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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.

Apple’s A6 isn’t an ARM processor design, it is Apple’s first CPU design

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNsGNlDb6xY&start=109]

Contrary to earlier published reports, the iPhone’s A6 chip is not the first ARM Cortex A15 processor in public usage. According to AnandTech, it is something entirely different and perhaps more significant: a CPU core of Apple’s own design.

It turns out I was wrong. But pleasantly surprised.

The A6 is the first Apple SoC to use its own ARMv7 based processor design. The CPU core(s) aren’t based on a vanilla A9 or A15 design from ARM IP, but instead are something of Apple’s own creation.

To be clear, the A6 is still based off ARM’s designs. It is not an ARM-specific CPU design like a Cortex A8, A9, or a new A15. What does this mean?


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Samsung already has anti-iPhone 5 ‘It doesn’t take a genius’ ads out

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You can say many things about Samsung, but one you cannot say it is slow (you could also say it leaked the rumored 1GB of RAM on the iPhone 5). However, a reader has taken an “S-pen” to the ad above:

[tweet https://twitter.com/jshchnz/status/247134888321495040]

Here’s a Redditer’s breakdown of the features:

Before I even start typing, I would like to note that this will probably be a little bit biased towards Apple.

So, I’m sure you’ve all seen Samsgun’s latest anti-Apple ad. If you haven’t, you can go and check it out here. Notice how they list a lot of features that the iPhone apparently doesn’t have. Well, here’s what they do.

NFC: Near field communication let’s your phone establish a connection with another phone that is touching it or very close to it. It can accomplish almost everything that Bluetooth can, but in a much closer proximity and without dealing with pairing.

Smart-stay: This feature aims to prevent the display backlight from turning off while you are looking at the phone’s display. Critics have said that this feature works fine in well-lit areas, but not in the dark.

S-Beam: This is a feature available in Ice Cream Sandwich, and uses NFC to transfer data between two phones that are held closely together. It does the same thing that the iPhone application Bump does.

Share Shot: This is an easy way to share photos with another S3 owner. It lets you upload pictures you’ve taken to another S3 decide through a WiFi network. The iPhone’s equivalent is Shared Photo-Streams, only Share Shot only works through WiFi.

Group Cast: Group Cast is designed for presentations. It lets users view and interact with PDF, PowerPoint, and image files through their phones.

Direct Call: This feature aims to know when you want to talk vs. when you want to text. For instance, if you’re composing a text message but decide to call the receiver instead, you simply hold your phone to your ear and it will dial their number. (Seems silly to me)

Smart Alert: This feature activates when you’ve been away from your phone. It vibrates to let you know that you have missed calls or text-messages. It seems like a much more annoying version of Notification Center, BUT you don’t have to manually check it– it automatically notifies you as oppose to you manually checking Notification Center.

Tilt-to-Zoom: This feature let’s you simply tilt the phone – as opposed to pinching and zooming – to zoom in on a picture or website.

Palm Swipe Capture: This feature lets you swipe your palm over your phone to take a screenshot. On the iPhone this is accomplished by simultaneously pressing the Home button and the Sleep-Wake button.

Palm touch to mute/pause: You can mute and pause media on the screen by covering the screen with your hand.

Picture-in-picture: This let’s you watch a video and normally use your phone at the same time by placing the video in a popup window.

Turn Over To Mute: Let’s you turn over your phone to mute incoming calls.

Shake To Update: Lets you shake your phone to update the information most apps are displaying. For instance, shaking your phone while in the Twitter app will load new tweets, etc.

Removable Battery: Pretty self explanatory. Lets you take out your battery.


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Should Apple provide Lightning to 30-pin adapters to those who thought they were getting one with iPhone 5?

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via

While pre-ordering our iPhone 5s and getting the heck out of the Apple Store, we did not notice Apple included some extra copy in the accessory list page that told users:

Your iPhone includes a Lightning to 30-pin Adapter for connecting accessories to devices featuring the lightning connector.

Apple never said this anywhere else—either online, in PR, or at the event. Some people who would have otherwise made the purchase might have skipped buying the adapter, however, which is now backordered until at least October. Some people may have even made the buying decision based on this information (unlikely…but it is right there in black and white).
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AT&T now out of opening day iPhone 5 stock, orders now pushed back to ’14-21 business days’

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AT&T just ran out of Sept. 21 stock for the iPhone 5. The delivery page has now pushed sales to “14-21 business days,” which equals almost three to five weeks. Verizon ran out of stock earlier today, but it is hard to determine if this shows demand per carrier since AT&T is such a big legacy iPhone carrier and Apple obviously gave it a lot more stock than others.

[tweet https://twitter.com/9to5mac/status/246631458775646208]

Both big carriers have downsides: AT&T will not run FaceTime unless you buy a Mobile Share plan, while Verizon will run FaceTime on all of its iPhones—but new customers must sign up for a Mobile Share plan (no matter what). In addition, the CDMA version of the iPhone, which Verizon and Sprint both carry, will not support simultaneous talk and data. Speaking of Sprint, it is still advertising ship dates of Sept. 21.


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Apple’s iCloud outage finally ends but some of those users left with malformed emails

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The iCloud outage, which began Tuesday and affected roughly 2 percent of Apple’s 200 Million iCloud users, now appears to be over. However, some iCloud users wrote to tell us that Apple just dumped all of their email into the Inbox with 12/31/69 dates and jumbled Subject lines. One reader’s email now looks like this:

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An excerpt from his frustrated email is below. I hate to say this about a company that makes the best hardware and OS software in the world, but it would be hard to trust my junkmail to iCloud at this point.


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Google releases Java to iOS Objective C translator

Interesting new tool from Google:

We are proud to announce the open source release of J2ObjC, a Google-authored translator that converts Java source code into Objective-C source for iPhone/iPad applications.

J2ObjC enables Java code to be part of an iOS application’s build, as no editing of the generated files is necessary. The goal is to write an application’s non-UI code (such as data access, or application logic) in Java, which can then be shared by Android apps, web apps (using GWT), and iOS.

J2ObjC is not a Java emulator, but instead converts Java classes to Objective-C classes that directly use the iOS Foundation Framework.  It supports the full Java 6 language and most of its runtime features that are required by client-side application developers, including exceptions, inner and anonymous classes, generic types, threads and reflection. JUnit test translation and execution is also supported.  J2ObjC can be used with most build tools, including Xcode and Make.

You can go to the J2ObjC project page for instructions on how to use the tool, check out the source code and view the list of reported issues.  The site also has detailed design docs for anyone interested in how the translator works.

Android apps are in Java, while iOS is in Objective C, but this tool allows those who develop in Java an easier way to convert their apps to iOS. Interesting move.

Related articles

Poll: So which iPhone 5 are you getting?

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Please select 3 answers (PollDaddy %s won’t work out correctly):

Phil Schiller Interview on NFC, wireless charging, and the Lightning dock connector for many years to come

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AllThingsD got a few words in with Apple Senior Vice President of Marketing Phil Schiller. The Apple keynoter extraordinaire defended the decision to keep Passbook NFC-free, noting it had all of the functionality needed.

It’s not clear that NFC is the solution to any current problem, Schiller said. “Passbook does the kinds of things customers need today.”

As for wireless charging, Schiller notes that the wireless charging systems still have to be plugged into the wall, so it’s not clear how much convenience they add. The widely-adopted USB cord, meanwhile, can charge in wall outlets, computers and even on airplanes, he said.

“Having to create another device you have to plug into the wall is actually, for most situations, more complicated,” Schiller said.

As for why the company is changing the dock connector that has been on nearly all iPhones and iPods since 2003, Schiller said it simply wasn’t possible to build products as thin as the new iPhones and iPods without changing the cord. Hence, the new “Lightning” connector.

That said, Schiller said that Apple doesn’t take changing the connector lightly.

“This is the new connector for many years to come,” he said.

No word on whether or not iTunes is a monopoly.
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iTunes 11 to be announced today as well?

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Who knew Apple’s search engine could be such a treasure trove of information? Here’s the iTunes 11 announcement:

We’ve heard the new digital player has been re-designed from the ground up and is much sleeker and faster. We weren’t sure if it was ready for this event or if it would drop in October but a dedicated press release seems to indicate a bigger update or at least the announcement of a big update.

The upcoming update may also explain the wonkiness of the App Store over the past week or so.

Update:  We’re hearing iTunes 11 in October. Version 10.7 will be very soon

[tweet https://twitter.com/markgurman/status/245907040013275137]

Update 2: Fox’s Clayton Morris says the big update may be a few weeks out yet:

[tweet https://twitter.com/ClaytonMorris/statuses/245900190521888768]

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Whoops! ‘iPhone 5’ name seems to be confirmed by Apple.com’s search engine (Update: New Touch and Nano too)

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search for “iPhone-5” on Apple’s website leads to the above documents. Seems pretty conclusive? Right?

The name of the new product appears to be “iPhone 5”.

The current page cannot be found, but we are fairly certain it will be available in a few hours.

Another page, http://www.apple.com/iphone/iphone-5/tips/ also shows up.

Thanks, Vlad!

Update: The search engine also revealed a new iPod touch and nano today (but you already knew that, right?):

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Update 2: Apple also just leaked the iPhone LTE and a new version of iTunes in its search engine.
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Analyst: iPod touch to gain 5-Megapixel Camera, GPS, Gaming capabilities and more

Following a string of reports on the new iPods expected later today, KGI securities’ Ming-Chi Kuo issued (via MacRumors) a list of “expectations” for today’s iPod touch upgrade.

Most of it is a rehash of details that others and we reported earlier. He mentioned the same iPod touch colors that we reported last week, we also first reported a 1,136-by-640 display in May, and the processor was revealed by @Chronic yesterday, but there is some new thinking which we hadn’t yet reported:

– GPS: While the current iPod touch can in some cases determine fairly accurate location information based off of Wi-Fi access points, Kuo expects that the new iPod touch will incorporate built-in GPS in order to better capitalize on Apple’s new Maps app.

– Camera improvements: Kuo expects the iPod touch to adopt a FaceTime HD camera on the front, as well as a significantly upgraded 5-megapixel rear camera.

– Cross-device compatibility: The new iPod touch may be able to easily connect with iPad and Mac hardware to serve as a game controller or other accessory.

Kuo also believes that Apple will discontinue the fourth-generation iPod touch. We heard that is wrong and the current iPod touch will continue in a new 16 GB form. Given that—we cannot be too sure about the exact nature of the camera improvements he listed above (and view them as estimates). While we do expect improvements, possibly including a panorama mode, we cannot verify the 5-megapixel figure. We earlier predicted the same FaceTimeHD that Apple released on the iPad 3.

GPS would be a factor of the Broadcom Wi-Fi chip that is used. Typically, Apple’s iOS device GPS resides on the 3G/4G Broadcom baseband processor that is missing from iPods and Wi-Fi-only iPads. The current thinking is that GPS is not very useful without a data plan, but perhaps Apple is considering caching local maps data to the new Maps.app. Current iPod touch devices can triangulate their position based on Wi-Fi hotspots and through hotspotting on a GPS-equipped iPhone.

As for the Game controller angle, we are not sure it is an angle Apple will take. We have heard about some Bluetooth 4.0 opportunities, though.

Kuo also has been setting moving targets for iMacs and other Apple products, which have varied from August to November.


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Undercover reporter spends weeks building iPhone 5 in a well-timed report from Shanghai Evening Post

MICGadget translates a report from the Shanghai Evening Post that sheds some more light on the Foxconn assembly plants. A reporter went undercover as one of the many people hired to build the iPhone 5. He (pictured right) kept a diary but was only able to stomach the work for a few weeks (reporters are lightweights when it comes to real work, trust me).

By my own calculations, I have to mark five iPhone plates every minute, at least. For every 10 hours, I have to accomplish 3,000 iPhone 5 back plates. There are total 4 production lines in charge of this process, 12 workers in every line. Each line can produce 36,000 iPhone 5 back plates in half a day, this is scary … I finally stopped working at 7 a.m. We were asked to gather again after work. The supervisor shout out loud in front of us: “Who wants to rest early at 5 a.m !? We are all here to earn money ! Let’s work harder !” I was thinking who on earth wants to work two extra hours overtime for only mere 27 yuan (USD$4) !?

There is not much here you have not heard before and unfortunately no tech specs. The bottom line is it is incredibly hard work with little wages under pretty bad working conditions, but it is voluntary, legal and people know what they are getting themselves into.


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Google VP says we aren’t going to live in a ‘thermonuclear’ world and it ‘didn’t believe round corners were patentable’ [Video]

[ooyala code=”x3NHJ1NTo_h_k-nkcK3IFHmVebko22Nt”]

David Lawee, vice president of corporate development, says some things that will likely sound familiar if you used the Internet at all during the Samsung v. Apple trial. Wake-up call, indeed.

[Bloomberg (non-flash) via BI]
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YouTube iPhone app from Google lands in the App Store just month after Apple’s version disappears

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On Aug. 6, Beta 4 of iOS 6 came out with one huge gaping hole: Apple’s YouTube app. There was speculation on both sides of the fence that Apple might have pulled it because of the ongoing war with Android or perhaps Google pulled it because it wanted more control of the app and/or it wanted to show more ads. In reality, it was probably a little of both.

Whatever the case, just a month after being pulled and just a day ahead of Apple’s iOS 6/iPhone 5 event, Google has released its own homegrown YouTube app into the App Store. It is formatted for the iPhone only (an iPad version is in the works), but it already has many features that its Apple-built counterpart lacked.

Description

Watch the world’s videos and keep up with your favorite YouTube channels with the official YouTube app for iOS. Sign in to access your subscriptions, playlists, uploads and more.

Features:
✓ Enjoy YouTube’s vast video catalog, including official music videos
✓ Find videos and channels more easily with voice search and query autocomplete
✓ Subscribe to channels and instantly access your subscriptions with the channel guide UI
✓ Read comments, browse related videos, enable subtitles and more – all while watching
✓ Easy video sharing to Google+, E-mail, Facebook and Twitter

Did Google throw this together in just one month or did it have some advance warning? We are thinking the latter; it is already receiving some good reviews and appears to be a well-polished product.

As TheNextWeb points out, it is not certain how you will upload videos to YouTube in the new app. Matt Panzerino postulates that Apple will allow YouTube to be granted rights in iOS to have a file handling menu option. We are not so sure that Apple cares if you can upload to YouTube natively (see Mountain Lion) from the OS. We are thinking that you will eventually need to open the YouTube app manually, browse to the video, and do it the old-fashioned way.

The more important question now becomes: where is the Google Maps app for iOS?

More… including a walkthrough YouTube video below:


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‘That’s what the blogs are saying’

Funny exchange we missed over the weekend from the Apple vs. HTC courtroom:

When Pender asked whether Apple would be announcing its newest iPhone next week, Apple lawyer Michael McKeon of Fish & Richardson in Washington said he wasn’t told of the company’s plans. “It will be thinner and the screen bigger?” the judge asked. McKeon would only say, “That’s what the blogs are saying.”

Indeed.
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Don’t call it ‘Instascraper’: Why you can’t read 9to5Mac on Instapaper

Update: Matt Buchanan from Buzzfeed probably has a better version of this. The Atlantic too.

I do not personally use Instapaper, but I know a few of our 9to5Mac readers do. We’ve covered the app on a number of occasions in the past and even have covered interviews with its developer, Marco Arment. But, as of this mostly unrelated post, 9to5Mac readers who tried to save our posts on Instapaper were greeted with this message:

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via

That was a lie. The publisher (us) never chose to remove our content from Instapaper. After some coaxing, Marco changed the message this morning to this:

That is also untrue. Instapaper can save pages from 9to5Mac. Marco is just blocking us (and only us). If he were being honest to his users, he would say something like, “I don’t agree with the site’s content and therefore Instapaper won’t show content from the site.”

[tweet https://twitter.com/marcoarment/status/245157862010126336]

But it still does not explain why Marco chose to censor 9to5Mac from Instapaper. The problem seems to have started with our coverage of his iPad mini log files. In the post, we wondered if the iPad minis he found in his logs were verified to be in Cupertino via IP (Apple’s campus and Stores use 17.x.x.x IP addresses).

Arment’s concern was likely the public perception of whether or not he was logging the IP addresses and therefore the geo-location of his users. (We do not care one-way or the other. We were just interested if the iPad mini hits were coming from Apple’s Campus, thereby dramatically improving the likelihood of them being real.)

He replied on Twitter, and we updated the post within minutes of the tweet:

[tweet https://twitter.com/marcoarment/statuses/241543413063884800]

He also made fun of (us?) misspelling his name.

[tweet https://twitter.com/marcoarment/status/241538101980303361]

A lot of people laughed and joked about the misspelling on Twitter. We did too.

Fast-forward a week…and Marco’s Instapaper came up again in a post about the FBI operative having access to millions of UDIDs. One of the folks at HackerNews wondered if it was related to Marco’s DB servers being snagged in an unrelated ISP confiscation last year. We presented that postulate, while fully acknowledging that we have absolutely no idea about whether it was related, and others did as well:

Indeed, as part of the discussion about the situation, it had been suggested that the data was more likely to be from an app developer’s database. The FBI erroneously seized an Instapaper server in 2011, for instance, and the data could have come from that event.

On Twitter and email, he claimed this was his reason for being upset:

[tweet https://twitter.com/marcoarment/statuses/243005365858488320]

However, it appears that was a Red Herring. In fact, in his post on the matter, he erroneously accused another app of being the cause of the leak.

The popular and free AllClear ID app, related to NCFTA, is a likely culprit, especially given the filename. AllClear ID sent a statement saying they do not collect UDIDs and are not affiliated with the NCFTA, for whatever it’s worth.

(It turns out it was likely another app.)

But in updating, I spelled his name wrong —”Marcus Armento”—as a laugh. I also linked to his Tweet above regarding the wrong spelling of his name and the funny replies it received. I do not think he was upset about his name, though.

This whole thing is likely about three simple letters. I (also jokingly) called his app “Instascraper,” which publishers often call the app because it removes ads from the websites it views. “Scraping” is what publishers call bots and other robot services that strip content from a website and republish it without any financial payment to the content creator.

For the record, I honestly do not care about ad revenue lost to Instapaper. Instapaper is such a microscopic (yet vocal!) part of 9to5Mac’s readership and people have to view a page (including ads) to add a page to the app. We frankly want what makes our readers happy. You can use a Radio Shack TRS-80 to view 9to5Mac, if you want.

Yes, now you know: Many publishers call Instapaper “InstaScraper” behind Marco’s back, and it is probably insulting and embarrassing for Marco to know this. I was not considering his feelings when I wrote it, obviously, and for that I am sorry.

It is not nearly as bad as this story from the Awl however:

 It was pointed out early on that Instapaper is, at best, copyright infringement.

Instapaper costs $4.99 for app use, and it’s a “a regular business run by a regular person, so it earns income to cover its costs.” None of those costs are fees to republish in full content published elsewhere, which is exactly what Instapaper does. They do however provide an “opt-out” for publishers: “To opt out, have your site’s legal owner or copyright agent click here to contact Instapaper with the internet domain names of the site(s) you wish to opt out of text-parser compatibility. Please provide contact information for identity verification, including a daytime office phone number.”

They note that no “major publishers” (whatever those are) have yet opted out.

As fellow publisher Federico Viticci helpfully pointed out:

[tweet https://twitter.com/viticci/status/244809706856652800]

Readers viewing the website from third-party aggregation were able to add 9to5Mac posts to Instapaper (not sure if this is still the case).

In the end, I really do not care if we are or aren’t on Instapaper (this is a clarification post). I obviously will not lose any ad revenue from the censorship. Moreover, with Apple’s own Safari Reading List and many other alternatives popping up, there are plenty of “Read it later” alternatives that will not censor what you want to read.

For me, it is important to clarify for the record: this was not our choice. Additionally, for the record, I have been emailing Marco since we were blacklisted to find some middle ground. He decided not to respond directly.

Just as Instapaper does for Marco, 9to5Mac.com puts food on my kids’ plates. We hope this puts an end to the situation and can come together on a solution. If nothing else, we hope Marco puts his users above his own feelings and desire to ‘punish’ us.

Update: Marco apologized and restored our website. Yipteedoodah.  I am not going to lie and say I agree with much of his point of view of the events, but I am happy for readers who want to use that service. I am also happy to put this behind us. Moreover, I want to apologize to Andrew. TallestSkil wins best comment below.

T-Mobile unveils its big Sept. 12 plans for iPhone: ‘Bring your unlocked iPhone and save $1200 vs. AT&T’

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T-Mobile announced a huge new “unlimited and unlocked iPhone” initiative today that will launch Sept. 12—a date that should ring a bell. The nation’s fourth-largest carrier does not and will not officially carry the iPhone, but its parent company carries the iPhone all over Europe and was even the original carrier in its home Germany. The biggest issue with T-Mobile USA and the iPhone is that T-Mobile’s 3G/4G bands are incompatible with Apple’s iPhone hardware. Therefore, a million plus iPhone users are kept to EDGE 2.5G speeds, which seemed to work O.K. for the original iPhone, but five years have passed since it first launched and expectations have largely risen.

Today’s announcement is a big one for T-Mobile and will be accompanied by a large marketing push. T-Mobile claims —and the math seems to work— that it will save users $50 a month over similar AT&T plans. The total savings amount equals $1,200 over the life of a two-year contract.

T-Mobile will have a store-within-a-store for iPhone users who want to make the hop. Trained T-Mobile salespeople will be able to instruct users on unlocking, but they will not physically open the devices. This is an unprecedented move…especially for a device that T-Mobile does not officially carry.

Getting your hands on an unlocked device is pretty easy and will probably get a lot easier over the next weeks as the new iPhone is announced. Apple has offered the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S unlocked almost since it released last year and you can currently snap up a new one at eBay for about $580.

T-Mobile has some more good news for prospective iPhone customers today: Remember the iPhone-compatible 1900MHz network it demo’ed at WWDC? That same 1900MHz 4G network is rolling out in Seattle, Las Vegas, Washington, DC, and the New York metro area currently (readers? sightings?).

Even better: T-Mobile’s tests of unlocked iPhone 4S devices running over 4G (HSPA+) on its 1900 band have recorded 70 percent faster average download speeds than iPhone 4S on AT&T’s network. We will wait for neutral parties to review before judging and, obviously, LTE is coming for the iPhone 5, which T-Mobile expects will run on its network.

However, the best part might be the company behind the network. T-Mobile allows its customers to make and receive calls over Wi-Fi when there is no network on their smartphones. The iPhone is no exception. T-Mobile has the Bobsled app for iPhone for making calls. This is fantastic not only when in low -service areas but also when travelling abroad. T-Mobile will release other apps soon for things like live TV, account management and visual voicemail.

We’re also developing iOS versions of helpful T-Mobile applications like T-Mobile myAccountT-MobileVisual Voicemail and T-Mobile TV (we already offer an iOS version of our popular Bobsled application).

For those thinking about making the jump, remember that T-Mobile is not an official carrier and things like the following may apply:

Also, AT&T offers customers a chance to request a device unlock for their iPhone. The main requirements are that the device is an AT&T iPhone and all contract and term commitments are satisfied before submitting a request. The carrier can take up to a week to process a request, and it “reserves the right to deny any unlock request that it concludes would result in an abuse of this policy or is part of an effort to defraud AT&T or its customers.” AT&T further said it could “alter this unlocking policy at its discretion without advance notice.”

Check out AT&T’s Customer Device Unlock page for more information.

The full press release follows:
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T-Mobile.UK Internal and External systems now have placeholders for 4 different ‘iPhone X’ sizes

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The interesting thing is not that T-Mobile created placeholders on both its internal and external systems in the United Kingdom, because that is pretty standard at this point, but rather it thinks there needs to be an “8GB iPhone X” placeholder. This runs counter to what we heard for iPhone 5 sizes, so perhaps the ‘X’ is a new model 4S stripped down to 8GB? Or, maybe it is just guessing.

We will know for sure in a few short days.
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Fox: New iMacs launching before Christmas

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Clayton Morris at Fox says that new iMacs will launch soon, perhaps as early as next week during the iPhone event or even after the rumored October event, but he seems to think they will be available for the holidays.

I’ve been hoping for an iMac update and it looks like my wish is about to come true! Multiple sources tell me that a new lineup of desktop machines from Apple is imminent.

It appears that Morris changed his story from “releasing next week” but there is no mention of that on the Fox News website.  Only this tweet:

[tweet https://twitter.com/claytonmorris/status/244079886107566080]

There has been no shortage of new iMac rumors, and supplies have been dwindling in a number of retail channels. We are in agreement with some of Morris’s predictions like USB 3, updated CPU/GPU and SSD options, but we are not yet on board with the outward design overhaul and loss of optical drive.

A few things we can count on in the new iMacs are new Ivy Bridge processors, improved graphics chips, USB 3.0, and expanded SSD capacities. Also look for a new slimmer design with Apple finally removing the optical drive from the side.

It is possible that the iMac announcement could happen at the rumored October iPad mini announcement, but I’m not holding my breath for that. Apple has been known to update the desktops without much fanfare.

Analysts have expected a new iMac for some time now, with KGI Research’s latest estimates below:
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In the face of built-in Dictation on Mountain Lion, Nuance announces Dragon Dictate 3

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Nuance announced Dragon Dictate 3 today, which is the latest addition to its lineup of Dictation software from Mac (Nuance purchased MacSpeech a few years ago, after MacSpeech began using Nuance’s speech engine).

With Dragon Dictate for Mac 3 speech recognition software, you can use your voice to create and edit text or interact with your favorite Mac applications. Far more than just speech-to-text, Dragon Dictate lets you create and edit documents, manage email, surf the Web, update social networks, and more – quickly, easily and accurately, all by voice. Open and close or navigate between applications, or even create your own custom voice commands to execute multiple steps with a simple word or phrase. Use your iPhone or iPod as a wireless microphone, or capture your notes on-the-go using a digital voice recorder and Dragon Dictate 3 will transcribe them for you.

With Mountain Lion now incorporating its own Speech-to-text engine (which also uses Nuance on the backend), the market would seem a lot more niche. However, there are die-hard Dragon Dictate users who will tell you nothing replaces the original.

Downloads of the product will begin Sept. 13, and boxed copies will be available starting Sept. 24.

The press release follows.
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