want some financial analysis for your company, what are you going to do? One thing you could do is look for information on the web using your computer. Are we going to use our voices, are we going to use our minds to communicate instead of the computer? My answer is: I don't think so. Computers have a keyboard input for you to write down your message to get the computer to work. And the keyboard is operated by the fingers. Why would that change? Now, apart from the fact that you can instantly look up some information and grab it for everyone in the world that wants it through the internet, the computer is just the versatile tool that really gives the human beings an interface to that world. But the computer has other purposes now. It is storage for more things, like music, photographs, home videos, email. The computer is so important and you just can't see those things going away. You could see a few things like applications being used on the web, using Google Calendar instead of the iCal software for Macintosh. You could see people using different applications, but pretty much doing the same thing on their keyboard. Will the personal computer go away? As long as you have a computer, it's going to be the most efficient access to the world. When you get to the point where everything is on the web, including applications, then you can use anybody's computer anywhere. But you just can't do them all on your phone. IDG: In your autobiography, you describe yourself as an engineer and an inventor. Which are your most recent inventions? Wozniak: My most recent invention is a Segway key programmer. It's for the Segway, which is a two-wheel, self-balancing transportation device. It is a small project, but I did it to the standards that I always employed in the old days. I had a startup company a few years ago that developed a GPS tracking system. I had developed a remote control way back in the late '80s that was the first universal remote control. IDG: Which are your most cherished inventions, Apple I and Apple II? Wozniak: The one that I loved the most among my designs is the Segway key program, believe it or not. The floppy disk drive for the Apple II, also. I did it incredibly quickly, incredibly differently than anyone had ever done it before. I just made it as perfect as it could be. The Apple II was probably my greatest invention. I came up with a lot of very strange ideas of how to do things that were very complicated, but to do them very simply with very low cost and all in one computer. So many things in one computer that nobody ever expected, it set the tone for what a personal computer would be forever. That's probably my greatest invention. Along with Apple I, it changed the world of computers from ugly impersonal front panels. And the world changed that day and never went back. I also invented a video terminal for the Apple I with which I had access to early Arpanet, the forerunner of today's internet. And I developed a video game for Atari in an extremely short period. I designed "blue boxes" that could make free calls all over the world by emitting tones into a telephone. I designed lot of calculator chips for Hewlett-Packard scientific calculators. It's so hard to say, you know, the list goes on and on. I had a full engineering life, even though it was time to slow down at about age of 30. IDG: I heard you are interested in the field of robotics, is that right? Wozniak: Yes, I am. IDG: I personally find some robots pretty scary - especially those projected for the Department of Defense. Do you think the Terminator age is close or the age of intelligent machines is coming? Wozniak: It is coming, but it's coming very slowly. These machines that seem to walk really have a special requirement. The way a human being walks is still almost impossible to copy. Every one of these robots will kind of do one thing well, but we never will see a robot that makes a cup of coffee, never. I don't believe we will ever see it. IDG: I hope you're right. Wozniak: Think of the steps that a human being has to do to make a cup of coffee and you have covered basically 10, 20 years of your lifetime just to learn it. So for a computer to do it the same way, it has to go through the same learning, walking to a house using some kind of optical with a vision system, stepping around and opening the door properly, going down the wrong way, going back, finding the kitchen, detecting what might be a coffee machine. You can't program these things, you have to learn it, and you have to watch how other people make coffee. This is a kind of logic that the human brain does just to make a cup of coffee. We will never ever have artificial intelligence. Your pet, for example, your pet is smarter than any computer. IDG: Do you have any unfulfilled dream, like having grandchildren? Which would be the virtues and values you teach them? Wozniak: I have three children and I'm careful not to influence their values with my own. I want them to be kind with other people and make friends, get their own influences, and I'm going to help them go in those directions. That's how I was raised and I believe it's great to raise my children in that way. And I'm sure I'll have grandchildren before too long. That's the whole aspect of having kids. IDG: But again, do you have any unfulfilled dreams? Wozniak: To get 750,000 points on Game Boy "Tetris." (Laughs.) Also, I have a long dream to build my own house in a very energy-efficient approach. That's going to be very soon. It uses the right kind of wood that serves as a heater and as an air conditioner, combined with some other techniques in how the wood is assembled to operate energy life pressure. You don't have to add energy into a house after you build it. I love that concept. It's like the way I used to make computers. I want to build it myself. That's a project that could be finished this summer, next summer, but not too far from now.
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  | AT&T iPhone shock dents Apple stock AT&T activation report lops 6 per cent off Apple stock price Gregg Keizer, Computerworld (US online)
Apple's stock price slipped yesterday after partner AT&T revealed that it had activated only 146,000 iPhones in the first two days the device was for sale. Apple's share price took a hammering in response, falling $8.81 to $134.89, down 6.13 per cent at close of trade.
In its second fiscal quarter, which ended 30 June, AT&T said it had activated 146,000 iPhones. The Apple smart phone went on sale Friday, 29 June. That number differs dramatically from estimates posted by financial analysts the week after the iPhone debut. Piper Jaffray & Co. analyst Gene Munster, for example, pegged sales at 500,000 units during the opening three-day weekend, more than triple what AT&T said had been activated. Other analysts have more recently said that Apple probably sold 450,000 to 500,000 iPhones in the quarter that ended 30 June. AT&T characterized sales of the iPhone as "robust" and said that store traffic remained at historically high levels into July. More than 40 per cent of the first wave of iPhones were sold to new AT&T subscribers, the company added.
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  | PCalc 3 is a brand new version of my veteran calculator application from 1992. It is a fully featured scientific calculator for Mac OS X with support for hexadecimal, octal and binary calculations, as well as an RPN mode, parentheses, programmable functions, and an extensive set of unit conversions. A Dashboard Widget is also included with the main application. PCalc was the first piece of Macintosh software I ever wrote - I started it in the summer of 1992 to learn how to program the Mac while I was at university. It has been rewritten from scratch twice now. The first time was in 2000 with the release of PCalc 2, so I could learn about programming Mac OS X. A special release of PCalc 2 was included by Apple with Macs sold in the US and some other countries during 2002. With PCalc 3, I've rewritten it once again to take advantage of five years of advancements in Mac OS X.
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  | Type bc to enter calculator mode!
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  | Drag a Folder into the Terminal window to let Unix fill in the details. Type cd before the path to change to that directory
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  | Shutdown at a time (or day) sudo shutdown -h 2330 is Half Eleven tonight!
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  | Jon Heeks.... It was Michael Howard that had 'something of the night' about him though, not Tebbit!
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  | Eject Key is a feature...
Darren Davies, Stuart Gordon
Apparently Apple decided to introduce a delay in the operation of this key in the latest version of OSX. This means that you now have to hold the eject key down for a second or two before it will respond. Lots of people assumed this was a bug, but Apple say it was intentional, to prevent people accidentally ejecting media if they press the key by mistake. I have never had this happen to me, so find the new arrangement a bit of a pain, although I guess I am used to it now.
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  | Hi Will
I am hoping that you or another British Mac listener may be able to give me some advice.
I have a Powerbook G4 running OSX v 10.4.10. I have a broadband connection using a Netgear Router.
I have a connection problem which neither I nor my ISP (Virgin) have been able to resolve.
When I first power up, my connection is faultless.
If however I allow my Mac to sleep and then wake it and try to connect, say using Entourage to check my e-mail, I get a long wait before the following screen message:
At this point, Safari or Firefox won’t connect either. I have tried turning Airport off and on again. This does not work. My only option is to restart my Mac, when connection is back to normal.
Hope you can help. Keep up the good work. I enjoy your Podcast.
Regards
Paul from Wales
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