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Apple WWDC Keynote Roundup

by Michelle Lentz on June 8, 2009

So a bunch of anouncements out of the Apple WWDC keynote this morning. Here’s the rundown:

iPhone 3GS

Time to break open the pocketbook. iPhone 3G S will be available in the US on June 19 for a suggested retail price of $199 (16GB) $299 (32GB) at Apple, AT&T, Best Buy, and Wal-Mart. So obviously the capacity has gone up. What else is new?

  • It’s supposedly up to twice as fast as the iPhone 3G, with longer battery life.
  • 3 MP autofocus camera with video recording
  • Hands-free voice control for dialing, working the iPod, and just about anything built into the system
  • iPhone OS 3.0 with Cut/Copy/Paste, MMS (end of summer availability), Spotlight Search, landscape keyboard options
  • Digital compass
  • Remote wipe if you lose the phone

And for those of you who remember that I recently gave a talk on social media and accessibility, Apple has seriously improved the iPhone’s features for those with disabillities.

iPhone 3G S provides new accessibility features including VoiceOver, a screen reader that speaks what appears on the iPhone 3G S display, enabling visually impaired users to make calls, read email, browse web pages, play music and run applications. The new universal Zoom function magnifies the entire screen, and the White on Black feature reverses the colors on screen to provide higher contrast for people with low vision. iPhone 3G S also supports Mono Audio which combines left and right audio channels so that they can be heard in both earbuds for those with hearing loss in one ear.

iPhone 3G

The price on the current iPhone has immediately dropped to $99. It will run iPhone 3.0, which is available via download on June 17 via iTunes.

Snow Leopard

While this is really a great upgrade for developers, it can’t hurt for the rest of us to upgrade too. Especially since the new upgrade will only cost $29!  Oftentimes I’ll skip major upgrade like that because of cost, but at that price – I’m there. Snow Leopard hits stores this September. Engadget has a list of some of the new Snow Leopard features:

  • Apple rewrote the Finder, while keeping it mostly the same on the surface, for a bunch of “little benefits.” Tweaks include faster Quick Look previews and Spotlight searches.
  • There’s built-in Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 support in the OS, including Mail, Calendar and Address Book syncing.
  • QuickTime X has a new “modern foundation,” HTTP streaming and a whole new look. Users can record and trim video, and upload to sharing sites like MobileMe and YouTube.
  • Snow Leopard has half the footprint of Leopard, amounting to 6GB in savings and 45% faster installs.
  • New trackpads can handle handwriting recognition now, and there’s new text selection “AI.” There’s also support for wireless Braille accessories (pictured).
  • Safari 4 is available for Windows, Leopard and Tiger, but Snow Leopard adds “Crash Resistance,” which keeps browser and tabs intact even if a plugin crashes — user just refreshes the page. 64-bit version does JavaScript 50% faster.
  • All core apps are 64-bit, and performance improvements abound. Mail boasts 85% faster message loads and 90% faster loads, while Time Machine has a 50% faster initial backup time.

Safari 4.0

Safari 4 was released today, and you can download it right now for both Mac and PC. It’s got a bunch of new features and is being billed as incredibly fast.

  • Top Sites function: Similar to Chrome, you can see a visual of the sites you browse the most frequently, letting you rely less on bookmarks and toolbars. Markers indicate recent changes to the sites.
  • Cover Flow & Full History Search: I guess if it works somewhere, implement it everywhere. You can view your bookmarks and browsing history using the nifty cover flow feature. This is actually handy. Sometimes I won’t remember the name of a site in my countless bookmarks, but I can identify it on site. Added to that, you now search your browsing history.

MacBook Updates

The new 15′ MacBooks have the same non-removable battery (I’m sorry but that’s annoying) as in the current unibody 17-inch option. The battery should last around 5 years and 7 hours per charge. They replaced the ExpressCard slot with an SD-card reader. That’s not a bad idea at all.  The starting price tag is around $1699, which is lower than previous incarnations. (No wonder Microsoft gets in digs at Apple’s prices.)  Prices run between $1699 for the low end to $2299 for the high end. The 17″ unibody MacBook Pro is being discounted *cough* to $2499.

The MacBook Airs have also received a bit of a refresh and a price cut to $1499 and $1799, depending on the configuration. It’s a $700 discount. Still too steep for me, but definitely an improvement.

That’s the major announcements from what I’ve read across the web this afternoon. I have to admit that as much as I love my MacBook Pro (non-unibody, 1 year old), I’m sort of feeling a little apathetic towards Apple. Even the commercials are getting to me. Backlash, maybe?

What do you think of the new announcements?

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Contact Michelle with news, stories, events, and more.
Email: michelle[at]writetech[dot]net
Twitter: @writetechnology, Friendfeed: michellel
Sites: Write Technology, Wine-Girl.net, RainbowGoode.com

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by Brian Solis via PR 2.0

As Twitter and Facebook compete for your attention and social status, there’s another story that serves as the undercurrent for something much more important, a fully pervasive and functional social operating system (OS) that serves as a open platform to connect you, your content, updates, and activity to your friends, peers, and followers across your social graph, regardless of network, browser, or device.

Facebook and Twitter have effectively created immersible destinations and ecosystems that facilitate the development and deployment of applications that not only replicate capabilities currently available in traditional software and cloud computing, but also create a new dynamic for social collaboration, interactivity and engagement hosted in each respective network, desktops, and across the social web. Each network boasts a library of thousands of applications that only continues to burgeon.

Unlike the file interoperability between applications that run on Mac and Windows, Twitter and Facebook platforms are proprietary, although Facebook provides a bridge to automatically port tweets into your Facebook personal News Feed for example.

>Twitter and the statusphere have become our attention dashboards that serve as our soure of news and information as well as hub for communication – more so than email. We’re just now beginning to recognize and acknowledge this shift in content consumption and production behavior. The new ecosystem for sharing, discovering, and publishing updates and micro-sized content reverberates throughout social networks and syndicated profiles, resulting in a formidable network effect of activity and interaction. It is the digital curation of relevant content that binds us contextually and through the statusphere we can connect directly to existing contacts, reach new people, and also forge new friendships through the friends of friends effect (FoFs) in the process.


Source

Last year, Facebook rolled out its Connect program to extend the platform and also aggregate your disparate social activity by enabling you to login to participating sites and services using your Facebook credentials.

Facebook Connect is a technical bridge that links your Facebook profile with other online networks to feed your associated activity back to your personal Facebook News Feed. For example, if you’re commenting on a blog hosted on the Moveable Type platform, you can now login with your Facebook details and not only will your comment and link to your Facebook profile appear on the blog, the activity of commenting is also linked back into your activity feed for your friends and colleagues to see. Digg allows Diggers to log on using their centralized Facebook ID and for each story they digg, the activity is documented back on their profile. The idea is to collect and present distributed activity in one focused stream to create a centralized hub for presentation and interactivity between you and those within your social graph. Examples and Facebook Connect partners already number in the hundreds if not thousands.

Twitter, at one point, was and maybe still is a Facebook Connect partner. However, the social platform is also going to connect your identity and distributed activity through its new “Sign in with Twitter” program.

Many networks currently facilitate connectivity between activities. You can send updates from participating communities directly back to Twitter, similar to the Facebook program. While many services related to Twitter require your username and password, your credentials were still guarded at the services level as well as in Twitter’s network. Now, your identity is verified at Twitter’s gates and will no longer need to reside in multiple locations.

Instead of creating and maintaining multiple identities, eventually you’ll only have to manage two – Facebook and Twitter – until, perhaps someday, you only need one.

So, back to the Mac vs. Windows discussion. With its new login system, Twitter is attempting to extend its social OS by also aggregating identity and officially channeling outside activity back into the Twitter timeline, which could ultimately feed into Facebook.

After the failed attempt at acquiring the popular micro community and with mass public attention now on Twitter, Facebook now has an official and formidable competitor in the social OS category. It’s userbase is 200 million strong compared to maybe 8 million. But current numbers aren’t reflective of the outcome. This is a long and winding road that will traverse numerous grades and hurdles.

Many are focusing on the technical aspects and openness of Twitter’s authentication system. I believe that the bigger story resides with the platform and the ability to lure developers, foster innovation, and seamlessly connect users and activity to friends, peers and followers to stimulate new registrations, adoption, consumption and interaction. Facebook and Twitter, and other emerging and existing networks on the periphery in the evolving social landscape, will eventually play host to much more that the proverbial “conversation.” They will enable not only a new genre of communication, but also centralized professional and personal collaboration and management.

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