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Archive for the ‘Apple’ Category

Prototype iPhone eBay Auction Ends Soon

Under Siege 2An auction for the self dubbed “Newton MessagePad 3000″ beta iPhone is nearly over, with a high bid of $2,295.

For all that you get a phone that doesn’t have a ringtone, can’t send text messages, has a plastic screen and is an unforgettable piece of Apple history… I hope whoever buys this really likes beta software.

Plus, Newton MessagePad 3000 is a much better name than iPhone. Maybe Steven Seagal will use this incarnation to save another runaway train or other fast moving vehicle in Under Siege 3.

Update: Steven Seagal’s Newton scene here.

Prize Pool for Native Sound/Wifi Drivers for MSI Wind OS X

Over at the MSI Wind.net forums, a prize pool is being set up for an experienced OS X coder to develop native drivers for the wifi and sound card.  The wifi card is a Realtek RTL8102E PCI-E, and the sound card is Realtek High Definition Audio, not sure which chip. (More on that here.) The pool’s currently up to about $250.  Easy bucks for an Apple hacker.

The thread can be found here.

Apple iTunes 8 Genius Feature Party Shuffle Rebranded

It’s been about 2 years since the last major iTunes update, iTunes 7, and Apple’s newest installment adds a couple of key new features.

  • Visualizer, purchased from the barbarian group, called magnetosphere which simply replaces the old visualizer.
  • Genius automated playlist constructor, and Genius Sidebar. I’ll get into detail on these below.
  • Album grid view.
  • Support for the new iPod Nano 4G, and iPod Touch 2G, etc.

The most interesting of these new features is obviously the genius feature.  The sidebar simply integrates into your library showing tracks that you might be missing or ones you might like based upon what’s currently playing.  The key thing is that it shows songs you might already have a lot, as well as kind of “cliché” suggestions.    Playing “Long Line of Cars” by Cake, gives reccomendations of artists like Beck, Doughtry, The Decemberists and Death Cab for Cutie.   It also has suggestions for other Cake songs which are already in my library that I ripped straight from the CD.

But the Genius playlist constructor is probably the one that’s going to be used the most often and will be what people call the “key feature” of iTunes 8.  Too bad it’s only a version of party shuffle that takes suggestions from what users have bought on the music store.  For instance, I have the Guitar Hero soundtrack, and if I select say, “The Light That Blinds” by Shadows Fall, I’d be expecting a nice mix of hard rock/metal.  But the 25 song playlist Genius returns is filled with songs from Guitar Hero, since the Shadows Fall song is from Guitar Hero II.

I’ve been playing with this feature a lot to try and figure out how it works; I think I’ve figured it out.  It queries the music store for a list of songs purchased by people who purchased the original track.  Genius then finds ones with similar genre, etc, and uses party shuffles algorithm to randomly pick songs from that list that are also in the user’s library.  It is not an algorithm that compares song BPM or waveform.  This is why songs that aren’t on the iTunes Music Store can’t be used.  Apple and bloggers pandering Genius off as though its the next incarnation of Pandora.  Searching Pandora for The Light That Blinds, returns no Guitar Hero related songs, only ones similar in genre, bpm, waveform, etc, or as Pandora states it, “similar musical qualities.”

How iTunes Genius works. Probably.

How iTunes Genius works. Probably.

Apple also gets to collect tons of usage data on everyone who uses Genius, making it a great feature for both users and Apple.  But it would be nice to see an algorithm instead of randomly picking related songs from the iTunes Music Store.   (Note: This is all speculation.)

8 iPhone 2.0.2 Bugs Apple Needs To Fix in 2.1

With the Let’s Rock event now over, new iPods released, iTunes 8 and iPhone 2.1 on Friday, it seems a fitting time to compile a list of bugs that Apple needs to fix in the new release.  The iPhone is still the best mobile platform even with these, they’re not show stoppers, but they were incredibly annoying.  Oh yeah, Steve Jobs is still not dead.

The following happen while downloading/installing an app on the home screen:

  1. If you try to go to settings, the device locks up till the install is done.
  2. Text input lags.  Badly.
  3. Updated apps reset their position on the home screen to the last page.

General bugs:

  1. After updating to 2.0.0, the mail application quit working for no apparent reason.
  2. Text messages will sometimes scroll to the top, with no place to type, and the keyboard will appear halfway up the screen then push up and off it.  Not sure why this happens.
  3. Text from SMS app will get “stuck” even when the app is closed and appear ghosted over the background on the home screen.
  4. When the phone is woken up and unlocked it will sometimes take up to 5 seconds to adjust the screen brightness.
  5. Entering text in the SMS app will occasionally lag, with each letter popping up for about 1 second, regardless of how fast the text is actually entered.

Let’s hope that Apple found someone to fill their “security expert” position.

Edit: It appears someone found the iPod Touch 2.1 software here.