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Dear Apple: What we want to see in iPhone 4.0, part 2

Topics: Features , iPhone First, I want to take a moment to thank all of you. The response to the first open letter has been incredible , and it wouldn’t have been possible without your suggestions. This is the second in a series of letters from you, the TUAW reader, to Apple. This time around I received over 1500 emails with suggestions on how to improve the next iPhone’s hardware. While the next iPhone is expected sooner this year than in past years, and the hardware design has most likely long since been finalized, it’s clear that plenty of you have your own ideas of how you want the next-generation iPhone to look and work. With that in mind, even though the next iPhone’s hardware …

[ More ] January 18th, 2010 | No Comments | Posted in Apple |

How the Decade Was Supposed To Turn Out (Spoiler: Christopher Reeve Walking) [Y2k10]

“In the years since the new millennium, the world has seen such progress.” So begins a noted Super Bowl commercial from 2000 that milked the Christopher Reeve sympathy/inspiration angle to show how well an investment firm can predict the future. The commercial, for Nuveen Investments , which is still around, says rather general things about advancements in AIDS and cancer treatments, but some of its suggestions are more specific. For example, the opening shot shows that the New York of the future will have new skyscrapers. Yes. Sure. That was a pretty safe bet. Really, the more prescient thing would’ve been to mention the lack of certain skyscrapers. It’s notable, however, that the Twin…

[ More ] December 23rd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Events, Object |

YC-Funded Lingt Uses Games To Turn You Into A Language Learning Addict

If there’s one thing that 2009 proved, it’s that there’s nothing like an addictive game to keep people coming back to your service for more. Over the last year, we’ve seen Foursquare and Gowalla tap into this with their colorful badges, and Zynga is making a killing off games like Farmville. But what if you could turn that habit into something that might actually be helpful to school or your career? That’s the premise behind Lingt , a new startup that’s looking to leverage gameplay elements to help with the mother of all repetitive tasks: learning a new language. The Y Combinator funded company is launching today in public beta, offering a suite of matching games to help English …

[ More ] December 21st, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Object |

Beeper Code: The Caveman Days of Text Messaging [Y2k10]

In 1999, 45 million Americans had pagers. They were an equal-opportunity technology, owned by drug dealers, whores, doctors and CEOs—and new college students whose parents couldn’t drop the leash. At least there was the code. Saddled as I was with my beeper, I did what I could to avoid actually picking up the phone. For Christmas my mom gave me a few rolls of quarters: a reminder that when she paged me, I was supposed to call her back. Most of my paging, however, was sending numerical messages to my friend Sarah. My pager was green! Hers was pink! We were so very cool. This number-to-word conversion …

[ More ] December 20th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Green, Object |

Publisher Will Display Content on Two E-Readers

Sony Electronics, which has delayed the delivery of its electronic book reader, is hoping a deal with News Corp. will make it worth the wait for consumers. The companies sealed a deal Thursday that will enable Sony Reader users to view content from The Wall Street Journal and the New York Post. The deal comes after reports that News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch was unhappy with the company’s deal with Amazon.com for the Kindle. Consumers will have to choose between two different subscription models to access the publications’ digital content, and News Corp. will reportedly get better control of subscriptions. A monthly digital subscription to the Journal will cost $14.99. The price for MarketWatch news and columns is $10.99, and a monthly subscription to the…

[ More ] December 17th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Object |

Giz Explains: What Everyone Should Know About Cameras [Giz Explains]

Talking to a camera nerd—or even reading about new cameras—can feel like translating from a different language. But it doesn’t need to! Here, in this here post , is everything you need to know about cameras, without the noise. When you buy a camera, you’ll be pelted with specs from a salesperson, many of which are confusing, and even misleading. You will cower, and may cover your head for protection. He will keep pelting. And really, he has to—spec sheets and jargon are integral to camera marketing, at least for now. Here’s what it all means, in one handy cheat sheet. Types …

[ More ] December 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Digital Cameras, Mobile, Object, Storage |

Nuance launches Dragon Dictation for iPhone – Get it while it’s free!

Nuance is one of the most important companies in the mobile space, yet few cell phone owners have any idea who they are. You know that T9 feature that lets you blast out texts on your number pad? That’s theirs. If your phone does text-to-voice or voice transcription, that’s probably their technology too. Nuance’s latest move to take over the mobile world: the iPhone. While they don’t have anything on the iPhone out-of-the-box (yet), they’ve just released an App called “Dragon Dictation”, which lets you speak your texts and emails. Drunk texting just got even easier &#…

[ More ] December 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Mobile |

Apple Has Acquired Lala

Earlier today we covered rumors that Apple was in talks to acquire streaming music service Lala . Now New York Times tech reporter Brad Stone has tweeted that it’s a done deal. He writes, “Apple has acquired digital music startup Lala. Now updating our story”. You can find the NYT story here . This could be bad news for Lala users. It’s unlikely that the innovative deals negotiated by Lala will survive through the acquisition. For over a year, Lala users have been purchasing the rights to stream their music an unlimited number of times for ten cents per song. If the deals with the music labels go up in smoke, Lala may lose the right …

[ More ] December 4th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Apple, Object, Rumors |

Watch Out Foursquare, Facebook is Poised To Dominate Geo

Over the last six months just about all of my tech friends have started using Foursquare , a geolocation-based game that was built by the creators of Google-acquired Dodgeball. Some of them will literally pull out their phones as soon as they enter any restaurant, event or even TechCrunch HQ and check in just so they can be named ‘mayor’ of that establishment (whoever checks into any particular location the most times becomes mayor of that location). It’s fascinating and a bit bizarre to watch, and it clearly shows that Foursquare has tapped into something powerful. But all this time I’ve had a nagging feeling that Foursquare, at least in its current form, is not going to be the next Twitter , …

[ More ] November 28th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in GPS, Gadgets, Gaming, Mobile, Object, Rumors |

Tokyo robosuit could make you the sack lifting champion

In Japan, the ultimate merit of a robotic suit is measured in sacks of rice. We’ve seen it before with the HAL-5. The latest suit created by students at Tokyo’s University of Science provides enough assistance to the wearer’s back to lift an additional 15 to 20 kilograms (that’s 33 to 44 pounds) — in other words, another two bags of rice for five in total. The university’s previous robosuit was heavier and more bulky by comparison, in that it provided assistance to both the wearers back and arms (though clearly some support is provided based on the image above). The suit will ultimately benefit factory workers or those with physical limitations when it goes into production sometime in 2010. Outstanding. Surprisingly, nobody from…

[ More ] November 26th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Cellphones |