Posts Tagged ‘CNET’

New York Times confirms future iPhones to get NFC payments – CNET (blog)

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

Though rumors about the next iPhone, expected to be released this summer, have consistently contained mentions of near field communication technology, The New York Times has confirmed that Apple has indeed been working on the feature, though how soon it may debut is still up for speculation.

The information comes to the paper from two people who say they have knowledge of the inner-workings of a future version of Apple’s iPhone. Apparently, Qualcomm will produce an NFC chip to be included on the iPhone’s processor, allowing peopleĀ  to simply scan their iPhone near a qualifying NFC reader to make quick payments on the go.

“One person familiar with the new Apple feature said the phone’s credit card information would be tied to information currently used on iTunes, which would make it simple for customers to set up the new mobile payment method on the iPhone.”

For many, near field communications is being touted as the next step in mobile technology and it would seem Apple wants to be at the forefront of that revolution. Steve Jobs often touts the 200 million-plus credit cards Apple retains for its iTunes accounts, all of which could be easily integrated to iOS devices sporting NFC technology.

It is entirely possible that NFC is still too new for Apple’s traditionally conservative adoption policy to add to the iPhone 5 this summer. Reports of Google and Microsoft exploring the technology have surfaced though, which may or may not give Apple enough incentive to be among the first to market with NFC-enabled devices here in the U.S.

There is also the issue of where iPhone users could take advantage of an NFC-enabled iPhone. Do you know where you could? I can’t think of a place offhand.

Is NFC technology a must-have for iPhone 5 this summer, or can it wait? Let me know your thoughts in the comments!

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Angry Birds Rio hits Apple and Amazon App Stores – CNET (blog)

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

In case you haven’t already looked at the top products list on your iPhone or iPad today and noticed that a new Angry Birds is now available, we’re giving you the heads up.

Angry Birds Rio is 99 cents on the iPhone, $2.99 on the iPad, and is free today as part Amazon’s Appstore for Android launch (Amazon scored the Angry Birds Android launch exclusive). You you have to download the Amazon Appstore app to your Android phone to download the game. (Click the “Get app” link on Amazon’s site and follow the directions).

This version of Angry Birds is actually a licensed game that’s a tie-in to the upcoming “Rio” animated movie, which hits theaters April 15.

The movie’s plot involves some kidnapped birds trying to escape their captors, so thematically the game and movie work well together. But after this, it wouldn’t surprise us to see more Angry Birds movie tie-ins that are more of a stretch.

Is the new Angry Birds better than the previous versions? Well, the game looks better, with much more detailed backgrounds, but some players claim it’s not quite as challenging as they’d hoped.

If you have a question or comment for David Carnoy, you can submit it here. However, because our editors and writers receive hundreds of requests, we cannot tell you when you may receive a response.

Hunkered down in New York City, Executive Editor David Carnoy covers the gamut of gadgets and writes his Fully Equipped column, which carries the tag line “The electronics you lust for.” He’s also the author of “Knife Music,” a novel that’s available at Amazon, bn.com, and as a Kindle, Kindle UK, or Nook e-book.

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Target picks Microsoft’s virtualization software – CNET (blog)

Monday, March 21st, 2011

Retail giant Target plans to roll out Microsoft’s virtualization technology to its 1,700 stores, giving the software giant’s enterprise cloud computing efforts a new boost. Microsoft announced a new deal in which Target will manage such operations as inventory, point-of-sale, and supply-chain management remotely with Microsoft’s Hyper-v software. In addition, Target will roll out 15,000 virtual machines using the technology across the country.

VMware, run by former Microsoft senior executive Paul Maritz, dominates the software virtualization business. But Microsoft has been working to cut into that lead with acquisitions and new software. The market offers one of the best opportunities for growth in enterprise computing as companies push to reduce costs by shedding hardware and running systems over Internet infrastructure.

Target

Target

That’s why Target is deploying the new Microsoft technology. It’s being used to run cash registers and the computers used to guide restocking inventory. The retailer, which manages all of its store technology remotely, says it will reduce the number of servers in its stores from seven to two, eliminating 8,000 servers in the process. That cuts not only the cost of replacing the hardware, but also the expense of maintaining it and even the price of the electricity used to power it. Microsoft doesn’t believe it will reduce its server software revenue. “Virtualization can lead to consolidation of hardware resources, but shouldn’t negatively impact software licensing,” says David Greschler, Microsoft’s director of virtualization and cloud strategy for its server and tools business.

The Target deal is a feather for virtualization efforts at Microsoft, which wants to prove its software can handle large, mission-critical applications. “Particularly as organizations are contemplating cloud computing, they find comfort in knowing the Microsoft platform can virtualize and manage all kinds of applications–Microsoft’s, a third party’s or homegrown–on a massive scale,” Brad Anderson, corporate vice president of the company’s management and security division, said in a press release.

Hoping to grow its virtualization business, Microsoft has built tools into its Windows Server software to make it easier to run its Hyper-v technology. And while it still trails VMware, it’s picked up customers in recent years including Del Monte Foods and Costco Wholesale. That said, Target has been a longtime customer of Microsoft’s Virtual Server software, so upgrading to Hyper-v was the logical move, says Brett Waldman, senior research analyst at IDC. “Landing a large, named client like Target is always a big deal, but it does not seem like VMware was ever seriously considered in this case study,” Waldman says. What’s more, Hyper-v is included in the license for Windows Server 2008 R2, which Target is using, making moving to VMware even more of an expense.

View full post on technology – Google News

NFC: The Apple rumor that just won’t quit – CNET

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

iPhone 4 buyers on iPhone 4 launch day.

iPhone 4 buyers on iPhone 4 launch day.

(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

What a confusing week it’s been for iPhone rumors. On Monday, a report by The Independent said that Apple was holding off on bringing near-field communication (NFC) technology to the next version of the iPhone, and then a story posted last night by Forbes claims that the effort is still on track.

The source on that newer report is said to be “an entrepreneur who is working on a top-secret NFC product,” who has a buddy working at Apple. That’s compared to The Independent’s multiple sources on the matter, which were “several of the largest mobile operators in the UK.”

Whom to trust may be less important than the underlying message: NFC is coming to a future iPhone, it’s just a matter of when.

This is the latest in a series of reports that have pegged the iPhone and other Apple products as recipients of NFC technology. NFC allows data transfer between two devices at short distances (about 4 inches). For phones this could allow things like mobile payments, as well as transferring data between devices without the use of a cellular or nearby Wi-Fi network in a similar fashion to Bluetooth.

Signs that Apple was interested in NFC first cropped up in April last year, with the company filing a number of patents, which included use cases for the technology in its products. One of those entailed simply using an embedded NFC chip to pick up on a nearby item for purchase. Other, more advanced use cases included things like a smart shopping cart system that could tell what items you had put in your shopping bag, and let you pay for them on the spot with an NFC-enabled device.

One of the first big hints that NFC was coming to the next iPhone specifically originated from the blog TechCrunch some four months after the barrage of patent filings. That report, which cited an unnamed source, said that Apple planned to build NFC-enabled iPhones that used hardware from NXP Semiconductor. This was bolstered by the fact that just days before, the company had hired Benjamin Vigier, who had a background with NFC technology, to be its product manager for mobile commerce. Vigier had been a product manager at MFoundry, a company that handles payment technology for some 300 banks and credit unions, as well as PayPal’s mobile service.

Shortly after the TechCrunch report, blog Cult of Mac claimed that Apple’s intentions for NFC could stretch far beyond payments and include portable computing functionalities:

If users wave a NFC-equipped iPhone at a NFC Mac (they need to be in close proximity to interact), the Mac will load all their applications, settings and data. It will be as though they are sitting at their own machine at home or work. When the user leaves, and the NFC-equipped iPhone is out of range, the host machine returns to its previous state.

That system would also require Apple’s computers to begin packing NFC chips, which has not yet been the case.

A follow-up to that report appeared last night, with Cult of Mac saying that Apple was already testing “several” iPhone prototypes with NFC built-in, but that there was still quite a bit of work to be done on the system that would let users log in and share applications on NFC-enabled Mac computers with their NFC-enabled phones. That system, the blog’s source said, made use of the Mac App Store to download applications they might have purchased on another computer, and make them usable for that computing session, even if it wasn’t their own machine.

Besides the Cult of Mac report, one of the other news bits that claimed NFC was headed to the next version of the iPhone came from Bloomberg in January. Citing sources at Apple, technology consultant Richard Doherty, who was interviewed in the report, said that the company was indeed planning a payments service that makes use of NFC and that it was headed to the AT&T version of the iPhone, as well as the iPad 2. Based on a follow-up interview with the NFC Times, Doherty claimed Bloomberg had misquoted him, and that his sourcing had not been Apple, but developers for equipment makers from China that had supplied Apple in the past.

As mentioned in our NFC story from Monday, Apple now has more than 200 million Apple ID accounts, something the company claims is the largest number of accounts attached to credit cards on the Web. Bringing that payment network outside the realm of digital goods presents not only a new business opportunity for Apple, but also a way to combat competitor Google, which has already beaten the company to the hardware punch, including NFC support in the latest version of its Android mobile operating system, and in new phones like the Nexus S. There’s also Hewlett-Packard and its TouchStone connectivity technology, which is headed to its TouchPad tablet and phones running WebOS arriving this spring.

Apple is expected to announce its follow-up to the iPhone 4 in June. That device is already said to be nearing its final form.

Updated at 3:30 p.m. with a follow-up to the aforementioned Bloomberg report, as well as additional information about MFoundry.

View full post on technology – Google News

Circle up, math geeks! It’s Pi Day – CNET

Monday, March 14th, 2011

Pi cuff

Perhaps you’ll want to celebrate with this cuff bracelet, which has the first 500 numbers of pi (well, 480 to be exact) etched in brass.

(Credit: Etsy user/KarlaWheelerDesign)

In Massachusetts today, hundreds of apple pies are being delivered to math and science teachers within a 3.14-mile radius of the Raytheon headquarters in Waltham. If that first sentence didn’t clue you in as to why, then you aren’t living up to your mathletic potential.

Yes, number geeks, it’s 3/14, the 22nd year the date has officially been observed as Pi Day, in honor of that trigonometric wunderkind also known as 22/7. The first Pi Day observation was spearheaded by the San Francisco Exploratorium, but the museum is closed on Mondays, so this year it’s up to the rest of us to pick up the slack.

Fortunately, there’s no shortage of pi celebrations taking place around the world:

One of the biggest pi parties today takes place at Princeton University, where the day is also celebrated as Albert Einstein’s birthday. It’s all part of Princeton’s Geek Freak celebration, which wraps up today–plenty of pies and Einstein look-alikes are on hand.
If you’re part of the Silicon Valley start-up scene, there’s a SXSW Pi Day party at the British Bankers Club in Menlo Park with the requisite pi recitation contest.
The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, Fla., is offering discounts today (Salvador was a big pi fan), and in Tampa at the Museum of Science and Industry you can take the Pi Day challenge, solve a series of logic-based puzzles, and get in for free.
But pi isn’t just for number geeks, it’s also the inspiration for several artistic endeavors this year, including this bit of domino performance art…
…and “What Pi Sounds Like,” which has already gone viral.

Finally, no holiday, even an arithmetical one, would be complete without commemorative merchandise. For the particularly nerdy sweetheart in your life, we recommend this cuff bracelet with pi etched in brass. For a more low-key gift, pi ice cubes are perfect for geeks who needs to cool down after working themselves up into a pi-induced frenzy.

At Princeton, a day to honor pi–and Albert Einstein’s birthday.

(Credit: Princeton University)

If you have a question or comment for Eric Mack, you can submit it here. However, because our editors and writers receive hundreds of requests, we cannot tell you when you may receive a response.

Crave freelancer Eric Mack is a writer and radio producer based somewhere high in the Rocky Mountains in a “one bar” service area (for both drinks and 3G). He has reported for NPR, Wired, and The New York Times and was previously an editor for AOL. He recently completed his first e-book on the Android OS. Eric is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CBS Interactive. E-mail Eric.

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Twitter apps for iPhone and iPad get major update, including ‘Quick Bar’ – CNET UK

Friday, March 4th, 2011

Got Twitter’s official app for iPhone or iPad? If so, there’s a new update to download that introduces a bunch of new features, including a redesigned tweet screen, a tool to find people to follow based on your phone contacts, and a swipeable ‘Quick Bar’ to show currently trending topics at the top of your homescreen.

Twitter says its iPhone app is now the third most popular way to access the micro-blogging service, behind only the main website and the mobile Web version. That app went live in May last year, as a relaunch of existing iPhone app Tweetie, which the company bought in April.

This week’s update — version 3.3 — includes a redesigned New Tweet screen, which is a bit simpler, with clear icons for mentions, hashtags, photo attachments and turning on the ‘share my location’ feature. Links are now automatically shortened when you paste them into the Tweet box, rather than making you tap on a pop-up menu to do it.

The app now tries to autocomplete Twitter usernames and hashtags to speed up your tweeting, and the Direct Messages section now groups DMs by conversation, much like the text messaging app on iPhone. Even if you fear change, these tweaks seem sensible, and make the app more usable.

There are two more major features in version 3.3. The first is a Follow Your Friends tool, which scans your contacts and tries to match up their email addresses with Twitter accounts, to help you follow them. It’s useful, although if like us you’ve synced your iPhone contacts with your entire Gmail contacts, it takes a little while to do the necessary contact-crunching here.

The last big feature is iPhone-only for now, and it could be more controversial. It’s called Quick Bar, and hovers at the top of your main tweetfeed on the app’s homescreen, showing currently trending topics. You swipe left and right to see what else is being tweeted about right now (at the time of writing: BNP, Blue Nun and #blackpeoplemovies, which sounds like a recipe for an eventful night out).

It feels rather intrusive at first, especially when the topic is promoted (ie, an ad). That said, it disappears when you’re scrolling down and up your feed, and we’ll probably get used to it. Be warned, though, there doesn’t appear to be a way to turn it off if you don’t.

Twitter hasn’t said when (or if) these changes will be reflected in its apps for Android, BlackBerry and other smart phones. Got the iOS versions? Let us know what you think of these changes by posting a comment. With or without references to right-wing political parties, German wine or racially oriented film satire.

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