Chapas de Apple (Stop in Motion) from Fernando Rueda on Vimeo.
This is what Cultism is all about. Not merely that you make a stop motion movie using your Mac; not merely that you make one featuring dancing Mac buttons; but that you own five of the things in the first place.
Heh.

Written by Giles Turnbull | Source: http://cultofmac.com
on December 2nd, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Apple and Opinions and Quickies.
Fluid Tunes is a pretty cool free app from Majic Jungle Software that uses your computer’s camera to interpret movements of your head, hands or feet, letting you browse, play or pause your music in iTunes without touching your keyboard or mouse. It works on OS X 4.11 and higher and is a tiny (788K) universal binary.

Written by Lonnie Lazar | Source: http://cultofmac.com
on December 2nd, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on News and Software and iTunes.

Image © mic.imac
Flickr user mic.imac has a fascinating portrait up of Steve Jobs, comprised entirely of artfully arranged Apple products. The portrait echoes a theme that runs through the upcoming Welcome to Macintosh documentary my colleague Nicole Martinelli wrote about on Monday, which is that the people who work at Apple give themselves entirely to the work of designing and producing the products the company makes.
Of no one is that statement more true than Steve Jobs. As CoM founder Leander Kahney says in the documentary, “Apple is Steve Jobs.”

Written by Lonnie Lazar | Source: http://cultofmac.com
on December 2nd, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Media and News and Steve Jobs.


This prototype tactile iPhone case called Invisual allows sight-impaired users to get the most out of the smart phone. It would work in conjunction with special accessibility functions, such as text-to-speech features and moon type tactile alphabet keyboard.

Portugal-based designer Bruno Fosi crafted the silicon case with modified bas-relief buttons that correspond to the iPhone home screen. Fosi says that the iPhone thus covered keeps all its functions intact, including multi-touch and finger flick scrolling.
Via Yanko Design

Written by Nicole Martinelli | Source: http://cultofmac.com
on December 2nd, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on iPhone.

When Steve Jobs convened the “Let’s Rock” event to unveil the new iPod Nano in September, he made a point of whetting our appetites for premium in-ear headphones with remote and mic that were said, at the time, to be shipping in October. It’s now December and the Apple website still says “Coming Soon.”
Apple engineers were ordered to revise the design, which required Apple’s overseas contractors to retool their manufacturing process, resulting in the extended delay, according to sources cited by MacBloz on Monday.
The premium headphones, slated to retail for $79, are intended to compete with high-end audiophile headsets costing two and three times that amount from the likes of Bose and Sony, and according to the MacBlogz sources, that standard has not yet been achieved. On the other hand, it should be premature to rule out a splashy marketing deployment of the eagerly anticipated headphones just in time for last minute holiday shopping.
Via MacBlogz.

Written by Lonnie Lazar | Source: http://cultofmac.com
on December 2nd, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Rumors and iPod Accessories.