How Flipboard Turned Web Noise Into iPad Gold

Evan Doll


Editor’s note: This article is the first in a series of profiles about hit apps and the successful app programmers behind them.

Every day from morning to night, Maria Popova hunts for digital gold on the web.

Some of her finds: A neuroscientist explains how brains feel emotion. A lost, unpublished Dr. Seuss manuscript resurfaces. An infographic breaks down the economics of the hamburger.

Under the Twitter handle @brainpicker, Popova shares every nugget she can find with her 37,000 followers. But as interesting as all this content may be, her Twitter.com profile, like everyone else’s, is little more than a pile of plain links and text.

And this is why the Flipboard app for iPad is a godsend for readers, and why we’re excited that Wednesday’s new software update adds several new features. It grabs photos, text or video from links in a Twitter stream like Popova’s and stitches them into a magazine-like layout with neatly arranged panes, lots of white space and beautiful typography.

So when looking at Popova’s Twitter feed on Flipboard, you see part of the burger infographic she mentions, alongside an excerpt from the interview with the neuroscientist and a clip of the lost Dr. Seuss book. Swiping your finger across the iPad screen flips to another page of her content (left goes back chronologically and right takes you forward).

When you launch Flipboard, the main screen displays a grid of nine large tiles, each one representing a section (see picture at top of the post). The Facebook tile loads a Flipboard-ized version of your friends’ status updates; tapping the general Twitter tile shows content from people you follow in the same magazine fashion.You can also add sections for specific Twitter feeds you’d like to read (like @wired), and it’ll do its magic.

The new version of Flipboard that just went live in the App Store adds the ability to magazine-ify content from your Flickr stream, Google feeds and Facebook groups.

It’s all extremely easy to set up; you’ll be flipping around in minutes.

The end result is a visually rich magazine that’s alive — breathing with content posted by people you care about on the internet. (Hell, Flipboard looks so good you’ll start appreciating photos and comments from people you don’t care much about, too.)

If only the web could be this much fun on its own. In fact, a superior browsing experience is exactly what gave rise to Flipboard.

“One of our first thought experiments was, how would you re-imagine a web browser?” said Evan Doll, an ex-Apple engineer and co-founder of Flipboard.

Evan Doll

“We love magazines,” he added. “There’s something great in terms of the graphic design, typography and emphasis on the visual side. And there’s also the fact you have editorial — someone filtering down the new stuff, telling you what’s important, interesting and worthwhile. Both those things we wanted to try to marry with social.”

The wedding is generating a lot of buzz. Apple last week namedFlipboard as the best iPad app of the year. That same week, the startup announced partnerships with major media outlets including The Washington Post, Bon Appetit and the San Francisco Chronicle.

The Flipboard team is only a year old, and it has already received $10 million in funding from stars like Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey and actor Ashton Kutcher.

That’s a good thing, but it also means that Flipboard is going to have to make money — not easy for an app that’s free in the iTunes App Store.

Doll says the team is still hatching a plan to rake in cash, which could involve embedding advertisements into Flipboard pages or splitting micropayments with content creators. And it’s not just creators, but also prolific content sharers like Popova that Flipboard would like to help earn money.

“She should be able to do that as her full-time job,” Doll said of Popova. “She’s a one-woman magazine.”

Flipboard download link [iTunes]

Price: Free

Category: Media

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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This post was written by Journalist on December 16, 2010

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Dongle Adds USB, SD and MicroSD to iPad

Apple’s iPad Camera Connection Kit is a wonderful thing, although overpriced at $30. Not only can you use it to inject photos from your camera direct into the tablet’s brain, you can also hook up all manner of USB peripherals, from keyboards to microphones to thumb-drives.

MIC Gadget’s 3-in-1 adapter does all this, and more. It combines Apple’s two small, easy-to-lose widgets into one slightly larger, slightly harder-to-lose package, putting an SD card reader and USB port into one plastic box. The extra is a micrSD slot, which is actually all but useless: the only way it would work is if your cellphone saves its photos into a standard folder named “DCIM”, which is what will trick the iPad into reading them.

There’s one thing that MIC Gadget’s version had in common with the official Apple version: it costs $30. I’d stick with Apple’s overpriced kit: it works, you only have to carry the part you need and it is built to last. It is also available now, unlike this 3-in-1 solution, which ship after Christmas.

3-In-1 iPad Camera Connection Kit [MIC Gadget]


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iPhone Sensation Angry Birds Grabs 50 Million Downloads


The extremely popular iPhone and iPad game Angry Birds has accumulated 50 million users who play it for 200 million minutes a day, according to its maker.

Humongous.How did Angry Birds do it? It hardly seems like luck; if you look at it closely, the game’s success was brilliantly engineered.

The company Rovio hit all the check boxes. Angry Birds has a really sharp style, fits in an accessible game genre and features a physics-based gameplay that creates a ton of different situations to keep the game interesting at various skill levels.

On top of that, it’s priced at an irresistible 99 cents. Plus, the game’s makers regularly add new stages through software updates to keep people talking about Angry Birds (just like Doodle Jump does), which makes it a constant viral sensation. So whenever people buy an iPhone, one of the first apps recommended by friends is Angry Birds. Add that all together and you have a mega hit.

And it’s only going to get bigger. Angry Birds recently soared onto the Android platform, and soon it’s also heading to PCs, Macs, every game console and Facebook, according to Rovio.

From CNET

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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This post was written by Journalist on December 14, 2010

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Supreme Court Considers Kindle v. iPad

Newly-approved Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan is a Kindle user, while longtime conservative Justice Antonin Scalia wields an iPad.

This nugget of information appeared in a recent video clip on C-SPAN. Both justices use the devices (plus hard copy printouts) to read the vast quantities of written material they must wade through — up to 40 or 50 briefs for each case, Kagan says in the video above.

The news, however, made us wonder about something of far more pressing national importance: Is this a deep ideological divide on the Supreme Court?

Would Scalia see things differently if he read opinions on the monochrome Kindle? Does Kagan need a dose of iPad color, and maybe a round or two of Flight Control HD between court sessions?

Are Kindle-wielding Justices writing angry “Mactard” and “fanboi” comments on the opinions of their opponents, while the Mac-loving faction refuses to talk or even think about anything that wasn’t designed in Cupertino?

Nah, that doesn’t seem realistic.

Thanks, Jeremy!

An award-winning writer specializing in technology, science and business, Dylan Tweney is a senior editor at Wired.com and publisher of tinywords, the world’s smallest magazine.
Follow @dylan20 and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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This post was written by Journalist on December 13, 2010

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Cover Stories: Cases Make E-Books Look Like Real Books

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Like books, e-readers and tablets need protection. Their delicate, computer-like screens can get cracked or smashed by the vagaries of life.

And like books, we spend hours staring at these delicate devices. So why not make them look more like books?

We don’t just want to protect tablets and e-readers, but honor and personalize them, and maybe bring back some of the quaint pleasures of reading an old leather-bound volume at the same time.

The most natural way to signal their special status as reading machines and engines of cultural consumption is to borrow what we know from the look and feel of book covers. And if making an e-reader look like an old hardcover book or a composition notebook adds a little trompe l’oeil fun, so much the better.

This slide show highlights some of the best faux-book covers for e-book readers and tablets.

Above: Covers made by Dodocase for the Kindle 3.

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This post was written by Journalist on December 13, 2010

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Padlette Gives You a Handle on The iPad

What if I told you that for “just” $25, you could add a stretchy silicone web to your iPad? You’d rejoice, right? “Finally,” you’d shout, as you leaped up and punched the air, “At last my problem of owning a sleek, easy to hold slab has been solved. Thank you Charlie. Thank you!”

Well, don’t thank me. Thank Padlette, the people who brought you this rubbery appendage. The Padlette is also the name of the handle that stretches from corner to corner of the iPad, running a diagonal strip which will help you pick it up off the table and then, erm… Let’s check the promo video to see what it does:

That’s it? Sure, the strap makes picking it up easy, and maybe even helps with that whole “carrying around” thing, but it doesn’t seem to actually make it any easier to hold when you’re actually using the iPad. And using it is just about the only thing I’m doing if I’m holding it.

Now, the iPad is slippery, to be sure. That’s the main reason I have the non-slip Apple case/skin on it. But I don’t see how the Padlette is going to help. Are you supposed to wear it like a mitten?

If you do decide to buy a Padlette, hurry. For a limited time, you can make your new toy even more annoying by choosing the limited-edition glow-in-the-dark version. Available now.

Padlette product page [Padlette]


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Gorgeous $300 Leather iPad Case Mimics Apple’s Own

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You love your Apple iPad case. You love that it is more like a slim, slip-on skin than a thick case. You love that it seals in the iPad from all sides, and that it has a built in stand for typing. You love that, once fitted, you almost don’t notice it.

Problem: You don’t love the way it picks up dirt, or that you can’t fasten it shut. And you hate its utilitarian blankness, made to look like a corporate, trade-show giveaway by the Apple logo on the front.

Solution: The gorgeous Travelteq iPad case, almost identical in design to the Apple version, only fashioned from leather and costing a scary 225 ($300). The Italian leather is lined in a choice of colors and seals the iPAd in just like the Apple case. There are cutouts for all ports and switches, a fold in the front cover to bend the flap into a typing or movie-watching stand, and a strap to keep the case closed. You even get a business-card holder inside, should you need it.

If only this thing wasn’t so damn expensive. I’m an avowed fan of the Apple case, for all the reasons listed in the first paragraph, and I don’t even care about the cons in the second (apart from the logo). But even I would buy the Travelteq case in a second if it wasn’t over the half the price of an actual iPad.

Travelteq iPad case [Travelteq. Thanks, Brandon!]


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Photos: Are These iPad 2 Cases?

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With the next-generation iPad rumored for a spring 2011 release, Asian websites are posting images of purported third-party cases for the device.

The cases, spotted by Apple fan blogs MacRumors, Powerbook Medic and iLounge,sport common characteristics: a hole for a rear-facing camera and a rectangular hole that could be for an SD-card slot.

The premature-accessory game is a crapshoot. Occasionally accessory makers have sources connected to Apple in the plastics industry, who leak characteristics of new Apple hardware so they can get a head start on making cases. There have been times when leaked case designs accurately foreshadow new hardware features, but also times when they were wrong.

If the iPad cases above are based on real characteristics of the iPad, they reveal some interesting tidbits. Many have speculated the iPad 2 would gain a front-facing camera, but a rear-facing camera, as the cases suggest, was less expected. Also, the possible addition of an SD-card slot would eliminate the need for buying acamera-connection accessory made by Apple.

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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Children’s Toy Plays Friendly With iPad Software

The iPad presents exciting opportunities for digital board games, but consequentially it can eliminate the joys of grabbing physical objects, knocking over game pieces when you lose, and so on. That’s why I like the idea of Duo, a physical toy with iPad integration.

The video above demonstrates how it works. You place the Duo toy on top of the iPad, which is running a free app called Yoomi. Two objects appear on-screen in the Yoomi app, and one player picks an object by pressing a color-coded button on the Duo.

Then the other players place tokens on a color representing the object they think was chosen. The toy rotates to drop the winners’ tokens into the bin; after a number of rounds, the first player to get rid of all of his or her tokens wins.

It’s a silly game for kids, but it shows the potential for data and physical toys to blend together into a unique interactive experience. It’s sort of like a kiddy version of augmented-reality gaming.

The Duo costs $40, exclusively sold at Toys R Us.

Product page

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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This post was written by Journalist on December 7, 2010

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Competition Rules: UK iPads From 200, 15GB Per Month

Over in the UK, something is happening that will bring cheer to the miserable, heavily-drinking denizens of that gray, cold land: Competition. To be precise, competition in iPad plans.

3G operator “3″ has entered the iPad subsidy game, going squarely up against Orange, which announced its own plans earlier this week. The prices for the iPad itself are the same as Orange is asking – 200, 250 and 350 for the 16, 32 and 64GB models. The difference is in the data plans. 3 offers a massive 15GB per month, or around 500MB per day. To get these prices, you’ll need to sign a two-year contract.

When I’m not trapped in my elevator-free apartment, my iPad is in constant use on my own 3G data plan. Even then, I have never come close to hitting the 2GB cap. So unless you watch a lot of streamed video, 15GB may as well be unlimited.

This is what happens when you have a lot of equally good operators all chasing the same customers. In the US, a Verizon iPhone can’t come fast enough.

iPad Plans on 3 [3 via Pocket Lint]


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This post was written by Journalist on December 3, 2010

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Hands-On with the ZooGue Genius iPad Case

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ZooGue’s leather folio-style case for the iPad is called the Genius. That’s some fancy talking right there, but amazingly it actually manages to live up to the name. Almost. A slightly more accurate name would be Fat Genius.

Let’s get the problem out of the way first. The Genius might be incredibly handy, but it is also thick and heavy, thanks mostly to the profusion of clever extras. Empty, it weighs 16-ounces, or around two-thirds the wight of the iPad itself. It is also fat, looking less like you have slipped the iPad into a case and more like you have tucked it up in bed: The case is all but a full inch thick. All that material does help protect the iPad inside, though.

The Genius might be bulky, but the features it packs in almost make up for it. First, slot the tablet in. It works like the Apple case, with the iPad entering through a slot by the hinge. A flap then wraps around and Velcros into place, and all ports and switches are left clear. Flip the case open and the stiff front-cover sits around back, out of the way.

This cover has a pair of ugly Velcro strips along the top and bottom edges (along with a nasty plastic logo-badge, apparently shrunken from an earlier version). These strips engage with a Velcro-tipped kickstand on the back, letting you prop the iPad at any angle from around 35-degrees to vertical. This is the best part of the case: adjustment is fast and easy, and the stand is as sturdy as you could wish for. It is also very comfortable for reading, with the iPad either on your lap or on your chest (if you’re lying down).

The other gimmick is a strap that wraps around a car-headrest to keep the kids entertained. The strap is elasticated, and in two parts. Wrap both sides around the headrest and they Velcro together. It works well, and the straps can also be used to keep the case closed.

The leather is plush, but slippery. Prop this against a wall and it may slip and fall flat, unlike the grippy Apple case (still my favorite of every case I have tried).

If you don’t mind its size, then the Genius should be on your list: It’s well made and easy to use, and for what you get, pretty cheap at $50. If you’re looking for something simple and slim, move along.


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This post was written by Journalist on December 1, 2010

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Rumors: iOS 4.3 Will Offer App Subscriptions As Early As December

iPad owners have had less than a week with iOS 4, but a software update offering news and magazine subscriptions targeted at them could arrive in less than a month.

Daring Fireball’s John Gruber reports that Apple’s Steve Jobs will join News Corp.’s Rupert Murdoch on stage at a December 9th event to announce Murdoch’s new forthcoming tablet newspaper, The Daily. According to Gruber’s sources, The Daily will be an app in the App Store, but make use of new recurring subscription billing on users’ iTunes accounts, and “developers at News Corp building the app already have preliminary documentation on the new subscription billing APIs from Apple.”

Macstories’ Federico Viticci reports further that recurring subscriptions are part of a new version of iOS — iOS 4.3 — with a scheduled release date of December 13.

According to Viticci’s sources, iOS 4.3 wasn’t intended to be released so quickly after 4.2.1, which was originally internally slated for an early November release. It’s possible that 4.2.1’s later official release might also push back the release of 4.3. But with Apple playing such a large role in the release of The Daily, both companies may stick with mid-December announcement and releases after all.

Subscription-based recurring billing would likely increase the number of paid magazine, newspaper, TV, video and other media applications on iTunes. Really, any application that depends on continuous content or service delivery could introduce a subscription model: online gaming, data backup, GPS, office applications and more. Many subscription-based services already have iOS apps, but have to establish accounts and recurring billing separately from iTunes.

Another technical challenge posed by subscriptions that could require an OS update is automatic background content delivery. If you’re being billed automatically every week for a newspaper or magazine, you shouldn’t have to go through a long, complicated routine just to download a new issue.

A final open question: how much customer information will Apple and app/content makers share with each other about their subscribers? This data has value, too — as does customers’ privacy.

Image by Apple.


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Amazon’s Price Check Might Be Perfect Smartphone Shopping App

Amazon has figured out a way to advertise its own products is everyone else’s stores, using a clever application that leverages the key features of smartphones — in particular, Apple’s latest iPhones.

Price Check for iPhone initially doesn’t seem very different from Amazon’s well-established, multiplatform “shopping cart” frontend, which has always allowed users to check prices and buy products on the go. The difference is the variety and speed of inputs you can use to find items in the store, which make the app particularly well-suited for in-store holiday comparison shopping.

  • Say It brings up a picture of a microphone with an “I’m listening” message. Speak the product’s name into the smartphone mic, and Amazon will try to find it. The speech recognition is a little iffy, and obviously homophones give it some trouble (my search for “Kinect” brought up “Connect Four”), but it’s generally pretty good.
  • Snap It opens up your iPhone’s camera, along with a textual reminder that the service “works best in good light with a book, DVD, CD, or video game” — in short, media objects with well-established cover art that Amazon can try to match in its database (and Amazon says it’s steadily increasing the size and variety of this database). “Snap It” worked extraordinarily well with every book I tried in the decidedly poor light of my office.
  • Scan It is particularly powerful, since it can use a product’s barcode to find a unique copy: it won’t confuse hardbacks with paperbacks, or widescreen and fullscreen copies of a DVD. But it requires an autofocusing camera to get high-quality resolution on the barcode — which means iPhone 4 or 3GS. My iPhone 3G has the “Scan It” button grayed out; if I click it, I get a short, apologetic notice that my non-autofocusing camera can’t scan a barcode, at least up to the standards of Amazon’s new app.
  • Finally, you can also type in a product’s name in the “Type It” box at the top. Once you’ve found an item, you can browse specs and reviews, or share the price over email, Facebook or Twitter, or narrow the stores between Amazon and its partners (the “Prime” compatible button is quite nice.)

    There’s also a handy list of “Recent Price Checks,” so you can keep track of products you’ve scanned, and a shopping cart, so you can buy products from Amazon directly. You can’t access your own wish list, which skews the app towards impulse buys or holiday shopping for other people.

    When the app was first announced, I was confused; why was Amazon launching yet another shopping application for iOS? There’s the old standby Amazon.com, the Windowshop App for iPad and now PriceCheck? Did customers really need a whole page (or in iOS 4, a folder) devoted just to apps for Amazon?

    Now I think I understand the strategy much better. Each Amazon application capitalizes on the unique hardware and anthropology of the device. Windowshop is a browsing catalog, suited to the full-sized screen and laid-back posture of the iPad. Even the name suggests voyeurism and fantasy. Price Check is mobile, pulling in camera, voice and autofocus to make something you can whip out of your pocket to make a snap decision while the Black Friday hordes crowd in around you.

    Different devices, different scenarios, different shopping experiences — but all of them funneling you to just one store, up in the cloud. Smart. Now I wonder when and if other platforms (Android, Blackberry, etc.) will get their chance to play with similar new toys.


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TiVo App for iPad Might Be the Ultimate Remote

TiVo is porting their gorgeous interface for integrated live TV, DVR and internet video services to the iPad. The company is announcing their new Tivo Premiere iPad app today; it should be available free from the iTunes store in the coming weeks.

There have been other iOS and Android remote applications, but TiVo’s is particularly noteworthy because of the sheer number of services it can control. From the press release, here’s a short list of what it can do:

  • Gesture based control - Take complete control of all recordings, even dragging forward and back through a show with a simple tap or swipe
  • Start watching what you want – Launch a recorded show, live TV or streaming video with the swipe of a finger
  • Program guide – Browse your full-screen TV program guide without interrupting TV viewing
  • Schedule – Schedule one-time recordings and Season Pass recordings from the device at home or on-the-go
  • Get more from your shows and movies – Explore cast and crew and other recommendations of your favorite shows without interrupting the big screen
  • Search – Search for all of your favorite TV shows, movies, actors or directors across both broadcast and broadband from Netflix, Amazon Video On Demand, and more
  • Share comments with your friends – From within the TiVo Premiere App, comment and share your thoughts to Facebook or Twitter about the show you are currently watching

A TiVo spokesperson confirmed to me that the app will search and launch every service TiVo offers, from on-demand video to streaming music. (And remember, Hulu Plus is still coming.)

This is where TiVo’s ability to push all of its services through one box is particularly powerful: I don’t have to switch inputs or apps to see what’s on live TV or Netflix.

TiVo Premiere To-Do List, Highlighting Amazon + Netflix

About the only thing the app can’t do is stream video from your TiVo to the iPad, about which I’m sure there will be quick complaints from people who believe the world owes them everything they can possibly imagine.

From my experience using Comcast’s similar but on-its-face less-awesome Xfinity TV iPad app, browsing television and on-demand video on a tablet is both very different from and obviously superior to using a traditional remote. It’s almost unfair to call this class of apps “remote controls.” TiVo’s press release calls it a “two-screen experience,” and that’s closer to the truth. It’s more like flipping through a magazine — an oversized, interactive, full-color TV guide.

We’re separating out reading, browsing and management from the big screen, bringing the text closer to our eyes and putting the objects we’re manipulating directly in our hands. Twenty years from now, we’ll make jokes makinf fun of ourselves for ever doing it differently.

The remote reimagined [TiVo]


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Print Wirelessly From iPad to Any Printer? There’s an App for That

One of the features pulled from the iOS 4.2 update at the last minute was the ability to print to any printer connected to your Mac (more correctly, the functionality was not added in OS X 10.6.5). Printopia, from Ecamm, solves this, without any messy hacks, and it adds more besides.

You can still print from an iPad to a purpose-made AirPrint printer, but who wants to buy a printer these days? Nope, better to repurpose the piece of junk you already have (and lets face it, nobody has ever designed a good printer). Printopia is a preference-pane that lists any printers you have installed on your Mac, and when you choose the print option in any compatible iOS app, (Safari, for instance), the printer shows up right in the menu.

But what if you don’t have, or want, a printer? Printopia has you covered. You can choose to print to a PDF, which is then saved on the Mac (in a new Documents/Printopia folder), and if you have Dropbox installed (which you should, as it is both awesome and free) then there’s even an option to save a PDF into your Dropbox. This last option should show up automatically, but for me it only works on my MacBook, not my iMac. Then again, my entire Documents folder is inside my Dropbox so, like, whatever.

Printopia is available now, for $10, and you can try it free for a week.

Printopia product page [Ecamm]

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Dongle Brings Live TV to iPad (In Japan)

TV on the iPad: Fantastic idea or foolish folly? I lean towards the former, but then I don’t own a TV set and so much of my life is now contained in my iPad that the only paper books I buy are fancy hardbacks, like The Making of The Empire Strikes Back (you should get it). To bring live TV onto your tablet (or iPhone or iPod Touch) you will need Buffalo’s Little Tele i.

The dongle, with its own loop antenna, slots into the dock port and works with the 1Seg service. This is a digital broadcasting service available in Japan,Chile, Brazil, Peru and Argentina, and already works in those countries with many compatible phones.

The Little Tele i works in combo with an iApp, so you can enjoy a variety of non-skippable programming at a herky-jerky 15-frames-per-second, and has its own battery which will power it for up to 2.5-hours. It will cost 10,600, or $127 when it goes on sale in December.

Clearly this isn’t the solution for anyone in the U.S or Europe, which is a shame as the iPad (and presumably other upcoming tablets) is perfect for streaming a bit of background junk once in a while. Until Elgato comes up with a standalone EyeTV for the iPad, there’s another, free, way to get your fix. Filmon.com, visited from an iOS device, lets you watch local, live TV re-streamed to the browser, no app required. Neat.

Buffalo Little Tele i [Buffalo via OhGizmo]

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RIM’s Fighting Apple On Every Front

Apple’s found itself in market cold wars with many tech companies, most notably Microsoft, Adobe and Google. But things are really heating up with smartphone maker RIM. In the last 24 hours, RIM has attacked Apple’s technical chops and software philosophy.

First, RIM’s Playbook team posted a video (see below) comparing its forthcoming tablet’s mobile browser to the iPad’s. Interestingly, the video highlighted not just the iPad’s lack of Flash (which everyone knows about), but also its slow page-loading speed, lack of pixel-by-pixel rendering fidelity and lack of support for high-quality JavaScript and HTML5 video.

The implication is clear: Steve Jobs has said that Apple isn’t putting resources behind Flash so it can focus on HTML5 and other open web standards. But the iPad’s implementation of those standards is far from perfect. RIM is now claiming that it has been able to put together a faster browser with better HTML5 performance — and, as a bonus, support for Flash — even though Apple’s had more time to get its browser right.

RIM’s HTML5 emphasis is key for its second attack on Apple, which CEO Jim Balsillie voiced at Tuesday’s Web 2.0 conference: Apple’s highly-touted app marketplace really just masks iOS’s subpar web performance.

“You dont need an app for the Web,” Balsillie said. Since many iOS apps are just frontend clients for web properties — stores, games, media companies, social networking sites — and RIM’s app strength is in documents and productivity, it’s a clear contrast.

Theres still a role for apps, but can you use your existing content? Balsillie asked web companies. Can you use your existing web assets? Do you need a set of proprietary tools to bring existing assets on to a device, or can you use known tools that you use for creating websites?

As for Apple catching up to Blackberry in the smartphone market, when asked what he would tell Jobs if he were there, Balsillie simply said, “You finally showed up.”

This isn’t the first time Balsillie has shot back at Jobs and Apple. After an October earnings call where Jobs crowed about passing RIM in quarterly smartphone sales and denigrated 7-inch tablets (a class that includes RIM’s Playbook) as overexpensive underperformers, Balsillie took to the official Blackberry blog, questioning Apple’s numbers (RIM’s fiscal quarters are slightly different from Apple’s), its software philosophy and Jobs’s treatment by the media.

“For those of us who live outside of Apples distortion field,” Balsillie wrote, “we know that 7-inch tablets will actually be a big portion of the market and we know that Adobe Flash support actually matters to customers who want a real web experience.” He added, “We think many customers are getting tired of being told what to think by Apple.”

It might be surprising that Balsillie taken such a hard line against Apple, considering that Android smartphones are arguably taking a bigger bite out of RIM’s core smartphone business, while Windows Phone 7 is trying to peel away customers too. But targeting Apple makes a lot of sense.

First, no company in technology is more visible than Apple and no person in technology is more recognizable than Steve Jobs. Shooting down Apple and the iPad is news, and doing it on the basis of HTML5 and web support is a strike at the heart of what Apple has staked its claim on. It’s like Pepsi beating Coke in a sip test.

Second, the iPad surprised everyone — including Apple — by its adoption rate among business users. RIM, which has traditionally been very strong in the business world, is eager to stop that trend in its tracks, before companies that were RIM-only decide to go iOS-only.

Finally, Blackberry offers a lot more smartphone models, at different price points and in different form factors, than it did when the iPhone was announced. It’s rebranding itself in the consumer market as a company that’s all about the web and communication. This week’s attacks were aimed at driving that point home.

No more of what Jobs once called “the baby web” for baby-sized smartphone screens. Email, Messenger, text entry, and the full web: that’s the space Blackberry wants to occupy in the customer’s imagination.

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PlayBook Smokes iPad Browser in Blackberry Speed-Test Video

RIM has released a video pitching the upcoming PlayBook tablet against the current iPad, and it’s pretty impressive. Clearly the tests were chosen to favor RIM’s own device, but even so, it beats the iPad handily in each one.

Loading a regular webpage, for example, sees the PlayBook finished with everything, rendering and all, while the iPad still ticks along. Next, it’s on to Flash, which the iPad doesn’t do at all. Smartly, RIM chose to use a non-video serving site (in this case Adidas) as most video providers offer iPad-compatible streams as an alternative to Adobe’s proprietary plugin. Even so, the animation on the Flash site stutters noticeably (this is probably Flash’s fault, not the PlayBook’s).

Then we move to Javascript and HTML5, and while the example shown clearly favors the PlayBook, there are plenty of sites where the iPad works great.

Still, the raw rendering speed of the PlayBook’s browser is obvious, and the Flash support will make it useful for browsing restaurant websites on the go (why do all restaurant sites use Flash?). RIM must be proud. It must also be aware that the PlayBook won’t be out until next year, when it will be up against the iPad 2, not the current iPad.

BlackBerry PlayBook and iPad Comparison: Web Fidelity [Blackberry YouTube Channel]

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Hands-On with PDF Highlighter, the iPad’s Best PDF App?

Poor PDFs. So dull and boring, and yet so essential. The same-everywhere document format is wonderful at what it does (boarding cards for online checkins, mostly), but has lost out in a popularity contest with the e-book. Hell, the PDF is not even well suited to the screen. Until now.

Out of the gazillion PDF apps for the iPad, the brand-new PDF Highlighter really stands out. It has almost all the features of other readers, but adds great some great design touches that will make you smile often as you use it.

Highlighter’s name hints at its gimmick: You can scrawl on top of a PDF’s pages, as well as highlight, underline and strikeout text and even add a sticky note which can be moved around later. The sketching function works great, giving smooth lines even for those with the shakes from a severe hangover, and you can of course adjust color and line-thickness.

I have been using this to tick boxes and fill-out answers on some worksheets I have to help me learn Catalan. It’s a lot more fun than paper.

To browse your highlights, sketches and notes, you hit a toolbar button and they all pop up as strips of paper over a darkened screen, OS X dashboard-style. Touching one takes you to its place in the document.

The other big feature is Dropbox support. You can open PDFs from Dropbox and save them back (you can also use iTunes’ clunky file transfer, or get things out with plain old email). Any saved PDF can be opened in a desktop PDF app with annotations intact.

These features are winners on their own, but the little details are what really make the app. Turn a page while zoomed in, for example, and the app respects the zoom level, but shifts up to the top of the next page, ready to read. Page navigation is classy, too, with a Pages-style loupe which shows thumbnail previews as you slide your finger across the navigation-bar at the bottom of the screen.

The display of the PDF can be jiggered with, too. You can invert the display for night-reading, tweak the contrast for tired eyes and even choose between eight shades of gray or beige for the page background. Links are clickable, and open in a small, popover browser instead of sending you off to Safari, and you can highlight a word and look it up in the same popover using Wikipedia.

Finally, there is full support for hierarchical tables of content (with clickable links) and search in both the library view (search by title) and when reading a PDF (search-as-you-type shows the results as torn paper-strips with the search-phrase highlighted inside a few lines of text for context).

The level of polish is very high, and its hard to see what could be added in a future release. The developer is OMZ Software, the same folks behind the NewsRack (formerly NewsStand) RSS reader for iPad and iPhone, itself a pretty slick app.

If you use PDFs in anything more than a cursory fashion, you should check out Highlighter. It’s just $5 in the App Store, or less than you spent this morning on that child’s milkshake from Starbucks that you somehow convinced yourself is a cup of “coffee”.

PDF Highlighter [OMZ]
PDF Highlighter [iTunes]

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Enhanced Narnia E-Book Has Promise, Restrictions

When will books benefit from the addition of multimedia magic? Narnia may hold the answer.

HarperCollins has released an enhanced e-book for C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader in advance of the film adaptation of the same. The book is a perfect test case for the promises and flaws of the enhanced e-book market.

The Voyage of the Dawn Treader isn’t an app, but a multimedia EPUB book. EPUB is as close as we have to a universal e-book standard. This immediately makes it multi-platform and multi-device — no need for separate iOS or Android code, or store approval. All you need is an application on those platforms that can read EPUB, and a touchscreen. EPUB books can’t be read on the Kindle, but the Kindle isn’t a multimedia touchscreen device either, so that’s no loss anyways.

The book is available for iBooks now, and according to the press release, “will be available on a number of handheld multimedia readers and touchscreen devices” — read: the forthcoming Nook Color, and possibly other Android tablets too. On all available platforms, it will cost $10.

Sometimes, enhancing e-books with multimedia seems like a solution in search of a problem. Generally, readers aren’t clamoring for enhanced books. Writers and publishers don’t always understand them, and there isn’t always good content to put in them.

Lewis’s Narnia books are different. They have a well-established readership and are broadly popular with both adults and children. They’ve already gone transmedia, spinning off games and movies; the writer’s estate is willing to develop and authorize new media, and companies like HarperCollins and Disney have the tools and incentives to develop them. The serial nature of the books, in turn, gives the books continuity and room to evolve.

What’s more, the visually rich and conceptually encyclopedic nature of the books means that adding maps, illustrations, animations, reference guides, and timelines actually become very useful reading aids. Add in audio readings and commentaries, critical essays, and you have something that could become the equivalent of a deluxe DVD edition of a beloved book.

Really, the deluxe DVD editions of The Lord of the Rings were enhanced e-books without us fully realizing it — at least those portions devoted to author JRR Tolkien, the writing of the books and the world of Middle Earth. That’s the standard against which we should judge enhanced e-books.

The Voyage of the Dawn Treader doesn’t quite get there. I reviewed the iBooks version, which costs $10, $2 more than the $8 “non-enhanced” version. It gets the Pauline Baynes maps and illustrations, animation and reference encyclopedia right. This material alone is worth the extra $2.

But a promising “read along” feature, using audio from Shakespearean actor/audiobook standout Derek Jacobi’s reading of the book, is hopelessly crippled, providing just the first few paragraphs of each chapter. If you want to hear the whole thing, you’ll need to buy the separate audiobook, which costs another $17 from iTunes. Putting snippets of audio in the e-book feels like a terrible tease.

Again and again, enhanced e-books bump up against rights that have already been sold and assigned. The video content, including an animated timeline/summary of the story, is solid, but considering the e-book is intended as a cross-promotion with the film, it’s sad that it doesn’t even include previews from the film.

It’s a worthwhile object for what it is. But it’s ultimately frustrating, because the potential for an integrated object on video-capable e-readers like the iPad and Nook Color is so clear, at least to me.

The publishing industry, though, is so knotted — the media streams so legally and functionally fragmented — that the opportunities for a clear case study, an example that everyone can point to as a standard, get squandered again and again.

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Pico Projector iDevice Dock Beams Movies, Games

Wowwee’s Cinemin Slice is another iPhone, iPad dock, with one huge difference: It has a pico-projector built in.

The big wedge has a retractable dock section at the front, into which you can either drop an iPhone or pull out like a drawer and sit the iPad on top. There are also speakers (2 x 6-Watt), a headphone jack for hooking up to proper speakers, and an infra-red remote.

But we’re here for that projector. It will pipe video from the iDevice and throw it onto the wall at any size up to 60-inches (from 10-feet away). Contrast is a decent 1000:1, the image has a 854 x 480 resolution, a 16:9 aspect ratio, and the Texas Instruments-made DLP projector beams out 16 ANSI lumens.

It might sound to you like the size and shape of the projected image is unsuited to the rather more square shape of the iPad and iPhone displays. You’d be right, but not to worry: there are also mini-HDMI and AV ports for hooking up laptops and other video gear.

The Cinemin Slice will be in stores in January 2011, for an as yet unnamed price. As a guide, Wowwee sells an almost identical projector without the dock accouterments for $300.

Cinemin Slice [Wowwee via iLounge]

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DC Comics App: Batman, Hellblazer, Invisibles on iPad

At last, DC Comics has a home on the iPad. Forget about the X-Men and all that other kids’s stuff: now you can buy and read some of the best comic-books ever made.

DC, like Marvel, is on the iPad in two forms. First, this standalone app in which you can browse, buy and read the available titles. This is powered by the same Comixology engine behind most branded comic-book apps. But while this is a nice way to get your favorite DC titles, it may be better to just grab the free Comics app, which is exactly the same but also contains the catalogs of Marvel and a heap of indie publishers. Some DC titles are already available in the Comics store, but now they are all in one DC store, so you can go straight for the good stuff.

Why am I so excited? Because DC comics were the ones I bought when I was a teenager, and a lot of those old titles are here. Hellblazer, Grant Morrison’s stunning Invisibles, the Sandman, and the comic book which arguably kick-started the whole comic-books-are-not-for-kids movement, Batman: The Dark Knight Returns. And not as a trade paperback, either, but in its original separate issues ($3 each).

What are you waiting for? The DC app is free, and also available on the iPhone. And one more thing: Look at that picture up top, or rather, that Photoshop disaster up top. Who the hell did that “iPad” illustration?

DC Comics iPad App [DC]
DC app [iTunes]
Comixology App [iTunes]

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ThinkGeek Joins iPad Keyboard Case Cavalcade

I promise I’ll stop writing about iPad keyboard cases soon, but today’s second installment comes from ThinkGeek, in the form of a luxurious leather folio case, packed with little chiclets to help you type.

Unlike the ZAGGmate profiled earlier today, the ThinkGeek case is designed to continuously swaddle the iPad, not to be removed. It holds the tablet by its edges, covering the bezel with a leather rectangle whilst still allowing access to all the buttons and ports.

But that’s not why you’re here. The keyboard part of the case is hidden under a flap which doubles as a wrist-rest when unfolded, and the connection is, as ever, via Bluetooth (li-ion battery life 90-hours ). All the media keys are here, including the ones the Apple Bluetooth keyboard doesn’t have: home and slideshow. Ever since putting iOS 4.2 on my iPad, I have been worrying about all those extra double-clicks I’m racking up on the home-button. Putting this on the keyboard is smart: when you’re typing, you’re also likely to be doing a lot of app-switching.

When not tapping away, you can use the case like any other folio-case, folding the keyboard-containing front-cover around the back, or just letting everything close up and stick shut with the magnetic clip.

For a circuitry-toting, leather folio, the ThinkGeek case is pretty cheap, at just $60. Available now.

IPad Bluetooth Keyboard Case [ThinkGeek. Thanks, Jessica!]

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Aluminum Shell Hides iPad Keyboard

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The ZAGGMate iPad case comes in two flavors, both of which look like aluminum tea-trays, only smaller. The cases protect just the screen of the iPad, clipping on like an iPhone shell-style case, only in the front instead of on the back.

Both cases also double as stands, with a neat, hinged plastic wedge that flips out of the interior and pushes at the back of the tablet while the case’s lip stops it from slipping forward.

Then things part ways. The ZAGGmate keyboard-case contains an hardware QWERTY keyboard on its inner surface. Once the iPad is propped into place, the Bluetooth keyboard can be used for typing, and has the full-complement of media keys for volume, home, starting a slideshow and adjusting the brightness. A 510 mAh rechargeable lithium polymer battery provides juice for a couple weeks of normal use (and charges via USB).

I scoffed for a while at these keyboard cases, thinking that the iPad’s on-screen keyboard was plenty good enough. It’s surprising still just how fast I can type on it, but with iOS 4.2 and all its fancy multitasking ways, the iPad just got a lot better at doing work, and even the simple addition of cursor keys and keyboard shortcuts for copy-and-paste make a huge difference.

The ZAGGmate costs $100 in its keyboard form, and $70 case-only. Available soon.

ZaggMate product page [ZAGGmate]

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IBendXL, A Paper-Thin iPad Stand

Yes, the iBend is yet another iPad stand, but this one is truly remarkable. Weighing in at around the same a sheet of card, and just about as thin, the iBend gains rigidity when it is bent into a curve.

The plastic iBendXL (the smaller iBend is for the iPhone) sips flat. You pull it out and bend it, producing two hooks at the front which grab the bottom edge of the iPad and a gentle curve at the back which creates a flat rest for the iPad to lean on. It reminds me of the fascinating models and diagrams in my old math classroom which showed variously truncated cones, cut by flat planes at different angles.

The iBendXL costs $10, and the smaller iBend is $5. Both are slim enough to be slipped betwixt the iDevice and whatever case contains it, and should be tough enough to last a good long time. What this stand really suggest, though, is a DIY project. I doubt the iBend folks are going to put up a printable PDF template anytime soon, but a rainy afternoon spent with some scissors, card and a French curve should get you pretty close. Available now, in plain colors or in fancy arted-up designs.

iBend product page [iBend. Thanks, Rishi!]

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