All posts by mactips

#SquareCMD Episode Sixty Two: iCloud Tabs

By brolloh iCloud is a helpful little thing isn’t it? Sure it syncs all the obvious data we need like Calendars, Messages, Contacts and Notes but the one I use the most is iCloud tabs.
Here’s how it works: Say you’ve just got off the train after a long commute, you had plenty of time to find what trainers you want and where to find that book for Christmas but you’re home now, all those handy tabs are on your iPhone.

Well actually they’re on your iPhone and on iCloud. Launch Safari on your Mac and click on the little iCloud symbol in the toolbar – your tabs!

Click on any of them to get going again. This works the other way around as well, Mac to iPhone or between all your iOS 6 and Mountain Lion enabled devices!
More soon!

The post #SquareCMD Episode Sixty Two: iCloud Tabs appeared first on SQUARE.

Source: SquareCMD

    

SquareCMD Episode Sixty One: Google Maps and Siri

By brolloh Google Maps has returned to iOS and is seemingly already doing a lap of honour, but wait a second! I seem to remember a kindly gentleman called Siri giving us a hand with directions in iOS Maps. Whilst Siri is on currently on lockdown to only work directly with native Apple Apps, he can help out with Google Maps, here’s how…

Simply ask Siri “Give me directions to ‘location’ via transit”
Whilst Siri won’t immediately switch to Google Maps but it will at least give you the option to route this journey using it. iOS Maps doesn’t currently have the option to use transit routes so we’re given a list of installed alternatives as well as relevant downloadable Apps.

Select ‘Route’ next to Google Maps and hey presto:

More soon!

The post SquareCMD Episode Sixty One: Google Maps and Siri appeared first on SQUARE.

Source: SquareCMD

    

Apple TV Debate Continues

By Alex Brooks Third-generation Apple TV showing iTunes movies
Just as we thought we could get to the end of the year without another flurry of Apple TV rumours we’ve unfortunately been scuppered by none other than Tim Cook himself. Last week Cook stated in a television interview for NBC that TV was an area of “intense interest” for Apple. A bit of an upgrade from just being a “hobby”.
Naturally these comments, which were admittedly accompanied with some very coy smiles from Cook, have set the rumour sites into an outbreak of excitement. Notably very few of these rumours are anything to pay much attention and lack any kind of credibility beyond “I have a friend who says his friend saw Jony Ive and Tim Cook shopping for TVs in Best Buy”.
However, today a usually accurate source has popped up with a bizarrely vague article quoting a number of sources from the supply chain about Apple’s possible movements towards an Apple TV set in 2013. The Wall Street Journal’s article which quotes “officials at some of Apple’s suppliers” makes a point of assuring the reader that whatever Apple is currently up to it’s too early to tell what exactly the company’s movements are, in fact “It isn’t a formal project yet”.

The debate over Apple’s future pathway into the TV market rests in two camps. One camp believes that Apple will takes its usual strategy and storm into market with a hardware, software and content solution. That way Apple will makes its usual margins from the hardware and deliver a seamless experience without risk of third parties getting in the way.
The other camp (of which I quite openly reside) believe that Apple is clearly best placed to release something similar to the current Apple TV, probably bigger and more advanced but still cheap enough to warrant having it in addition to a TV set. The argument being that there’s no margins available in the TV market anymore, and as Gasseé points out “[e]ighteen months later, as Moore’s Law dictates, the computer is obsolete but the screen is just fine”. There’s little improvement Apple can bring to the actual TV hardware business, other than removing buttons and simplifying interfaces.
There’s no doubt that these two camps will continue to fight it out until the day Apple does release an actual product. However Jim Dalrymple over at The Loop touches on something that Tim Cook alluded to during that NBC interview. Cook stated that Apple’s “whole role in life is to give you something you didn’t know you wanted”. Dalrymple posits that the debate isn’t about whether Apple will go all out with the hardware or not but instead on what problem Apple will aim to solve.
As Cook explained in his interview, when he turns his TV on he feels like he’s been transported back 20 or 30 years. What he was specifically referring to is unclear but the constant linear fashion of TV programming, slow and badly functioning interfaces and a wide variety of potential ways of viewing content in a myriad of complex ways might be some of the things Cook had in mind.
Could Apple’s solution be to allow access to all TV programming on-demand and on your schedule with a simple, easy to use interface that integrates all the services currently available along with movies to rent and apps to explore that enhance and compliment the viewing of TV programming?

Source: World of Apple

    

A collection of tips for iTunes 11

By Matt Swain iTunes 11 is the most radical update for iTunes in a long while. It’s a fairly comprehensive redesign, although it’s quite clearly the same app under the surface. Here’s a collection of cool new things you can do in iTunes 11.

Up Next

Up Next is the headline new feature that is a great improvement on iTunes DJ which it replaces. For any song you can right-click and choose Play Next to add it to the top of the Up Next List, or Add to Up Next to add it to the end. You can also just drag a song up to the centre display in the top toolbar. Alternatively, just hold down the Option key and click the plus (+) icon that appears next to the song, or press Option-Return while the song is selected.

All of the above applies to entire albums and playlists as well as individual songs, or an arbitrary selection of multiple songs. It even works with songs from a shared library on another Mac or on a connected device.

Unfortunately the rarely used song voting features that were part of iTunes DJ have gone, but Up Next is much simplified and will undoubtably be more widely used.

Click and drag

Since the sidebar is now gone, you could be forgiven for thinking you can no longer just drag songs into a playlist or onto a connected iPhone, iPod or iPad. But if you try it, you’ll find a sidebar slides in from the right as soon as you start dragging a song — allowing easy access to all your playlists and devices.

The new miniplayer

iTunes has had a miniplayer for years, but it has been completely redesigned in iTunes 11 with a few new features. Firstly, the way you switch to and from the miniplayer has changed: Instead of clicking the green zoom button, there’s now a small rectangular icon in the top right of the iTunes window, next to the full screen button. You can also use keyboard shortcuts – Command-Option-M will switch to the miniplayer, and Command-Option-3 will open up a separate miniplayer in addition to the regular iTunes window. The benefit of having both is that you can have the main iTunes window full screen, with the miniplayer still present on other desktop spaces.

The miniplayer displays the song and artist until you place your mouse cursor over it, when it switches to display playback controls. Be aware that if you have full keyboard access enabled in the Keyboard section of System Preferences, the miniplayer will only display the controls. You can tell this is the case if you have a blue “halo” around one of the control buttons that moves when you press the Tab key.

The best new feature of the miniplayer is that you now have access to your entire music library without having to switch back to the full size iTunes window. Just click the magnifying glass search button (or press Command-F) and begin typing the name of the artist, album or song you want to play. You can play it right away by selecting it and pressing return, or add it to the “Up Next” list by pressing Option-Return.

If you find yourself wondering where the volume controls have gone, try clicking in the AirPlay button. This should display a popup that allows you to control the volume on your Mac and separately for any connected speakers.

Navigate with the keyboard

With the sidebar gone, navigating to the different areas of your library can feel a bit harder, even though it’s only one extra click away. To make things easier, you can use the Command key with the numbers one through seven to access different areas:

Command-1 : Music
Command-2 : Movies
Command-3 : TV Shows
Command-4 : Podcasts
Command-5 : iTunes U
Command-6 : Books
Command-7 : Apps

You’ll need to make sure none of these sections are disabled in the iTunes Preferences otherwise the shortcut won’t work.

Another cool trick is navigating with the arrow keys in the album view — up, down, left and right will move the selecting from album to album, sliding out the song lists as the selection moves. Press Tab to move the selection to the song list, then Escape to go back to the albums.

Redeem gift cards with your camera

While in the iTunes Store, clicking Redeem in the menu on the right now brings up a camera view in addition to a simple text field. This allows you to hold up your gift card and the code is inserted automatically. I haven’t been able to test this as it doesn’t seem to be available for me, possibly due to being outside the USA. Also, interestingly this feature was the result of a collaboration with a 3rd party app developer named Geppy Parziale, who may have got a telling off from Apple for blogging about the work.

Search your entire library

The search feature in iTunes used to just act as a way to filter the list you were currently looking at. Now, as you type in the search field, items from your library appear in a popover, no matter what you are currently looking at. The order does change depending on where you are — the media type you are looking at (movies, music, podcasts, etc.) appear higher in the list.

Typing a search term and pressing return will filter the current view, just like older versions.

Change it back!

So you hate everything new? It’s not too tricky to get iTunes back to roughly the same as it used to be. First, click Songs in the navigation bar across the top to return to the classic song list. Next, chose Show Sidebar and Show Status Bar in the View menu to bring those elements back. You might also want to choose Hide Music in the Cloud in the View menu.

Show duplicates

It’s gone! Walt Mossberg assures us though that it will be back soon in the next minor bug fix update of iTunes. It is also likely that minor bugs with missing album artwork and marking a song as a podcast will also be fixed. On the other hand, apparently Apple has no intention of restoring the Cover Flow album art view.

Home videos

There’s a new Home videos classification for movies. This prevents the awkward situation where any videos stored in iTunes had to be shown alongside either your movies or TV Shows from the iTunes Store. Videos imported to iTunes from elsewhere automatically get this classification. To change the classification on a movie, just choose Get Info (Command-I) and change the Media Kind drop-down menu under Options.

Source: Mac OSX Tips

  

Low Volume Player

By Alex Brooks Steve Ballmer demos some Windows 8 devices | Image courtesy of Microsoft
A few weeks back Microsoft CEO and chief ass Steve Ballmer was asked in an interview with the Wall Street Journal if he’d like Microsoft to evolve to Apple’s business model, that is to say would Microsoft enjoy being in control of both software and hardware? In response Ballmer said that “[i]n every category Apple competes, it’s the low-volume player, except in tablets,” adding that “In the PC market, obviously the advantage of diversity has mattered since 90-something percent of PCs that get sold are Windows PCs. We’ll see what winds up mattering in tablets.”
To even the most casual of Apple watchers it would be obscene to believe that Apple is a “low-volume” player in the smartphone market, MP3 market or even arguably in the hardware side of the PC market.
So what led Ballmer to label Apple has as a low-volume player, apart from the fact that he is completely unable to see or predict an industry trend through the mind warping success of Microsoft’s recent endeavours. Is this just a defensive quip from Ballmer as he faces the pressure of a number of failing ventures into the post-PC and smartphone markets?

The smartphone industry is one where Apple is most commonly associated these days. The release of the iPhone in 2007 has revolutionised mobile computing and Apple’s business model, it’s also shaken up Microsoft something good with their Windows OS (formerly Windows Mobile, now Windows Phone) having little to no foothold in the smartphone market and forced them into a position where they’re chasing Apple.
So is Apple a “low-volume player”? Definitely not when it comes to revenue. During the most recently reported quarter Microsoft revealed a quarterly revenue of $16.01bn. For the same same quarter Apple announced quarterly revenue of $17.1bn just for the sales of the iPhone. Small player indeed (Thanks to Horace Dedui for letting me take a look at his numbers).
But that’s not fair, how about if we actually delve into where exactly Apple plays in the smartphone market. This is remarkably difficult as the majority of other manufacturers don’t report their numbers quarterly so instead we’re going to have to rely on estimates.
Well in the last quarter Apple sold 26.9 million iPhones, leaving them in second place marketshare wise to Samsung who has a large lead and was estimated to have shipped 56.3 million devices worldwide. Important to note that this figure for Samsung is an estimate and that they also ship a considerably large variation in devices compared to Apple’s three handset approach to the market. Sticking with the Microsoft theme though let’s look at Nokia’s shipments last quarter, as they are a major distributer of Microsoft’s Windows Phone operating system, well they were estimated to have shifted just 6.3 million units—more than a million less than beleaguered RIM.
But I’m sure Nokia’s not worried because Apple is such a low-volume player and they have Microsoft’s OS to save them.
Well, how about the PC market, a field that is dominated by Microsoft’s Windows operating system? With the recent release of Windows 8 Microsoft is banking on the PC market to help with its recovery. But there’s a problem, the PC market as we know it is in decline. Traditional computing is a dying breed, there will always be a place for the PC but more of its role is being covered by ever more powerful and capable tablets.
Chart of total quarterly PC shipments (Q409 – Q312) | Data from Gartner
The chart shows total PC shipments as recorded by Gartner since the end of 2009 until the most recently reported quarter. Growth is stagnant and in four of the last eight quarters it is in decline. Some could argue that this recent decline is anticipation of the release of Windows 8, yet with Microsoft reporting initial upgrade sales of just 4 million in three days it would appear that demand wasn’t as pent up as originally thought.
With Apple selling (Apple records sales where as the industry records shipments which could sit unsold for months) around 5 million Macs a quarter it’s clear that Apple could be considered a small-time player in the PC industry in terms of software. In the US Apple regularly falls into the top three hardware manufacturers of PC hardware according to Gartner.
Microsoft isn’t involved in the potentially high margin PC hardware business and instead relies on third parties to license its software. Is it wise for Microsoft to be banked so firmly on a declining market and not be in control of the hardware?
Microsoft Surface with Red Touch Cover | Image courtesy of Microsoft
Apple perceives the iPad as a “post-PC” device. This phrase goes beyond just marketing and is clearly what Apple believes through its core, the company truly sides with the idea that tablets represent the majority of future computing. It’s an understandable but odd position for Apple to take, primarily because unlike the PC-market as a whole Apple’s Mac growth is bucking the trend and heading skyward, slowly. But as we’ve seen the Mac share is tiny in comparison to the whole market.
But what about the post-PC market? Ballmer fully admitted that Apple is the dominant player in this market but it’s a fresh market, ripe for new competitors and arguably still in its infancy with all manufacturers but Apple.
But herein lies Microsoft’s problem and based on Ballmer’s comments, a fair amount of jealousy to boot. Microsoft is keen on blasting into the tablet market, Microsoft is keen to do this whilst not alienating the hardware partners that have been so good to the company for decades. Which has led to the current situation that Microsoft finds itself in, it looks like a mess from the outside and for all we know could very well be creating huge concern on the inside (recent executive departures may say so).
Microsoft has its first serious punt at making a post-PC device, with the Surface tablet Ballmer has clearly decided to the take the Apple approach to the tablet market and hold control of both the hardware and software. But the very same software that is being designed to run on the Surface is also designed and built to run on competing hardware. So as has been Microsoft’s challenge for decades the company is once again stuck creating the most widely compatible software that’ll work with a number of hardware partners.
This problem is compounded by legacy thinking on the part of Microsoft and the huge enterprise customers who are unable to move quickly and efficiently and therefore require the maximum possible amount of legacy compatibility. The approach Microsoft is taking, unlike Apple, is to build one operating system for all platforms and all hardware, it’s the wrong thinking and Microsoft is unfortunately going to find this out the hard way.
Microsoft’s experienced and established hardware partners will in the face of the threat of the company building better software just for its own hardware begin competing on price with the Surface, forcing down the margins of the Microsoft hardware and eventually pushing it out of the hardware market.
Then there’s the software problem which will also eventually alienate the hardware partners. In striving to create software that works equally as well in touch environments as it does in the land of pointing devices the software ends up a confused mix of small target areas and large target areas and juxtaposed user interfaces. It’s unlikely to directly annoy the hardware manufacturers that already run with such low standards of quality but there’s no doubt that the consumer will speak with its feet.
Microsoft will of course defend its position, claiming that the freedom that this model of software running on lots of different devices and able to run a large swathe of software both old and new will win over the consumer.
In the words of Ballmer “legacy, legacy, legacy”, or something like that.

Source: World of Apple

    

Cook Consolidates Senior Management Team

By Alex Brooks Scott Forstall introduces the ill fated iOS 6 Maps at WWDC 2012
In a way we all liked to state how much of a mark Tim Cook was leaving upon Apple. Almost every move he made the writers and the bloggers would burst out into the open and exclaim about this was Tim leaving his legacy upon Apple, doing as Steve Jobs wanted and not leading in his shadow.
However with the largest shakeup in Apple leadership since Jobs took over from Gil Amelio in 1997 we can now really see Tim Cook leaving his mark on Apple. And under the guise of a closed stock market due to Hurricane Sandy and a distracted press a release was pushed out notifying of huge changes at the top (as was pointed out to me by a friend, when Katie Cotton is on the bottom of the PR you know it’s serious).

The release is long but the bottom line is clear. Scott Forstall previously in charge of iOS development is gone, Forstall has been around since the early days when he was snapped up in the purchase of Steve Jobs’ startup NeXT. Forstall was on the front line for Siri and iOS 6 problems, whilst he’s listed as staying on as an adviser this is just due to non-disclosure practices. Whilst not thanking Forstall in the press release Cook did however extend his gratitude towards him in an internal email to Apple employees.
In a less ceremonious exit the controversially hired John Browett is gone after little more than six months as head of retail. Cook made it clear to extend a large amount of thanks to retail staff but Browett’s head has rolled. It can be reassuringly assumed that Cook saw the error of his ways.
Some more interesting observations from the release will show that Jony Ive the famed designer behind almost all of Apple’s hardware in recent history is also now overseeing software design—or as Apple puts it Human Interfaces. Some have pointed towards the prevalence of skeuomorphism in OS X and iOS as being Forstall’s doing, Ive reportedly heavily dislikes such design decisions. It’ll be interesting to see where this leads Apple’s software design in the future, if true.
In terms of software services Eddy Cue, infamous for his work on saving MobileMe and turning it into iCloud as well as the successes of the iTunes and App Stores is now heading up Apple’s two biggest software as service challenges—Siri and iOS Maps.
On the hardware side, Bob Mansfield who earlier this year retired is back for another two years as head of the Technologies group. The press release points towards this work being in the area of semiconductors with a team “who have ambitious plans for the future.” This can be read into quite a bit, Apple continues to push the boundaries with the iPhone and iPad when it comes to how much of the silicon is designed in-house and manufactured without the help of Samsung. I’ve speculated before that Apple may not wish to be bound by Intel’s future roadmaps on the Mac and may even expand its interests in semiconductor design to CPUs for notebooks.
There’s plenty of opinion and some inside track out there already. Viticci over at MacStories remarks on the timing and the supposed political struggles at the top between Scott Forstall and other execs. Adam Lashinsky who has a great record with the inside word from Apple looks towards Forstall’s turbulent relationship with Jony Ive alongside Forstall reportedly refusing to sign the iOS 6 Maps apology letter, leaving Cook high and dry alone. The New York Times chimes in with reports of struggles at the top, some so strong that Ive wouldn’t attend the same meetings as Forstall.
The underlying thread mentioned in both the press release and internal email is that there is now a smaller management team and those that remain are closest allies of Tim Cook. This smaller, tighter management team now criss cross each other in terms of hardware, software and services. The kind of integration that Apple is famed for could well benefit from such a huge strategic move.
Whilst the benefits of this management reduction will no doubt yield results beneficial to both Apple and customers, I can’t help but fear the future of such a small, ageing and increasingly wealthy group of men. Any more departures from the top will leave a drastically small senior management team.

Source: World of Apple

    

Apple Announces Q412 Revenue of $36 Billion

By Alex Brooks Apple Quarterly Q412 Revenue with Q113 Estimate
Apple today announced financial results for its second fiscal quarter of 2012 which ran from July 1 until September 30. The Company posted revenue of $36 billion and net quarterly profit of $8.2 billion, or $8.67 per diluted share. These results compare to revenue of $28.3 billion and net quarterly profit of $6.6 billion, or $7.05 per diluted share, in the year-ago quarter. Gross margin was 40 percent compared to 40.3 percent in the year-ago quarter. International sales accounted for 60 percent of the quarter’s revenue.
During the quarter Apple sold 4.9 million Macs representing a 1 percent unit increase over the year-ago quarter. Apple sold 14 million iPads during the quarter, a 26 percent unit increase over the year-ago quarter as well as 5.3 million iPods during the quarter, representing a 19 percent unit decline from the year-ago quarter.
Apple also sold 26.9 million iPhones in the quarter in which the iPhone 5 was released, representing 58 percent unit growth over the year-ago quarter

“We’re very proud to end a fantastic fiscal year with record September quarter results,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “We’re entering this holiday season with the best iPhone, iPad, Mac and iPod products ever, and we remain very confident in our new product pipeline.”
“We’re pleased to have generated over $41 billion in net income and over $50 billion in operating cash flow in fiscal 2012,” said Peter Oppenheimer, Apple’s CFO. “Looking ahead to the first fiscal quarter of 2013, we expect revenue of about $52 billion and diluted earnings per share of about $11.75.”
iPhone Unit Sales (Q412)

Source: World of Apple

    

Ahead of Apple’s Fourth Fiscal Quarter Results

By Alex Brooks On Thursday Apple will reveal its fiscal results for the fourth financial quarter of 2012 as well as the end of year figures. Once again Apple is expected to report a bumper quarter with a number of key product releases having occurred during the quarter.
Apple is highly likely to buck the trend that occurred last week amongst its staunchest competitors with many of the technology giants revealing less than ideal financials. Google was engulfed when an accidental press release revealed a sharp 20-percent drop in net income which caused the stock to tumble with the end result knocking more than nine percent of the company’s market value.
The news wasn’t great elsewhere with Microsoft announcing a greater-than-expected 22 percent drop in quarterly profit. The company is due to begin selling its Surface tablet in the coming weeks and release Windows 8 at the end of this week.
In the smartphone market Apple’s competitors RIM and Nokia continue to go from bad to worse. Nokia continues to cut jobs and slash spending on marketing and research. Last week Nokia revealed another quarterly loss and warned of further trouble ahead despite the impending release of the Finnish company’s Lumia handsets running on Microsoft’s Windows Phone 8 operating system.

In what seemed like an unlikely turn of events RIM last week gave some moderate optimism to the market when it revealed stronger than expected Blackberry sales (7.4 million for the quarter) and managed to add to its previously dwindling cash reserves. RIM also reaffirmed a release of Blackberry 10 in early 2013, the company’s only hope to prevent its continued downward spiral. However RIM mirrored Nokia and revealed a quarterly loss over $200 million.
Apple’s fourth quarter which ran from July 1 until September 30 will in contrast to competitors be more in line with market expectations and judging by recent quarters could outgrow even the most bullish onlookers. During the quarter the third-generation iPad was released in China—Apple’s fastest growing market. It is unknown how much sales of iPhones will have been dented with anticipation of the iPhone 5 which was only available for just over a week before the quarter ended.
Apple’s Q412 estimated revenue
Apple also had two large software releases during the quarter with OS X Mountain Lion coming to the Mac App Store in July and iOS 6 becoming available in mid-September. Both will likely have boosted sales of related devices with particularly strong Mac sales during the back to school season.
Market expectations are for Apple to reveal sales of 5.6 million Macs a healthy rise year-over-year. iPad sales are expected to be around 19 million a sharp rise from 11.1 million in the year-ago quarter. iPhone units look to rise year-over-year to 28 million bouyed by strong iPhone 5 pre-orders but constrained by limited stock (Update: Since writing AT&T and Verizon have published higher than expected iPhone activation numbers, AT&T activated 4.7 million during the quarter and Verizon 3.1 million).
iPods will likely continue to tumble to sales of about 5 million but in the current quarter will likely rise with Christmas season and new iPod nano and touch models.
Overall expectations are for Apple to reveal revenue of $39 billion.
However eyes will be on the coming quarter and Apple’s estimate. Some are predicting that Apple could cross the $60 billion mark for quarterly revenue during its first fiscal quarter of 2013. To put this in perspective earlier this year I wrote how breaking the $40 billion quarterly revenue barrier was impressive, Apple eventually announced revenue of $46.33 billion.

Source: World of Apple