
This, folks, is Gateway's innovative new PC, designed to reinvigorate the fortunes of this once-great (or at least once-popular) computer brand. Does it remind you of anything?
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Innovation in computer design
This, folks, is Gateway's innovative new PC, designed to reinvigorate the fortunes of this once-great (or at least once-popular) computer brand. Does it remind you of anything? Nous sommes en France
MacFormat is in Paris, inflicting our high school French on all the companies exhibiting at the hall at Porte de Versailles. It's a good show, actually; there may not be many more companies exhibiting than at the London show, but there seems to be more space...
First look: Pixelmator
Touted as everything from a Photoshop-killer to an 'image editor for the rest of us', it's safe to say that Pixelmator has been one hotly anticipated application. The final build of 1.0 was posted for download during the wee small hours, and as someone who...
Keyboard help for the fat-fingeredIf you're like me, 1) you have a brand-spanking-new Apple keyboard that still dazzles you with its thinness and loveliness, and; 2) you never learned to type properly. This combination can be problematic, because the new keyboard's keys are much easier to press than those on the old offering from Apple (where you had to pretty much thump keys into submission). Because my fingers flit about the place, rather than sticking to 'home' keys, I tend to strike Caps-Lock a lot, whICH CAN BE REALLY ANNOYING. (Sorry.) However, there's a solution—nip into the Keyboard section of the Keyboard & Mouse System Preferences pane, click 'Modifier Keys...' and set the 'Caps Lock Key' menu to 'No Action'. From that point on, you could have a hyperactive woodpecker randomly banging away on the key, and it won't make an iota of difference. Ah, bliss!
Premium Resellers plead to sell iPhone
It turns out the only Apple stores you'll be able to buy an iPhone from on Nov. 9th are Apple's own retail stores, of which there are only a handful in the UK. Of course, you can always pop down to your local Carphone Warehouse or O2 store too, but what...
MacFormat 188 on sale now!
iLife '08 masterclass
We have 20 packed pages on Apple's amazing iLife '08 suite, offering you tips and advice on getting the most from the apps and your Mac.
Each of the five programs has a section of the feature dedicated to it. If you're an iLife...
Socket to meSo I stepped onto the Bath-bound train at London Paddington yesterday, looking forward to an hour and a half catching up on a few emails and watching a few recorded TV shows. It was nice, clean, modern rolling stock, and I was delighted to note that the table seats boasted electrical power outlets. Delighted, that was, until I tried to plug my MacBook into one.
Hands up who can spot the problem here? Please feel free to email me suggestions for a suitably pithy note I can send to First Great Western... iPhone hits the UK! (Live blog from the Apple Store, Regents Street)
MacFormat is blogging live at the Apple Special Event today from London's Regent Street Apple Store. We're sitting in the audience and listening to Apple's announcement right now. Steve Jobs himself is here to do the announcement. Everybody claps Here's the big news of the day - yes, it's the iPhone in the UK! The big question everybody wants answered are: 1) Do we get 3G ahead of our US-cousins? The answer is... no - it's Edge. 2) Carrier is O2. 3) Price: 8GB only, the price is £269! On sale Nov. 9th. We watch a UK specific ad. Then another...everybody claps. And a third! Matthew Key, CEO of O2 comes on. He lacks Jobs' appeal, but does a decent job. Announces Carphone warehouse distribution deal. 90% of the population within a 20 minute drive of a store selling the iPhone. No mention of the rest of Europe - just UK. Other countries by next quarter. 3 Tariffs £35, If you're not with O2, dont' worry, you can keep your current number when you upgrade to iPhone. Dedicated care facility in the UK, specifically for iPhone customers. 7,500 hotspot deal, in the UK, no logging in and messing around, your phone will just connect. First mention of Edge network, I suspect that means there's no 3G. Steve and Matthew take quesitons.
Q) Why no 3G? "As you know the iPhone doesn't currently support 3G, so why didn't we build it in? The 3G chipsets work reasonably well except for power, they're real power hogs." - Jobs. Jobs would like the battery life up to 5 hours before he puts 3G in the iPhone. Edge works great for mail, Google Maps, the one thing you'd like to go a little faster is the Internet. "So instead of cutting the battery life way down we built in WiFi." "We think that's the best solution right now, so that's why we chose it". - Jobs. Q) The 7,500 hotspots - do we have to pay for those? It's The Cloud, and it's all part of the tariff with O2. Completely seamless. "Most people have WiFi at home and WiFi at work, this will help for the places inbetween." Q) Starbucks deal in the UK? Jobs - "You'll have to talk to Starbcuks about that!" Q) Activation - through iTunes? Same as US, so yes. Q) New purple iTunes icon on the phone - what's that? It's a new application, not yet on iPhone - will be updated via software update, works over WiFi, connect to iTunes Store, so will come to all iPhones for free. Q) Contract length? Is unlimited truely unlimited? Contract length: Each contract is 18 month. In terms of unlimited, they have a 'Fair usage' policy, like everybody else. Q) How concerned are you about hacks with unlocking the phone. "A constant cat and mouse game we play. People will try to break in and it's our job to keep them from breaking in." Q) Will there be Edge nationwide? "We're investing in Edge, we're in the process of rolling that out. At launch, we'll be north of 30%" Q) £269 is more expensive that US. US price doesn't include Sales Tax, while UK does - VAT. "It's more expensive to do business here". Q) Will it roll out to other countries? A few countries in Europe by next Quarter". Won't give any more details than that. Carrier in other countries not announced either. Q) Considered opening up the iPhone to other applications? Already doing that with the Web 2.0 standards. We're looking at opening it more intimately, but we haven't made firm decisions. Jobs talks about how 3rd party developers can potentially screw up the phone in some way, so they want to play it safe. Q) Any assurances about cutting the price after Nov. 9th? "In technology there's never any guarantees! If you wait to buy something looking over the horizon you'll never buy anything." Q) Should we be disapointed in 2Megapixel camera? It turns out the camera is great - let's not get into a war of pixels. If you have enought light this camera takes beautiful pictures. Apple reinvents the iPod - New MacFormat This Week Podcast 17/9/7
The new edition of MacFormat This Week for 17 September 2007 is now available for download!
In this edition of MacFormat This Week...
We've got all the facts about the new iPod touch and iPod nano. Christopher Phin gives his take on the new models...
Read about the Apple special event as it happens, here tomorrow!
MacFormat will be live blogging the special Apple event happening tomorrow (18th Sept) at 10.00am, so keep checking here for the latest updates!
Mum is no longer the wordOK, folks, what does this cryptic invite mean? Suggestions in the comments!
Just to quell any conspiracy theories, the blanked out text is just the RSVP email address and phone number; we thought it only polite to hide them. Free recording studio time for Mac users
Apple Premium Reseller Solutions Inc is offering music enthusiasts the chance to use a recording studio at any of its Brighton, Bournemouth or Hove branches free for one hour. To register, visit the Solutions Inc website . Simply turn up on the day with your...
$100 store credit for early iPhone adoptersIn an open letter on Apple's site, Steve Jobs has responded to the disappointment of early adopters – who paid $599 for their 8GB iPod – following yesterday's price slash to $399. I have received hundreds of emails from iPhone customers who are upset about Apple dropping the price of iPhone by $200 two months after it went on sale. After reading every one of these emails, I have some observations and conclusions. And Steve's main conclusion is an exciting one: Therefore, we have decided to offer every iPhone customer who purchased an iPhone from either Apple or AT&T, and who is not receiving a rebate or any other consideration, a $100 store credit towards the purchase of any product at an Apple Retail Store or the Apple Online Store. Details are still being worked out and will be posted on Apple's website next week. Stay tuned. Personally, I think the folks who were upset about the price drop should be a little more grown up: if you weren't prepared to spend $600 on a phone, you shouldn't have done so. That's how the market works. Nothing has an inherent value; the price is what someone decides to charge for it. If Apple wanted to sell the iPhone for $10,000, it could have. Nobody – strike that: very few people – would have bought it, but that's the point. Apple judged that a price point of $599 would work. And it did; almost a million iPhones have been sold. It will sell even more at $399. Hell, I'm clearing space on my credit card right now in anticipation of its European launch. Is all the kvetching just because, as Steven Riggins suggests, the iPhone is about to become a whole lot less exclusive? But hey; a $100 voucher for the Apple store is not to be sneezed at, and Apple will generate a substantial chunk of goodwill with this gesture. And think about it; if almost a million iPhones have been sold, giving a hundred buck rebate to all those purchasers will cost Apple $100,000,000. A relatively small amount compared to its cash reserves, but still not the kind of cash you find down the back of the sofa. And anyone who has bought one in the last fortnight gets the whole $200 back too. What I want to know – almost as much as whether or not Steve Jobs actually does write these open letters; they really don't match his presentation style – is whether this move was planned all along, or whether Apple was caught on the hop by the strength of the backlash. I suspect the former. So, did Apple cave in to a snivelling public, or was this the very least they could do? Let us know in the comments. We may just be feeling a little grumpy. New iPods: exclusive shots and first impressions
iPod nano iPod classic iPod touch And some notes...
iPod prices: a little arithmetic
When the original iPod first hit these shores, it held 5GB and cost £349. On that price-per-gigabyte basis, its direct descendant, the current 160GB iPod classic, should cost £11,168. In reality, it's £229. Put another way, you could make the case that the...
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