Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Apple TV now officially available in India for Rs. 7,900

Apple has officially launched the Apple TV in India for Rs. 7,900, almost a year after it was originally launched in the U.S. Apple has updated its India website accordingly and you can find the Apple TV listed under the iPod section of the site.

The Apple TV, for the uninitiated, is a media streamer that lets you stream and share content from your Apple devices and from iTunes to your HDTV. The device needs to be connected to your HDTV through HDMI, while it can pull content from other Apple devices over a wireless or a wired network. Apart from content you already own, you can also use the Apple TV to purchase content from the Indian iTunes store and view it on your TV.

Apple TV also provides access to a limited section of streaming content outside of the iTunes store but since most of the content is around Baseball and international finance, it's not really something that will become really popular. Apart from music and videos, you can also use the Apple TV to view photos from your iPhone or iPad or those hosted on iCloud, mirror content (like games) from your iPhone/iPod or iPad to your TV using AirPlay and watch videos from sites like YouTube and Vimeo.

While talking to ThinkDigit, an Apple India representative stated that the company was looking at partnering with Indian content providers to stream content using Apple TV, similar to the way American users can access video streaming services like Netflix and Hulu Plus on their TVs through the device. However, there were no specific details available right now.

There are already a bunch of HD media players available in the Indian market such as the WD Live HD, Asus O! Play Mini and the Amkette Flash TV HD. These media players let you stream content from external hard drives to your TV. However, the media player segment is yet to breakthrough in terms of mass adoption. It will be interesting to see whether Apple, with its new found interest in India, will be able to drive up sales of the Apple TV.


Source: http://www.thinkdigit.com/TVs/Apple-TV-now-officially-available-in-India_13534.html

Sunday, 14 October 2012

Just kidding! Rumor now tips Oct. 23 iPad Mini launch

Oct. 10 came and went without an iPad mini invitation, but the latest rumor suggests that Apple will actually unveil the much-hyped device on Oct. 23.

Citing "people familiar with Apple's plans," All Things D this morning said Apple will hold a press event on Tuesday, Oct. 23 to unveil the iPad mini. The blog has not yet confirmed a location, but speculated that the event will be held at Apple's Cupertino campus since the company already held a big press event in San Francisco for the iPhone 5 unveiling.

Apple has not yet made any announcements.

Earlier this month, a report from Fortune said Apple would send out iPad mini invitations on Oct. 10, hold its event on Oct. 17, and start selling the new device by Nov. 2. But by the time Wednesday afternoon rolled around, invites were nowhere in site, and Fortune issued a mea culpa.

"My source was a major Apple investor who had heard it from three different sources. They were wrong about the timing," reporter Philip Elmer-Dewitt wrote. "I was wrong to pass the tip along. I don't know what I was doing in the rumor business in the first place. Mea culpa."

When it comes to Apple event rumors, All Things D has been a pretty reliable source. In August, the blog correctly reported that Apple would not unveil the iPad mini at the September iPhone 5 event. iMore.com later predicted that the iPhone 5 would be unveiled on Sept. 12. Last year, meanwhile, ATD tipped the Oct. 4 iPhone 4S launch date and the change of venue from San Francisco to Apple's campus.

Oct. 23, meanwhile, puts the iPad mini launch just three days ahead of the Windows 8 release. On that date, the Microsoft Surface tablet as well as a number of other Windows 8-based tablets are expected to hit store shelves. Can they compete against a smaller and more affordable iPad? Stay tuned.

If you can't wait, check out PCMag's roundup of the top iPad mini alternatives below, as well as some supposedly leaked images of the iPad mini.

UPDATE: Jim Dalrymple and John Gruber, both considered to be in-the-know about all things Apple, have chimed in to seemingly confirm the Oct. 23 date. Dalrymple quoted the All Things D story and issued a simple "Yep" in response, while Gruber titled his blog post "Oct. 23" and wrote: "Looks like that's when Apple is going to unveil the smaller iPad."


Source: http://www.thinkdigit.com/Tablets/Just-kidding-Rumor-now-tips-Oct-23_11048.html


Friday, 28 September 2012

Camera+ now available on iPad

Tap Tap Tap has finally released the iPad version of Camera+. The Camera+ app became very popular amongst iOS users, when it first came out roughly two years ago, since then it has sold over 9 million copies.


The new Camera+ for iPad app has been long awaited and now with the release of iOS 6 and the new iPad (some time ago), this was the most appropriate moment for the app to hit the iTunes store. The app is as fully featured as its phone counterpart, offering the ability to independently set the exposure values and focusing point, something that the stock camera app in iOS has always lacked. The ability to separate focus and exposure from each other has allowed for the reduction of the number of bum shots taken by the iOS device, especially in conditions where the subject is backlit.


The iPad app utilizes the retina display of the new iPad along with its full real estate. While taking photos with the iPad app is just the same as shooting with the iPhone (save for looking silly), but the real joys of using Camera+ lies in the lightbox and editing section sections.

The lightbox allows the photos to be displayed along with their EXIF data, which is pretty nifty. The editing station has a plethora of effects that can be applied to the image, but the new feature of the app is the ability to layer effects. Earlier, each effect had to be applied one at a time, making the process cumbersome, and often turning people away to other editing apps.

Camera+ is currently on discount in the iTunes store and can be bought for just $0.99.


Wednesday, 18 July 2012

Microsoft's Office 15 intro comes without iPad flavor

For months, the Web teemed with rumors that Microsoft would launch Office for the iPad, making it the first touch-focused platform for the cash cow productivity suite.

But when Microsoft unveiled the next version of Office this week, it was clear the iPad would have to wait.

In an interview with CNET, Office division President Kurt DelBene said Microsoft's own Windows is the priority for the newest version of Office. The new touch-friendly productivity suite will debut on Windows 8, which launches in October, in large part because the operating system is the best showcase for Microsoft's application suite.

"We have a unique opportunity with Windows 8 style applications to push that even further," DelBene said.

DelBene didn't specifically address when, or even if, Microsoft would release a version of Office for the iPad, the dominant platform for touch-based tablet computing. But he made it clear that Microsoft would give Windows tablets the first crack at what for many companies remains a must-have application.

Of course, tablets running Windows 8 will need all the help they can get to compete against the iPad. The new Windows will be the first version of the dominant operating system to focus on touch computing and run on ARM chips, which should result in smaller designs. But it arrives more than two years after the iPad first hit store shelves. And Apple has vanquished every tablet rival that's tried to elbow its way into the market.

Months ahead of the new Office unveiling, rumors persisted that the productivity suite would arrive on the iPad later this year, initially fueled by an article in The Daily. A follow-up piece a few months later included a purported screenshot of the software in action, which Microsoft quickly claimed was fabricated. Last month, a report from Business Insider said the software would be ready to go for the iPad by November.

Microsoft is an active developer on Apple's iPad, as well as the iPhone, though has focused most of its efforts on its Bing search tool. Of the 23 applications the company has developed for iOS, it only charges for one of them -- the mobile tie-in to its XBOX game Kinectimals.

Despite those contributions, Microsoft has shown little interest in making pieces of Office available to users of Apple's iOS. So far, its efforts include a mobile version of OneNote and a version of its Lync communications software, two pieces of the Office puzzle, but arguably not the heavy hitters.

"They already have a toe in the water, but it's not a really healthy toe," says Michael Silver, a vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. "If Microsoft is really serious about continued competition in Office, and maintaining things, they will have to have an iPad version."

Of course, Office itself is among the most sought after applications not available for the iPad. Businesses use Excel for back office operations and Word to create marketing plans. As much as employees might want to bring their iPads into work, they are often hamstrung when it comes to completing tasks that require Office.


Several companies, including Apple, have tried to work around Office's absence from the iOS ecosystem. Microsoft Office documents that have been attached to e-mails can be read with Apple's built-in Mail application. Users can also open and edit several types of Microsoft Office files in their corresponding iWork apps, Apple's own suite of paid productivity applications.

For users who want more, companies like CloudOn and Onlive have solutions for both the iPad, and Android tablets that let you work with documents using virtualized versions of Microsoft's Office software. But Silver says these solutions can end up being a headache for businesses given Microsoft's complicated licensing agreements, and can leave power users who want more features yearning for more.

If Microsoft eventually offers an iOS version of Office, it would obviate the need for any of those work-around solutions. But for now, it's in Microsoft's best interest to make the best touch experience for Office on new Windows 8 devices.

"At least for the holiday season, the only tablet device you'll be able to get it on will be Windows RT," Silver said.


Thursday, 21 June 2012

30/30: A Pretty but Shy Taskmaster

Why can't the iPad be a clock? What did it ever do, or not do, to convince Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) not to grant it that privilege?

It has a built-in Reminders app, just like the iPhone, and yes, the iPad will tell you what time it is in the digital readout at the top of the home screen.

But it has no built-in Clock app, with that familiar set of alarm, stopwatch and timer settings.

Why is that? An iPad looks fine on a nightstand or a desk, and you don't need to be hooked up to a cellphone network to keep track of how long the chicken's been on the grill. Why no Clock?

Luckily there's a wide assortment of third-party apps in the App Store that will do basically the same thing Clock will. Certain apps may even pull off certain functions better. 

Get to Work

30/30 is an app that focuses entirely on the timer function. And it's not just a digital egg timer that counts down the minutes, goes bing and calls it a day. It's also a task manager. Use it to plan out a work day, a project, a series of tasks or any situation in which you need to rifle through a set of jobs in X number of hours.

The interface is big, minimalist and actually kind of satisfying to toy around with. Everything is done with gestures. The top is your timer, indicating how much time is left for the task at hand. Below that is your to-do list.

Start by adding tasks to your list. This is done by spreading two fingers between two existing tasks, or just reverse-pinching the space below the clock if no tasks are present yet. Sometimes this gesture makes it a little tricky to add a task to the bottom of the list. My fingers kept sliding off the screen and onto the iPad's bezel. Try pulling the entire list up, then making a downward motion directly under the list with you thumb.
Now you'll need to name the task, select an icon to go with it (an envelope, a paper airplane, a Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) logo, or any of 22 others) and give it a color code. The allotted time of a task can be set in whole minutes anywhere from one minute to three hours.

Create a few tasks, then hit the clock to start the countdown. Once the first task's time is up, you'll hear a chime, at which point you'll need to manually move it on to the next task. The one you just finished will be placed at the end of your list. Yes, it's a never-ending circle of toil.

Tasks can be eliminated with a swipe, or moved around with a hold and drag. To pause for an unanticipated interruption, just touch the clock again.

Speak Up

30/30's minimalist design is pretty nice-looking; however, the app's settings and extra features are also kept to a minimum.

Hit the gear icon in the upper-left corner to get to the settings menu. The first row of icons aren't really settings so much as additional information. For example, the in-app shop isn't much of a shop. Basically, it's a function through which you can donate money if you like the app.

I Love This is simply an invite to rate 30/30 in the App Store. It seems odd to elevate this "function" (to use the term loosely) to a top-level entry in the settings menu, but at least it's less annoying than certain other apps that accost you with a plea for validation as you're trying to close out of the program and get on to something else.

The menu also includes a toggle for auto-pause (without it, the app will jump straight into the next task when the present one is finished) and for badge notifications. Its brightness toggle has two settings.

30/30's sound setting is also very constrained. I'm of the opinion that timers and task managers should be capable of everything from gently nudging users to bashing them over the head with a 20-pound nag hammer, depending on one's preference. I like to have a library of sounds at my disposal, from wine-glass-shattering ear-piercers to smooth bassy hums, as well as an array of repeating options. A timer app should be both a meek and mild servant as well as a vicious taskmaster that cuts through distraction with a chainsaw, depending on user preference.

Unfortunately, 30/30's only sound option is on or off. And when it's on, all you get is a shy little blip of a noise.

Bottom Line

30/30 looks great, and its gesture-based control system is slick and intuitive. The "done and I'm onto the next one" concept is good for when you need to drill down into serious work mode and abide a rigid schedule.

But the app could benefit from some additional versatility, especially as far as sounds are concerned. 30/30 lends itself to tasks that may require deep concentration, and when you're really lost in your work, a gentle chime may not be enough to pull you out and get you moving to the next task.


Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/story/75410.html


Friday, 23 December 2011

Best Strategy Games for iPad

In case you do not know, there are some really good strategy games for the iPad. Here is my top 10 best strategy games for iPad.

1. The Merry Manor HD

– Build your own merry manor with your own farm, grow fruits and vegetables and the most important part, go through all sorts of fun adventures! Your neighbours are Operator, a business cat, Oops Bunny, the owner of a local joint The Barn and Nostradramus, a restless scholar of a raccoon. They are always happy to help. Together you will find yourselves in many fun situations, tackle day-to-day challenges and build, build, build!High quality graphics, bright colours and ideal sound will satisfy even the most demanding player!You are offered whatever is required to create a unique and beautiful manor!See the transformation from a small farmer to a king, it isn’t easy but you can do it.


2. Pretty Pet Salon HD

–The best -selling salon sim in iTunes goes HD and is now availabale in iPad. Get ready to run your very own Pet Salon. Serve customers, earn money, and make your shop bigger. Hire your staff, and new employees with personality. Exciting achievements for you to collect. Keep an eye out for two celebrity customers, they will give your pet Salon a real surprise.Get to compete with your friends all over the world for the best and most successful Pet Salon out there!An addictive pet grooming game that will be a sure fire hit for pet lovers.

3. SimCity™ Deluxe for iPad

– Manage and build your dream city now available in iPad. Made for both dedicated and casual players alike, let your inner urban planner run wild with the world’s favorite city building simulation. As Mayor and City Planner, take delight in the immersive visuals, the bigger display, and responsive touch controls – all designed just for the SimCity™ Deluxe experience on iPad. With HD-quality graphics and realistic animation that provides vividly textured terrain that you’ll want to reach out and touch. Easily “fingerpaint” masses of trees, water, and land with a simple swipe of your finger. Think big and live larger with customized controls.Be ready to take on demanding challenges.

4. Battle for Wesnoth HD

–If you’re after something that merges both strategy and RPG, you’ve found the right game. Battle for Wesnoth is a turn-based hex game set in the land of Wesnoth where you command mythical units like fire-breathing dragonfolk, griffin-mounted dwarves and elite elven archers. If you’re a fan of the desktop version, then this is definitely something you should add to your homescreen.

5. CityVille Hometown

–Create your CityVille Hometwon. Help the delightful characters, follow their stories, and be rewarded with special items. Watch your town grow with a wide variety of houses, businesses, and fantastic decorations that you can choose from. Name your businesses and residents to as you want to make your town unique.

6. Crime City HD

– Are you up to building criminal empires and crush your rivals?Want to become the toughest Mob Boss in Crime City HD! Rise through the ranks of the mafia and take over the city! Build up your hood, do heists, beat up people and fight other players! Get to explore HD exclusive areas, buildings and much more. Own 160+ Powerful weapons and cars that you can buy. Get to collect massive incomes from your properties, and get to enjoy it’s gorgeous graphics.

7. Wedding Dash 4-Ever

– It’s up to best friends Quinn and Flo to keep everything under control, when Quinn’s mom unexpectedly arrives in town and shakes up her home, business, and love life. While Mom is making suggestions at every turn, help quinn manage more weddings, keep the bride and groom happy, plan dream weddings and get more in Play First’s most romantic time management game. Get to host weddings in 5 trendy venues like a Japanese Garden and Vineyard. Up for a challenge, get to tackle 9 wedding day disasters including Bridezilla, Groom Kong, and a Food Fight before they upset the guests and happy couple!


8. Tower Defense: Lost Earth HD

–While searching for resources that have been exhausted on Earth, you followed the probe across the galaxy searching for habitable planets. Take command of towers and special weapons to hold your defense against endless waves of enemies on the hostile alien planet. Tower Defense: Lost Earth takes classic defense games to a whole new world. With 4 different game play modes with different objectives. 5 Different World Themes and 10 enemies with different behaviors.A game that supports English, français, Deutsch.

9. Sentinel 3: Homeworld

–Take the fight to the alien homeworld and unleash a massive arsenal of weaponry, A challenging campaign featuring 20 levels across 14 distinctive & demanding maps. Get endless modes for all maps with online highscores. The classic mode allows you to compete for scores in a pure skill-based mode. Comes with stunning graphics &fx, with high redolution Retina Display support.Also offers 15 level campaign, new commander, new weapons, new enemies and more.

10. Hotel Dash 2: Lost Luxuries

–Start your adventure with Hotel Dash 2: Lost Luxuries, PlayFirst’s wildest time management game! This year, DinerTown is a strong candidate to host the International French Fry Festival. Get to help Flo and Quinn excavate themed hotels built many years ago, and turn them into retro-chic resorts! Tap and slide to glide down zip lines, prep rooms, cater to guests’ requests, and renovate each hotel with unique accents. Will you restore enough hotels to host the festival, or will a sneaky competitor sabotage your efforts. Get to restore all five nature-themed hotels: Swiss Chalet, Bubbly Submarine, Chilly Ice Palace, and more. Get to meet unique guests like the scuba diver, genie, and snowboarder.

Source: http://www.ipad3-release.com/2011/best-strategy-games-for-ipad/

Wednesday, 12 October 2011

'iPad Mini' to take on Kindle Fire?

An industry source who speaks with the Asia-based tablet supply chain told CNET that chatter is picking up for a 7-inch Apple tablet. Maybe not coincidentally, that's the same size of Amazon's $199 tablet that's will ship on November 15.


Other reports, however, say that "Mini" doesn't necessarily refer to the size but simply the lower price point, possibly the mid-$200 range.


The late Apple CEO Steve Jobs summarily dismissed the notion of a 7-inch tablet during an earnings conference call in October of last year.


"Apple has done extensive user testing and we really understand this stuff...There are clear limits on how close you can place things on a touch screen, which is why we think 10 inch is the minimum screen size to create great tablet apps," Jobs said at the time.


"It's meaningless unless your tablet also includes sandpaper, so that the user can sand down their fingers to around one quarter of their present size," he added.


Jobs' protests notwithstanding, at the time more than a few analysts said Apple was close to bringing out a product.


And the tablet market is changing. Apple may have to change along with it. Smaller 7-inch and 8.9-inch tablets from Samsung, HTC, RIM and others are prevalent now. And if the Kindle Fire approaches the iPad in sales--which analysts say is possible--that would make smaller, cheaper tablets a category that rivals the 10-inch iPad in popularity.

Sunday, 8 May 2011

Autodesk updates SketchBook Pro

Autodesk
Autodesk released a major update to SketchBook Pro software that has artists switching from pencils and paints to virtual canvasses on iPhones or iPad tablet computers. 


SketchBook Pro software upgrades were crafted to take advantage of improved features in second-generation iPads recently unleashed on the world by California-based Apple.

"This is the biggest release we've had since last year when the iPad launched," SketchBook product line manager Chris Cheung said at a Digital Canvas exhibit of art made using the application.

SketchBook Pro
"It is more productive and, as a by-product, it is more fun as well."

The software lets people blend and texture colors as they would with oil paints or other mediums. Movements of fingers on gadget touch-screens are converted into virtual brush strokes. 


"This way, I have my whole art studio in my pocket," said San Francisco artists Julia Kay, whose works were among those in the exhibit.

"If I get bored I can lean against a wall and make drawings in full color, every texture, and I don't have to clean-up afterward."

Works by 82 artists were featured in the Digital Canvas exhibit in the Autodesk Gallery in downtown San Francisco.


Along with professional artists there were SketchBook users whose day jobs ranged from grade school student and farmer to surgeon and aerospace technician.

Matthew Hall of Britain described studied at Winchester School of Art and Chic ester University but veered away from painting for a decade while he focused on video. The he saw artists working on iPads. 


"Now I take my iPad everywhere, using the SketchBook Pro app to capture what's happening around me or what's banging around in my head at the time," Hall said in a description of his work on display at Digital Canvas. 


"Like the primal cave painters we are just creating lines on a surface with our finger," he continued. "I haven't enjoyed doodling this much since I was a child."

Jay Shuster, art director for the "Cars" film sequel about to be released by Pixar Animation Studios, said he did almost all the character design using Sketchbook Pro and credited the software with enabling him to work fast.


"Every day, ever hour counted," Shuster said. "I think, in a way, going digital allowed us to finish 'Cars 2' in the time we did."


He worked with SketchBook software on a Pixar-supplied tablet made by Fujitsu. California-based Autodesk specializes in 2-D and 3-D design software.


SketchBook Pro versions tailored for iPhones, iPads, and iPod touch devices were priced at $5 at Apple's online App Store.


Autodesk also upgraded a version of the software tailored for gadgets powered by Google-backed Android software, according to Cheung.

Read More :- 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/news/software-services/Autodesk-updates-SketchBook-Pro/articleshow/8186257.cms


 




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