
Στην επίσημη απελευθέρωση SDK «roadmap» χθες, πήραμε πολύ περισσότερο από είχαμε αναμείνει. Όπως και ένα μεγάλο δελτίο τύπου που συνεπάγεται τα εσωτερικές έργα και τις λειτουργίες του SDK (λίγο πέρα από-σύνθετου στη θέση), πήραμε της ζωντανής επίδειξης και τη tantalising προοπτική του τυχερού παιχνιδιού στο iPhone. Εντούτοις, η ιστορία που προκαλεί τον περισσότερο σάλο είναι προς το παρόν η αναγγελθείσα απελευθέρωση του σπορίου στο iPhone (ημερομηνία απελευθέρωσης Σεπτεμβρίου). Το παιχνίδι ήταν, και παράλληλα με τα άλλα παιχνίδια παρουσιάστε (συμπεριλαμβανομένης της έξοχης σφαίρας πιθήκων), γίνοντη σπόριο καλή χρήση της τεχνολογίας διαθέσιμης, χρησιμοποιώντας το επιταχύμετρο για να χειριστεί το περιβάλλον.
Περαιτέρω συμπεριλαμβανόμενη ανακοινώσεις επιχείρηση apps και νέα στέγαση κεντρικών υπολογιστών ανταλλαγής του μήλου
κεφάλι στο μέλος μήλων για την πλήρη ιστορία. Υπεάρξε επίσης η ανακοίνωση ότι το μήλο θα περιόριζε (φωνή άνω της IP) τα προγράμματα VOIP που χρησιμοποιούν τα κυψελοειδή δίκτυα, αλλά θα επέτρεπε εκείνων που χρησιμοποιούν το WI-FI μια ενδιαφέρουσα προοπτική.

Οι εγγενείς εφαρμογές iPhone πρόκειται να μεταφορτωθούν άμεσος από το κατάστημα iTunes, και οι υπεύθυνοι για την ανάπτυξη θα λάβουν ένα πριγκηπικό 70% του εισοδήματος στις μηνιαίες δόσεις.
Το SDK είναι διαθέσιμο για τους υπεύθυνους για την ανάπτυξη που μεταφορτώνουν τώρα
Ιστοχώρος μήλων (που οφείλεται αργός στην απαίτηση), συμπεριλαμβανομένου ενός συμπαθητικού εξομοιωτή λογισμικού iPhone που βοηθά με τη διαδικασία. Εντούτοις, ένα τέλος $99 ιδιότητας μέλους πρέπει να καταβληθεί προκειμένου να ταχυδρομηθούν οι εφαρμογές άμεσες στο κατάστημα iTunes. Η πλήρης έκδοση (αυτό είναι μόνο ένα βήτα) θα κυκλοφορήσει τον Ιούνιο μέχρι όλους τους ιδιοκτήτες iPhone, αν και iPod οι χρήστες αφής πρέπει να πληρώσουν ένα ασφάλιστρο.
Η ανάγνωση για αυτό είναι μεγάλη, αλλά τίποτα δεν κτυπά τον προσέχοντας Steve κάνει το πράγμα του.
Το κεφάλι στην περιοχή μήλων για κρυφοκοιτάζει.
Για εκείνους ενδιαφερόμενους στα minutae,
Φήμες της MAC αναλύθηκε το SDK σε τέσσερα digestable τμήματα:
Αφή κακάου - Γεγονότα πολυ-αφής, έλεγχοι πολυ-αφής, Acceleromter, ιεραρχία άποψης, εντοπισμός, επιφυλακές, άποψη Ιστού, συλλεκτική μηχανή ανθρώπων, συλλεκτική μηχανή εικόνας, φωτογραφική μηχανή
MEDIA - Ήχος πυρήνων, OpenAL, ήχος που αναμιγνύει, ακουστική καταγραφή, τηλεοπτική αναπαραγωγή ήχου, JPG, PNG, TIFF, χαλαζίας PDS, ζωτικότητα πυρήνων, ενσωματωμένο OpenGL
Υπηρεσίες πυρήνων - Συλλογές, βιβλίο διευθύνσεων, δικτύωση, πρόσβαση αρχείων, SQLite, θέση πυρήνων, υπηρεσίες δικτύου που περνούν κλωστή, προτιμήσεις, χρησιμότητες URL
Πυρήνας OS - Πυρήνας OS Χ, BSD TCP/IP, υποδοχές, διαχείριση δύναμης, Keychain, πιστοποιητικά, σύστημα αρχείων, σύστημα κινήματος απελευθέρωσης, ασφάλεια, Bonjour
Γραπτός κοντά επάνω 7η Μαρτίου 2008 με κανένα σχόλιο.
Διαβάστε περισσότερα άρθρα επάνω iPhone και Steve Jobs και Μήλο και iPod Touch and SDK and Event and Developers and Software Development Kit and 6th March and Roadmap.
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After a long wait, AT&T has officially stated that it will be expanding its 3G capabilities across the 100 largest US cities, effective in 2008. Whilst it isn't included in the announcement, the main reason for this must be a 3G iPhone, already in the pipeline.
The increase in transfer speeds will hopefully silence some of the iPhone's detractors, who thought (and rightly so) that the EDGE network was sluggish and couldn't keep up with the next gen requirements of the iPhone. With all the new features, its a shame that the network could let Apple down in such a way, loading pages in safari in minutes, not the seconds which you see in the adverts. And with a multi-year deal between Apple and AT&T, they can't switch to another/multiple providers. So all we can do is pray AT&T get their act together and get the service up and running. The basic transfer speed of 3G is at least three or four times faster than the '2.5 G' EDGE and similar networks, and AT&T are already working on 4G, which will no doubt put 3G to shame.
3G was initially held from the iPhone's feature list due to battery issues and the relative youth of the technology. You have to hand it to Apple- they took a risk, and it paid off big time- 4 million sales and counting. Now, with 3G talk-time extended to 5 hours minimum, it has become a business possibility. And in talks late last year, both AT&T bosses and Steve Jobs let slip that it would be out long before the close of 2008. To keep us happy, Apple, please release the iPhone Nano, a theoretical product which looks ace- see artist impression below.

Written by Will on February 7th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone and Steve Jobs and Apple and 3G iPhone and 3G and EDGE and ATandT and cellular and smartphone and mobile phone.
During Macworld, Steve Jobs told the New York Times that Apple will not make an e-book reader like Amazon’s Kindle because Americans don’t read any longer.He cited a specific number: 40 percent of Americans read a book or less a year, he said.Jobs may have been referring to a November report from the National Endowment of the Arts, To Read or Not To Read, which found that nearly 50 percent of 18-24 year-olds do not read at all for pleasure. Described as the most complete survey of reading trends, the report says Americans aged 15-24 spend two hours a day watching TV, but only 7-10 minutes reading. This includes reading for school or college.”The story the data tell is simple, consistent, and alarming,” wrote Dana Gioia, Chairman of the NEA.The decline of reading has considerable social, economic and civil consequences, says the NEA, and coincides with the rise of TV and the internet.
Written by Leander Kahney on January 24th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Steve Jobs and Apple.
I was really let down by the Macworld 2008 keynote yesterday. Steve Job's keynotes are a thing of lore, and yesterday, his legendary speeches lost a bit of their allure. There was a lack of 'BOOM's, no 'one more thing', and actually, an obvious empty spot, bereft of new, exciting products.
For the last year, Apple could do no wrong. They have released a stream of complete, advanced products, which has directly translated into a build up of momentum, and their shares ballooning to $200. Given these circumstances, the keynote was never going to live up to the collective Apple communities' expectations.
The online community tends to glorify these speeches, but I have already noticed websites such as Gizmodo and Engadget turning a accusing eye to Apple's court. The only way to sum this up is to take an objective look at what Apple 'really' released yesterday. Firstly, we have the success of Leopard, a solid release that really helped Apple to increase their market share following Vista, or 'OS Version Hell', as I like to call it. So far, so good. But from here on, things turned a bit sour.
Next came the release of Time Capsule, essentially a promised feature of the original beta version of Leopard which was removed from the Gold Master at the last minute. After a long wait, we are offered a 'new product', essentially an Airport base station and a hard drive in one. What was wrong with my original Airport Extreme and Hard drive that I had set up for Leopard? Instead, now I have to fork out for a stand alone product, when third party peripherals are cheaper, probably more reliable, and generally preferable.

There was much controversy surrounding the failed first incarnation of Apple TV, the most recent occasion where risky innovation hasn't worked for Apple. Apple TV 2, however, looks set ot work, and the Movie Rentals idea is a solid one. The price is right, with the $4.99 fee sitting somewhere lower than your average Blockbuster.

Next exhibit- the iPod/iPhone debacle. The reality of an SDK is getting ever closer, but Apple thought it would keep us sated to release some new applications for the iPod, ported over from the iPhone. How cool! We get stocks, weather, notes, mail and maps, all for 'free'. That is, if you don't already have an iPod. Early adopters get stung by Apple, just as usual, by having to fork over $20 for five free applications.

And finally, the Macbook Air. I was initially wowed by this thing, and its hard to deny Apple's marketing plan- it fits inside an envelope? 'The thinnest laptop ever' is an excellent piece of computing design and minituarisation, but could have been oh so much more. There are a few areas where the target market (road warriors), will find issues, such as the non-replaceable battery.

I respect and adore Apple, but yesterday they came dangerously close to losing my interest altogether. Its isn't a coincidence that the shares have fallen to $160, and the 'Keynote Index' theory is broken. All in all, Macworld 2008 wasn't successful, and Apple will have to reel out some special products over the next few months in order to regain their impetus. Where were the new Apple Cinema Displays? Where was my iPhone 3G announcement? Where was my Macbook Pro refresh? These, and many more glorious products, were noticeably absent...
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Written by Will on January 16th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone and Steve Jobs and Apple TV and iPod and leopard and Apple and Macworld and SDK and keynote and Macbook Air and Time Capsule and Macworld 08.

Written by Walt Mossberg on January 16th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Steve Jobs and Mossblog and Walt Mossberg and Apple and Macworld.
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