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Avatar for Seth Weintraub

Seth Weintraub

Founder, Publisher and Editorial Director of the 9to5/Electrek/DroneDJ sites.

Seth Weintraub is an award-winning journalist and blogger who won back to back Neal Awards during his three plus years  covering Apple and Google at IDG’s Computerworld from 20072010.  Weintraub next covered all things Google for Fortune Magazine from 2010-2011 amassing a thick rolodex of Google contacts and love for Silicon Valley tech culture.

It turns out that his hobby 9to5Mac blog was always his favorite and in 2011 he went full time adding his Fortune Google followers to 9to5Google and adding the style and commerce component 9to5Toys gear and deals site. In 2013, Weintraub bought one of the Tesla’s first Model S EVs off the assembly line and so began his love affair with the Electric Vehicle and green energy which in 2014 turned into electrek.

In 2018, DroneDJ was born to cover the burgeoning world of drones and UAV’s led by China’s DJI.

From 1997-2007, Weintraub was a Global IT director and Web Developer for a number of companies with stints at multimedia and branding agencies in Paris, Los Angeles, New York, Sydney, Hong Kong, Madrid and London before becoming a publisher/blogger.

Seth received a bachelors degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering from the University of Southern California with a minor in Multimedia and Creative Technology in 1997. In 2004, he received a Masters from NYU’s Tisch School of the Art’s ITP program.

Hobbies: Weintraub is a licensed single engine private pilot, certified open water scuba diver and spent over a year traveling to 60 cities in 23 countries. Whatever free time exists is now guaranteed to his lovely wife and two amazing sons.

More at About.me. BI 2014 profile.

Tips: seth@9to5mac.com, or llsethj on Wickr/Skype or link at top of page.

Verizon iPhone 5 won’t ever be locked, most likely due to FCC agreements

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Verizon is not going to re-lock the iPhone 5, according to a report today from the AP:

NEW YORK (AP) — Verizon Wireless said Monday that it won’t prevent its version of the iPhone 5 from being used on AT&T’s network. The Verizon version of the iPhone 5, which went on sale Friday, came with an unexpected feature: it works on the network of AT&T and many other phone companies [including T-Mobile], as well as on Verizon’s. It’s the first time Verizon, the country’s largest cellphone company, has sold a phone that works on competing U.S. networks with no complicated hacking, or “unlocking,” procedures.

But, does Big Red even have that option? Verizon tends to do everything possible to lock customers in, and allowing AT&T customers to use the handset is totally against everything it stands for. A Howard Forums poster notes that when Verizon purchased its 700MHz spectrum a few years ago, which it would eventually use for LTE, the carrier told the Federal Communications Commission it would not lock phones that used this network as part of the deal:


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Developer Chronic offering up some free AT&T iPhone 5 unlocks

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While being the source of much iOS news (and entertainment), Chronic is also a hardworking developer/hacker who helps iOS users get out of jams. His latest foray is into iPhone carrier unlocking. GSM carriers —such as AT&T in the U.S., or Fido and Rogers in Canada, or others such as Koodoo or Telus— can be unlocked including the just released iPhone 5. Since each carrier requires a different process, the fees vary widely.

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As a special incentive to 9to5Mac readers, Chronic is offering four free iPhone 5 unlocks for those on AT&T. If you are interested, just put your name in the comments. Everyone else can go here for prices and availability for their GSM carriers (obviously—Verizon and Sprint users need not apply)

[tweet https://twitter.com/chronic/status/250024461624029184]

The first three iPhone 5 (and one EarPod) ads hit: ‘Thumbs’, ‘Physics’, ‘Cheese’ and ‘Ears’

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It sounds like actor Jeff Daniels, of “Dumb and Dumber” and “Newsroom”, narrates the first iPhone 5 ads.

“Thumbs” shows how the 4-inch screen is tailored to the windshield-wiper motion of your thumb:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1Rc4MDmr8o&feature=plcp

“Cheese” shows the new panorama feature with a comical “cheeeeeeee *breath* eeese”:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xtm4ySJQPOc&feature=plcp

Two more and a poll below:


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Chipworks confirms that Apple is still using Sony and Omnivision cameras in iPhone 5

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Chipworks took apart the iPhone 5, just like last year, and it is looking at parts with an infrared camera. The chip analysts were able to lift suppliers’ names off both the front and back cameras. Also, just like last year, Sony makes the back 8-megapixel camera. The findings:

Unlike the prior generation iPhone 4S that had an IMX145, infra-red imaging did not show the same die markings. Only a lonely little “SONY”.  When we measured the pixel, we did find it to be 1.4 µm, similar to the IMX145 and we know that the published specifications are also similar. Further analysis will determine the unique features of this sensor.

OmniVision, a long time supplier of sensors for iOS devices, makes the iSightHD (1.9-megapixel) front camera:


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Apple’s 16-member Industrial Design team collect 50-year Design and Art Direction award in London

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Apple Senior Vice President of Industrial Design Sir Jony Ive never misses an excuse to get away to his native England, but for the Design and Art Direction awards, he brought his whole 16-member team to collect the award for ” best brand and the best design studio of the last 50 years.”

Even more unusually, Apple flew in its entire design team from San Francisco in recognition of the importance of the D&AD Awards and all 16 of them – 14 men and two women – accompanied Sir Jonathan on stage to collect the award for best design studio.

It is understood that Apple’s design team have never previously attended an award ceremony. Their appearance was all the more notable given that Apple is focused on the global launch of its iPhone5, which hits stores on Friday.

An incredibly animated Sir Jony Ive pictured in the video and image gallery below (thanks to reader “Coleman” who was there):


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Another teardown yields sub-$200 BOM for iPhone 5 16GB

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We got a preliminary iPhone 5-teardown cost of $167.50 from TechInsights last week. Today, iSuppli pegs that number at $199 (or $207 if including manufacturing costs).

“With the base model carrying a $199.00 BOM, the iPhone 5’s components are expected to be slightly more expensive compared to the iPhone 4S model,” said Andrew Rassweiler, senior principal analyst, teardown services, for IHS. “The low-end iPhone 4S with the same memory density as the base-model iPhone 5 carried a BOM of $188.00, according to a preliminary estimate issued by IHS in October 2011. While the price of some components, such as NAND flash, has fallen during the past year, the iPhone 5’s overall BOM has increased mainly because its display and wireless subsystems are more expensive compared to the iPhone 4S.”

iSuppli gave the iPhone 4S a $188 BOM last year, but improved wireless, additional RAM, larger in-cell display and a better processor upped costs ahead of falling storage prices and other things that carried over from last year’s model.

A bill of material costs is an estimate at best, and no one is sure at what prices Apple gets components. The idea is to estimate the cost of the next iPhone  (n+1) produced after all the constants are considered, such as: ads, marketing, R&D, packaging, shipping, overhead, etc.


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iPad mini spyshots leak, look slightly more convincing [gallery]

With the launch of the iPhone 5 and Apple’s stock price crossing 700, we almost forgot about the iPad mini that is rumored to launch next month. We have some new shots of the rumored device today from Chinese website Bolopad.com (via TechCrunch). These images look a bit better than previous leaks, which were just rendersschematics, cases or parts, but the now-defunct YouTube app gives us more than a little pause.

Update: it appears that they are mockups from here


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Apple’s next huge data center will be in Hong Kong, groundbreaking Q1 2013

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Map of Hong Kong post handover

We’ve received word that Apple is building another enormous data center—this time in Hong Kong SAR, China.

Apple recently finalized a location in the New Territories region of Hong Kong near the Shenzhen China border for the data center. We spoke to a bidding contractor employee who, on the condition of anonymity, told us the planned data center’s scale is unprecedented for his business: “There is simply nothing to compare it to and therefore it is hard to make estimates on size based on the materials required.” We were told that construction is to begin in Q1 2013, and it will likely take over a year for operations to start in the data center. The aim is to have it operational by 2015, which is the same time that Apple’s Spaceship Campus 2 is scheduled to go online.


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Apple SVP Industrial Design Sir Jony Ive to design one-off Leica M camera for charity?

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New Leica M

The story comes from PetaPixel and would seem pretty sensational:

At Leica’s special event last night, after the new Leica M was announced, company owner Dr. Andreas Kaufmann revealed that they’ve got a very special limited edition version of the camera planned — one that’s designed by legendary Apple designer Sir Jonathan Ive.

This camera will be the mother of all limited editions based on one simple fact: only a single unit of the camera will ever be produced.

So, a guy who produces industrial designs used by hundreds of millions is going to design a one-off camera?  That camera is supposed to be auctioned off for charity and would probably command a pretty high price. But, even if it is worth millions, is designing a camera worth Sir Jony’s time? It feels like some of the details have been lost in translation. For instance, designer Paul Smith has a special Leica camera. Perhaps we are talking about something superficial like the special colors rather than actually “designing a camera.”

[tweet https://twitter.com/TheAppWhisperer/statuses/247990128738455552]

Ive has been making the designer rounds lately with a reader snapping the picture of him below at a Burberry event last weekend.


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How much do Americans spend on damaged iPhones? [Infographic]

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SquareTrade, which makes warranties for things like the new iPhone 5, conveniently put out the infographic above. Square trade also covers jailbroken iPhones.

New Study Shows Damaged iPhones Cost Americans $5.9 Billion

SquareTrade Research Reveals High Cost of Increasingly Mobile Consumer Lifestyle

SAN FRANCICSO, CA – September 18, 2012 – SquareTrade, a leading consumer electronics protection plan provider, today released a new study showing that damaged iPhones have cost Americans $5.9 billion since their introduction in 2007. Surveying more than 2,000 iPhone users, the sum combines the cost of repairs, replacements and insurance deductibles for cracked, dropped, pummeled, kicked, and water-damaged iPhones. The study also found that in the last 12 months alone, 30% of iPhone users damaged their device.

As iPhones become an increasingly central part of our daily lives, accidental damage is 10 times more common than loss or theft. The study also shows that younger consumers are clumsiest with their iPhones: one in two iPhone owners under 35 have had an accident.

The top five iPhone accident scenarios according to the study are:

1. Phone dropped from my hand

2. Phone fell into a toilet, a swimming pool or a lake

3. Phone dropped from lap

4. Phone knocked off a table

5. Phone drenched by some liquid

“Today’s devices are racing to be thinner and lighter, with little regard to durability. And yet our lifestyles make them more vulnerable than ever to accidents,” commented Ty Shay, CMO at SquareTrade. “We were astonished at how many people drop their phones in the toilet as well as how frequently an innocuous drop from the hand actually killed the device. We look forward to seeing what the new iPhone 5 users report with regard to durability.”

SquareTrade’s recent study indicates that due to the often costly expenses associated with repairing damaged iPhones, many consumers often resort to “desperate” measures. For example, 11% of iPhone owners are currently walking around with a device that is cracked and 6% have taped up their iPhone as a solution.

SquareTrade works with leading online and in-store retailers to offer uniquely customer-friendly warranties to protect thousands of consumer electronics products and appliance including smartphones, tablets, laptops, televisions, video game consoles and digital cameras. SquareTrade consistently receives high rankings for superior customer service and its 5-day service guarantee.

The survey responses were collected using the world’s largest panel provider, Survey Sampling International. Demographic quotas were used to collect a representative sample of smartphone users. Overall cost estimates were created using survey data and smartphone market size estimates released by ComScore in May 2012.

About SquareTrade

Founded in 1999, SquareTrade works with top retailers to offer warranties that make sense with a no-hassle service to protect consumer electronics and appliances. SquareTrade’s service is uniquely researchable with millions of customers who have consistently rated SquareTrade’s service 5-star reviews. SquareTrade was awarded BizRate’s Circle of Excellence for 2010, and is the winner of the 2012 and 2011 Stevie Award for Sales & Customer Service and The 2012 People’s Choice Stevie Award. SquareTrade is privately held and headquartered in San Francisco. Recently Bain Capital led a $238 million growth investment in SquareTrade. For more information, go to www.squaretrade.com.

PRESS CONTACT:
Nikki Nardick
S&S Public Relations, Inc.
847/415-9307

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iMessage outages hit again (Update: back up for many)

[tweet https://twitter.com/9to5mac/status/247762946908897281]

We put out a tweet 30 minutes ago asking our followers if they are experiencing any iMessage outages, and about 70 percent of our followers said they are having some sort of issue. You?

Apple’s iCloud Status reads all clear, but this has been happening for a few hours and is a frequent occurrence in recent weeks. We iMessaged Apple PR and will let you know if our messages get sent.

Update: We are hearing it is back up for many of you.

First third-party Lightning to 30-pin adapters show up on Amazon for $10-18 (Ebay too)

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Look what just popped up on Amazon: A company called Nanotch is offering pre-orders for 30-pin to Lightning adapters. There had been concern when a report last month said the 9-pin adapters were only going to cost $10 each and Apple would be the sole manufacturer, but neither looks to be true.

The company listed the following features:

  • Lightning cable adapter for newest generation of Apple products.
  • Adapter to use your new Apple products with older accessories.
  • Use your iPhone 5 with older models of accessories.
  • 20cm cord.
  • Small adapter for easy connection.

There was some controversy in the first few hours of the iPhone 5 pre-orders because Apple’s Store website said a 30-pin adapter was included with the iPhone 5. Apple quickly removed the error but confused some customers in the process.

The Nanotch item is currently listed for pre-order. As with most third-party Amazon sales, buyer beware.

Update: Ebay has these as well and another item, which more closely resembles Apple’s adapter, is from seller ‘iTronz” below and ships next week:
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First iPhone 5 Geekbench results: Dual Core A6 more than doubles iPad 3 score, narrowly beats high-end Androids

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While it is easy to fake Geekbench results, the above 1601 score purportedly coming from an iPhone 5 (from a reviewer?) could be an indication of the type of speed underneath the A6 processor’s hood. The score is more than double any A5 processor iPhone or iPad has achieved, and it ranks just above high-end Androids. Here is a quick comparison versus the iPhone 4S.

No iOS device has ever crossed 800 before, so the 1601 score is a significant leap. Even the 2004’s most powerful Apple computer, the Power Mac G5, only scored 1571. Just think about that.

For reference: the quad core Tegra 3-powered Nexus 7 scored a 1591 and the quad-core Samsung Galaxy S III scored 1560 in the test— narrowly missing the new standard for mobile devices. (Note: Galaxy S IIIs running Jelly Bean still outperforms the iPhone 5.)

The Geekbench results also seem to confirm a 1GHz ARMv7 processor and 1GB of RAM we heard about yesterday.

[Via HackerNews] The full comparisons of Apple devices are at the top, while Android comparisons are below:


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iPhone 5s already shipping via UPS from ZhengZhou region of China

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Three separate readers reported their iPhone 5s have shipped from the Zhengzhou region of inland China via UPS—likely from the nearby Taiyuan Foxconn factory (pictured above) in Shanxi Province . The factory was rumored to have some labor turmoil earlier this year, but it appears it has cranked out the earliest batches of iPhone 5s.

In March, Foxconn had as many as 20,000 openings for workers at the factory to ramp up for launch.

(Thanks Mike, Al, and Kyle) Screenshots are below. 


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Most Yahoo employees now have the option of getting an iPhone 5

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A fantastic, if not very accurate, title at BusinessInsider: “Marissa Mayer Just Gave Every Yahoo Employee An iPhone 5”! Well, not really, but it backs up an earlier claim.

The former Google executive did offer high-end smartphones to most of its employees (if the memo BI received is legit) including the iPhone 5, three Androids and a Nokia Lumia Windows Phone. These are probably the top phones on the market today, and they will replace the BlackBerries that Yahoo! employees were given until this point.

The memo is below. Mayer was notorious for her use of Apple’s iPhone, even within the walls of Google.

We have a very exciting update to share with you today – we are announcing  Yahoo! Smart Phones, Smart Fun!  As of today, Yahoo is moving off of blackberries as our corporate phones and on to smartphones in 22 countries.  A few weeks ago, we said that we would look into smartphone penetration rates globally and take those rates into account when deciding on corporate phones. Ideally, we’d like our employees to have devices similar to our users, so we can think and work as the majority of our users do.

Moving forward, we’ll offer you a choice of devices as well as provide monthly plans for the data and phone.

The smartphone choices that we are including in the program are:

* Apple iPhone 5
* Android:
– Samsung Galaxy S3
– HTC One X
– HTC EVO 4G LTE
* Windows Phone 8:
– Nokia Lumia 920

We’re getting started right away and taking orders starting now

Clearly, Yahoo will buy a lot of iPhone 5s for its employees if they truly have freewill in the decision.

Apple’s A6 chip verbiage reveals Samsung-built processor, 1GB of 1066MHz RAM

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As we predicted in May, (and Apple supplier/competitor Samsung curiously stated in its ad today), the iPhone 5 appears to have 1GB of RAM. AnandTech translated the markings on the A6 chip shown both at the iPhone 5 announcement and on Apple’s current page.

Apple thankfully didn’t obscure the details of its A6 slide at the launch event, which gave us a Samsung part number: K3PE7E700F-XGC2. Through crafty navigation of Samsung’s product guide, Brian Klug got us the details. The K3P tells us we’re looking at a dual-channel LPDDR2 package with 32-bit channels. The E7E7 gives us the density of each of the two DRAM die (512MB per die, 1GB total). The final two characters in the part number give us the cycle time/data rate, which in this case is 1066MHz.

The post noted the iPhone 5’s memory bandwidth surpasses the iPhone 4S handily, but it is not quite as speedy as the iPad 3 (table below).


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