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Entries in Apple (7)

Monday
Sep102012

Google Glass Graces the Runway at New York Fashion Week

September 9, 2012


A model wearing Google Glass backstage at Diane von Furstenberg’s show in Lincoln Center.

 

Google Glass and Google co-founder Sergey Brin made a surprise appearance at New York Fashion WeekSunday afternoon.

Models walked down the runway at Diane von Furstenberg’s Spring/Summer 2013 collection show wearing Glass, the upcoming headset/eyewear device that Google is developing. The augmented reality-enhanced glasses have many smartphone-like functions: users can take pictures, record video, receive messages and check calendars, among other things.

The bands of each pair were modified to complement the collection’s palette of corals, blues, whites and grays. It was the first time Glass had ever appeared on a runway.

 


Models recorded video using Google Glass, which will be compiled into a short film.

At least one model turned on Glass’s video-recording function to capture her view of the runway (see above). Furstenberg and other members of DVF’s team also donned glasses during show preparations. That footage will be released in a short film, “DVF through Glass,” on DVF’s Google+ page Thursday, a DVF spokesperson said.

 

At the show’s conclusion, a Glass-clad Fustenberg and Yvan Mispelaere, creative director of DVF, took a celebratory lap down the runway. Halfway down the left aisle, Furstenberg reached over to Sergey Brin, who was sitting front row. He joined Furstenberg and Mispelaere for the rest of the walk amid wide applause.

Saturday
Jul072012

A *slight* waiting game by Apple Re: #RFID technology

The Wall Street Journal profiles Apple's "go-slow" approach to mobile payments. In June, Apple announced the inclusion of a feature called Passbook to iOS 6. Passbook allows users to keep loyalty cards, tickets and coupons in one central app. Passbook, however, does not offer a full payment system which has been a rumored area of research for Apple. 


The Wall Street Journal reveals that this is a very deliberate decision from Apple:

Holding back in mobile payments was a deliberate strategy, the result of deep discussion last year. Some Apple engineers argued for a more-aggressive approach that would integrate payments more directly. 

But Apple executives chose the go-slow approach for now. An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment on the decision-making process. Apple's head of world-wide marketing, Phil Schiller, in an interview last month, said that digital-wallet mobile-payment services are "all fighting over their piece of the pie, and we aren't doing that."

According to the Wall Street Journal's sources, a small group within Apple was reported to have been investigating a new service that would embed payment methods into the iPhone or even build a new payment network. Discussions reportedly included Apple facilitating payments with merchants and even all the way to the possibility of Apple to begin acting as a bank. Apple also considered simpler wallet app possibilities or working with existing middlemen and taking a small cut of each transaction. 

Meanwhile, the Apple iPhone team had indeed explored NFC communications options in the next iPhone. Various concerns included impact on battery life, security, vendor adoption and customer satisfaction. 

Ultimately, Passbook is said to be the current compromise while Apple presumably waits to see how the mobile payment market matures.

Tuesday
Jun052012

WWDC 2012 - Apple Updates

All of the Apple updates come just in time for the release of the ARSSN application and create a more stable platform on which it can thrive.
We’ve already heard reports of a thinner 15” MacBook Pro with a Retina display, and we’ve also heard Apple plans to launch a cheaper MacBook Air later this year. 9to5Mac‘s sources confirm updates to both lines though details about exact configurations are absent.
As for the rest of the updates, sources claim that 4 out of 5 Apple Mac lines will get an update, with one likely candidate being the iMac, though it’s unclear if it will also get a higher resolution display. Other details are unknown.
This leaves the Mac mini and the Mac Pro. While both lines could use an upgrade, the Mac Pro hasn’t been updated in years. Apple needs to either start refreshing its professional grade desktop system, or cutting it from its lineup altogether.
Apple’s WWDC conference runs from June 11 – 15 in San Francisco.

 

Monday
May072012

OS X Lion Flaw! (and wonderful article re: Sound Gesture Technology)

Security Alert!  Please be aware that there is a SERIOUS security flaw in the Apple OS X Lion OS that allows hackers access to your passwords, without any *** value being displayed.  ...Just something for you all to keep in mind until the hole is patched.  See article here.  Also, here's an interesting article [source: Mashable] regarding the future of #soundgestures - 

When you learned about the Doppler Effect in high school physics class—the wave frequency shift that occurs when the source of the wave is moving, easily illustrated by a passing ambulance—you probably didn’t envision it helping control your computer one day.

But that’s exactly what a group of researchers are doing at Microsoft Research, the software giant’s Redmond, Washington-based lab. Gesture control is becoming increasingly common and is even built into some TVs. While other motion-sensing technologies such as Microsoft’s own Kinect device use cameras to sense and interpret movement and gestures, SoundWave does this using only sound—thanks to the Doppler Effect, some clever software, and the built-in speakers and microphone on a laptop.

Desney Tan, a Microsoft Research principal researcher and member of the SoundWave team, says the technology can already be used to sense a number of simple gestures, and with smart phones and laptops starting to include multiple speakers and microphones, the technology could become even more sensitive. SoundWave—a collaboration between Microsoft Research and the University of Washington—will be presented this week in a paper at the 2012 ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing in Austin, Texas.

The idea for SoundWave emerged last summer, when Desney and others were working on a project involving using ultrasonic transducers to create haptic effects, and one researcher noticed a sound wave changing in a surprising way as he moved his body around. The transducers were emitting an ultrasonic sound wave that was bouncing off researchers’ bodies, and their movements changed the tone of the sound that was picked up, and the sound wave they viewed on the back end.

The researchers quickly determined that this could be useful for gesture sensing. And since many devices already have microphones and speakers embedded, they experimented to see if they could use those existing sensors to detect movements. Tan says standard computer speakers and microphones can operate in the ultrasonic band—beyond what humans can hear—which means all SoundWave has to do to make its technology work on your laptop or smart phone is load it up with SoundWave software.

Chris Harrison, a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon University who studies sensing for user interfaces, calls SoundWave’s ability to operate with existing hardware and a software update “a huge win.”

“I think it has some interesting potential,” he says.

The speakers on a computer equipped with SoundWave software emit a constant ultrasonic tone of between 20 and 22 kilohertz. If nothing in the immediate environment is moving, the tone the computer’s microphone hears should also be constant. But if something is moving toward the computer, that tone will shift to a higher frequency. If it’s moving away, the tone will shift to a lower frequency.

This happens in predictable patterns, Tan says, so the frequencies can be analyzed to determine how big the moving object is, how fast it’s moving, and the direction it’s going. Based on all that, SoundWave can infer gestures.

The software’s accuracy hovers in the 90 percent range, Tan says, and there isn’t a noticeable delay between when a user makes a gesture and the computer’s response. And SoundWave can operate while you’re using the speakers for other things, too.

So far, the SoundWave team has come up with a range of movements that its software can understand, including swiping your hand up or down, moving it toward or away from your body, flexing your limbs, or moving your entire body closer to or farther away from the computer. With these gestures, researchers are able to scroll through pages on a computer screen and control simple Web navigation. Sensing when a user approaches a computer or walks away from it could be used to automatically wake it up or put it to sleep, Tan says.

Harrison thinks that having a limited number of gestures is fine, especially since users will have to memorize them. The SoundWave team has also used its technology to control a game of Tetris, which, aside from being fun, provided a good test of the system’s accuracy and speed.

Tan envisions SoundWave working alongside other gesture-sensing technologies, saying that while it doesn’t face the lighting issues that vision-based technologies do, it’s not as good at sensing small gestures like a pinch of the fingers. “Ideally there are lots of sensors around the world, and the user doesn’t know or care what the sensors are, they’re just interacting with their tasks,” he says.

Tuesday
May012012

#ARSSN screenshots: Mayday, Mayday!

First screenshots from the #ARSSN application made by Integrated Social Media, Inc. Release is pending approval by the Apple Store(TM). Check back for release details and availability. Beta testing applications are still being accepted. Email info@aboutism.com for further details.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Feb292012

March 7th, 2012: Top Twitter Trend - The iPad3

The iPad3 To Be Unveiled in California!

Today virtually all twitter feeds were trending the iPad3 after Apple announced that in San Francisco, teasing what will likely be a new iteration of the iPad, featured an image emblazoned with 10 words,

“We have something you really have to see. And touch"

The rumor mill has churned out rumor after rumor for a few months now, however many 'reliable' SM sources state the forthcoming tablet could include the following: a quad-core processor, high-resolution retina display, 4G LTE from AT&T and Verizon as well as Siri functionality.  Further gossip about another possible Apple product unveiling has also surfaced...  The company may also dish out a new Apple TV with a faster processor and strong video playback on March 7, according to 9to5Mac.

Tuesday
Feb142012

Security: Where are we headed in 2012?

2011 had been pretty tough for Android and iOS in terms of security. Both the platforms attracted plenty of attention, well, the wrong type of attention as they had to endure malware and virus attacks. Though, both the operating systems managed to escape relatively unscathed but it did raise the questions about their security. However, as a nod of approval, both the operating systems have been declared safer that Microsoft’s Windows.

In a report issued by Symantec, iOS has been crowned as the most secure operating system. The main factor behind the stellar performance is thatApple screens its apps for security threats, which leads to lesser incidents of security malfunctioning.

Android, on the other hand, has a comparatively lax screening process for its apps and its effects considerably reduce the robustness of the OS. Another problem faced by Android is the device fragmentation, which is a natural byproduct of the open nature of the operating system. This also means that a large number of devices are not running the updated version of the operating system and hence, are not fully protected against threats.

Recent attacks on Android and iOS have also raised question whether these operating systems are inherently more secure or do they just lack the critical user base to make them attractive enough target for hackers. It may well be the combination of both the factors. But as the report indicates, Apple does retain proper control over its platform, thereby making it much more secure than Windows. Microsoft can probably learn a lesson or two from Apple.