TidBITS#1012/01-Feb-2010
========================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/1012>

  We have a full issue of esoteric cryptography explanations, breaking 
  Mac OS 9 news, and... kidding! Nearly all of this week's issue 
  revolves around Apple's just-announced iPad, the latest and most 
  significant addition to Apple's product line since the iPhone. Jeff 
  Carlson and Glenn Fleishman were present at Apple's January 27th 
  event, so in addition to a detailed look at what Apple revealed 
  about the iPad, they've collaborated to give you their hands-on 
  impressions based on using the iPad for a while. Plus, Jeff has 
  composed a wonderful photo essay documenting what it's like to 
  attend one of these Apple events, from getting up at 3:30 AM to 
  waving goodbye to San Francisco at the end of the day. And Adam, 
  stuck on the far coast, ponders what the future might bring with 
  regard to new iPhone OS-based devices. Read on, and once you've had 
  your fill of iPad coverage, make a note of where you can find us at 
  the upcoming Macworld Expo 2010, and check out the notable software 
  releases this week, which include Mailplane 2.1.4, Keyboard Maestro 
  4.0.2, BusyCal 1.2, Aluminum Keyboard Firmware Update 1.1, and PGP 
  Desktop 10. 

Articles
    The iPad Arrives
    Hands-on Impressions of the iPad
    Photo Tour of Apple's iPad Introduction
    iPhone Developer License Points to New Devices?
    TidBITS Events at Macworld SF 2010
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 1 February 2010
    ExtraBITS for 1 February 2010


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The iPad Arrives
----------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10954>
  34 comments

  At a media event on 27 January 2010, Apple announced the iPad, the 
  tablet-sized computing and communications device that has generated 
  more bits of industry speculation than any previous product in 
  memory. Featuring a 9.7-inch display and an optional keyboard dock, 
  the iPhone OS-based iPad will be available for prices ranging from 
  $499 to $829, depending on storage capacity and 3G data capability. 
  Wi-Fi-only models will go on sale in March 2010, with Wi-Fi+3G data 
  models following in April.

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/>
<http://images.apple.com/ipad/gallery/images/hardware-01-20100127.jpg>

  During the announcement, Apple CEO Steve Jobs led up to the 
  revelation of the iPad by pointing out that there are already two 
  well-defined markets for mobile devices: the smartphone, which used 
  to be too expensive and complicated for all but serious business 
  users, and the laptop, which may offer more than many users need 
  while having a relatively large form factor. 

  Jobs noted that any new mobile device has to fit between those two 
  form factors and must perform key tasks better than one or the 
  other. He then pointed out that products in the popular netbook 
  category fail that test. "The problem is, netbooks aren't better at 
  anything," he said, noting that they're generally slow, have 
  low-quality displays, and, well, run Windows. The price may be 
  right, but that's all that's right about netbooks in his opinion.

  Apple sees the iPad as sitting between the iPhone and the MacBook, 
  and competing directly with - and outshining - the entire netbook 
  category. Certainly, the iPad's screen looked far better than any 
  netbook we've seen, and the responsiveness of the demoed apps was 
  impressive.

  (Jeff Carlson and Glenn Fleishman, who were at the event, wrote 
  about using the device in Hands-on Impressions of the iPad, 29 
  January 2010.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10960>


**Apps** --  Based on the iPhone OS, the iPad's core apps offer 
  similar functionality to their iPhone equivalents, but have been 
  rewritten to provide more capable interfaces that take advantage of 
  the iPad's larger display. Honestly, they're impressive - whereas it 
  was always neat how well Apple made use of the limited display space 
  on the smaller devices, increasing that display real estate enables 
  much more fluid interfaces and fewer separate screens.

  iPhone apps run unmodified, either with pixel-for-pixel accuracy 
  within a black box, or with a pixel-doubling technique that trades 
  some crispness to zoom up to the larger size of the iPad screen. A 
  tiny 1x/2x button appears in the lower right of the screen in this 
  mode, and tapping it swaps between the modes instantly, even with 
  video or animation playing.

  Needless to say, this level of compatibility with "nearly all" of 
  the 140,000 apps in the App Store is huge, because it means that not 
  only will the iPad be useful from the moment it's available, but 
  also that users accustomed to the iPhone and iPod touch will be able 
  to continue using their favorite apps. (Developers must have been 
  overjoyed to know that good iPad sales wouldn't cause a commensurate 
  drop in revenue from unmodified programs.)

  That said, apps will be able to take advantage of the iPad's unique 
  screen size and other capabilities, and to that end, the iPad SDK is 
  available for download at Apple's Web site. Developers have access 
  to an iPad emulator on the Mac, just as they have an iPhone 
  emulator. 

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/sdk/>

  Apple showed not only the core iPad apps for browsing the Web, 
  playing music, and flipping through photos (complete with support 
  for events, Faces, and Places if syncing with iPhoto), but also a 
  version of the iWork suite for the iPad: Keynote, Numbers, and 
  Pages. Each app will be available for $9.99, so you don't need to 
  buy the suite if you need only one app. For these apps, Apple had to 
  rewrite the user interface completely, switching from a mouse- and 
  keyboard-based interface to the multitouch approach used by the 
  iPhone OS.

  The inclusion of iWork, and the extended time spent describing its 
  functionality during the announcement, is a clear nod toward 
  attracting the business traveler. But the iWork demonstration raises 
  a number of important questions and shows some of the potential 
  limitations of a device that bridges between a smartphone and a 
  laptop. 

  Apple didn't address file format or storage issues, but described 
  the capability to "import" iWork '09 files, which could be a problem 
  for business users exchanging files, especially in Microsoft Office 
  format, via email or cloud services like Dropbox. It also remains to 
  be seen how cloud-based Web apps like Google Docs, which are often 
  unusable on the iPhone and iPod touch, will work on the iPad.

  Like Apple's other iPhone OS-based devices, there's no support for 
  Adobe's Flash in the iPad, which is more glaring, given the iPad's 
  larger screen, longer battery life, and (presumably) more capable 
  processor. This is the only gaping hole in Apple's "the whole 
  Internet" claim, as some media sites offer Flash-based players for 
  video or audio. Steve Jobs pointedly showed a missing Flash movie on 
  the New York Times home page when using the mobile Safari browser at 
  one point, to some laughter.


**Publishing** -- Not surprisingly, Apple is setting the iPad against 
  Amazon's Kindle, both for reading newspapers and magazines, and for 
  full-length books. The New York Times demoed a new app that attempts 
  to capture the essence of reading a newspaper, with skimmable pages 
  and the capability to dive deeper into articles. The app offers the 
  look-and-feel of the New York Times, and features color pictures and 
  even inline video. We expect to see similarly rich media apps from 
  other publications as well.

  But more interesting yet was Apple's demo of the iBooks ebook reader 
  app, which provides a Delicious Library-like bookshelf interface for 
  displaying your books and linking to an iBookstore that enables you 
  to discover, purchase, and download ebooks right on the iPad. Titles 
  will initially come from Penguin, Harper Collins, Simon & Schuster, 
  Macmillan, and Hachette Book Group. No mention was made of how other 
  publishers - or independent authors - will be able to get into the 
  iBookstore, though Apple did say that the iBooks app relied on the 
  EPUB format. Apple also made no mention of PDF support, though the 
  iPhone and iPod touch can handle PDF and various other formats, so 
  it seems likely that the iPad will have similar capabilities.

  Of course, the burning question is how the iPad will compete with 
  Amazon's Kindle DX, which costs $489 and beats the iPad in only one 
  respect - battery life. Thanks to its E-Ink screen (which is the 
  same 9.7-inch size as the iPad's), the Kindle DX can run for a week, 
  even with its Whispernet wireless connectivity turned on, whereas 
  Apple claims 10-hour battery life for the iPad.

  In every other respect, though, the Kindle falls far short. The 
  Kindle's screen is grayscale rather than color and is slow to 
  refresh; the Kindle relies on an awkward joystick for navigation 
  versus the iPad's multitouch interface; and the just-announced 
  "active content" for the Kindle stands no chance of comparing to the 
  140,000 apps in Apple's App Store (see "Amazon Opens Kindle to 
  Developers, Changes Royalties," 21 January 2010). 

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10940>

  Amazon's main consolation is that the Kindle iPhone app should work 
  just as well or better on the iPad as on the iPhone and iPod touch, 
  so the iPad may help push ebook sales through Amazon for titles that 
  aren't yet available on the iBookstore, or that are less expensive 
  through Amazon.


**Hardware** -- The basic specs for the iPad are as follows: It's 0.5 
  inches (12.7 mm) thick, weighs 1.5 pounds (680 g), and features a 
  9.7-inch IPS display (a type of active-matrix LCD display). The 
  capacitive multitouch screen offers 1024-by-768 resolution at 132 
  pixels per inch.

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/specs/>

  Since the iPhone and iPod touch, Apple has typically shied away from 
  providing detailed processor specifications, but in this case Jobs 
  did reveal the iPad is based on Apple's own A4 chip, running at 1 
  GHz. Although it's impossible to compare directly against the iPhone 
  3GS's quite different 600 MHz processor, Jobs said with regard to 
  the A4, "it screams." We presume that the A4 is based on technology 
  from P.A. Semi, a fabless semiconductor company that Apple purchased 
  in 2008. The A4 is not just a CPU, but a full system-on-a-chip, 
  including the processor, graphics processor, I/O handler, and 
  additional core functions.

  Depending on the model, the iPad will come with 16, 32, or 64 GB of 
  flash memory for storing apps and data - Apple has not said how much 
  RAM the iPad will have for app execution. All models will include 
  802.11n Wi-Fi plus Bluetooth 2.1+EDR. Apple claims that the iPad 
  will have a 10-hour battery life in active use, though that will 
  undoubtedly drop depending on network usage, and the battery will 
  reportedly last 30 days in standby mode. Other features will be 
  familiar to iPhone users - an accelerometer, electronic compass, 
  speaker, microphone, and dock connector.

  Jobs was careful to note that the iPad is a good environmental 
  citizen, being free of arsenic, BFRs, mercury, and PVC.

  Perhaps the most significant hardware-related announcement was the 
  iPad Keyboard Dock, which holds the iPad in portrait mode and 
  provides an Apple aluminum keyboard (with a slightly modified key 
  layout) that you can use instead of the iPhone OS's standard virtual 
  keyboard. Although we don't yet know if the keyboard dock will work 
  with the iPhone and iPod touch as well, that would be ideal, since 
  all these devices could be used far more effectively for writing 
  with a keyboard. We suspect that editing may still be somewhat 
  cumbersome, given the iPhone OS's interface for copying and pasting 
  text and lack of drag-and-drop.

<http://images.apple.com/ipad/specs/images/keyboard_dock_1_20100127.jpg>

  In the same vein, we're pleased to see that the Bluetooth support in 
  the iPad enables use of the Bluetooth Apple Wireless Keyboard, a 
  feature that's often been requested for the iPhone and iPod touch. 
  Unfortunately, Apple representatives at the event, when asked, said 
  that Bluetooth keyboard support is not currently planned for the 
  iPhone and iPod touch.

<http://www.apple.com/keyboard/>

  Other accessories include an iPad Case that protects the iPad and 
  holds it in a variety of positions, a small iPad Dock that lets you 
  charge and sync your iPad to a computer, an iPad USB Power Adapter 
  that lets you charge your iPad from a wall outlet, and the iPad 
  Camera Connection Kit. This final accessory enables you to import 
  photos and videos from digital cameras either by connecting them via 
  USB to the iPad, or by inserting the camera's SD card into the SD 
  Card Reader. We expect this to be a popular accessory with travelers 
  looking to offload images from their digital cameras while on 
  vacation, though many digital photos from a modern high-megapixel 
  camera could overwhelm the iPad's relatively limited storage space.

  Speaking of which, the most notable omission in the iPad is a camera 
  - it's surprising that Apple didn't add one, as on the iPhone, for 
  still images and video, since it seems as though the iPad could be 
  an ideal video-chat device if the problem of camera shake could be 
  solved with image stabilization capabilities. Another part of the 
  problem might be where to put it, since the back is ideal if your 
  subject is in front of you, and the front is ideal if you want to 
  appear in the video yourself; we can imagine Apple meeting both 
  needs in a clever way in a future device. 


**Pricing and Availability** -- Jobs thoroughly enjoyed discussing the 
  iPad's pricing, noting that industry pundits (hey, we resemble that 
  remark!) thought it would have to sell for $999. (We never said 
  anything of the sort.) Instead, the iPad comes in six different 
  models, three that are limited to Wi-Fi for networking, and three 
  that combine Wi-Fi with 3G cellular data connectivity.

<http://www.apple.com/ipad/pricing/>

  The Wi-Fi models cost $499 (16 GB), $599 (32 GB), and $699 (64 GB), 
  while the Wi-Fi+3G models are more pricey at $629 (16 GB), $729 (32 
  GB), and $829 (64 GB). The Wi-Fi-only models will reportedly become 
  available in March 2010, with the Wi-Fi+3G models following a month 
  later in April.

  Of course, for the 3G models, you also need a 3G data plan, which 
  will cost $14.99 for 250 MB per month, or $29.99 per month for 
  unlimited data. Both plans are available only through AT&T in the 
  United States, which will no doubt cause much consternation among 
  those who dislike AT&T's coverage and network capabilities. Apple 
  said the iPad would be available internationally, but cell data 
  details will undoubtedly vary by carrier.

  iPad data subscribers also get free access to all of AT&T's Wi-Fi 
  hotspots, much as iPhone users do (for more on this deal and on 
  finding Wi-Fi in general, see "Find Free and Inexpensive Wi-Fi," 23 
  December 2009). Apparently, all the rumors about the iPad working 
  with Verizon Wireless were wrong.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10872>

  We're pleased that the data plans don't require a contract, meaning 
  iPad owners with 3G-capable models can activate this feature a month 
  at a time when they're going to be traveling, and needn't pay for a 
  data plan for months when they and their iPads will mostly be around 
  home, work, and Wi-Fi-enabled coffee shops.


**Padding the Numbers** -- At first glance, and while we are 
  admittedly still within the Reality Distortion Field, the iPad looks 
  like a winner. The hardware looks sufficiently capable, the use of 
  the iPhone OS means that it will have a huge app library from day 
  one, and the price is far more reasonable than many feared. 

  Many in the Apple world will undoubtedly be ordering iPads as soon 
  as they're available, but the real question is if the iPad will 
  continue to extend Apple's reach to those who didn't previously own 
  a Mac or an iPhone.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10954#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10954>


Hands-on Impressions of the iPad
--------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>, Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10960>
  26 comments

  To give you an idea of what it's like to use Apple's new iPad, we 
  need to jump past Apple's media event announcing the tablet and go 
  to lunch. (What can we say? Food and information go hand-in-hand in 
  our world, and Glenn was getting faint.)

  Over the course of 10 minutes determining where to eat in San 
  Francisco, there were a handful of moments when we thought an iPad 
  would be better than our iPhones: searching for restaurants on a 
  map; jotting a few notes from our conversations about the device; 
  checking Twitter to see if anyone we knew had restaurant 
  suggestions; looking on the Web to see if the first TidBITS article 
  was online yet; checking the calendar for our return flight 
  information.

  In each case, nothing about the iPhone prevented us from doing these 
  things. But after handling the iPad following Steve Jobs's 
  announcement, our fingers wanted more room to type, more of a 
  document-style grasp of the device instead of cupping it in the 
  hand, and faster performance. Our still-shiny iPhone 3GS units 
  suddenly felt small and slow.

  The iPad is something to be held and experienced, because so many of 
  its advantages are tactile: how it feels in the hand, of course, but 
  also how the software responds. (Where our opinions differ, we break 
  them out.)

  (For full details about the iPad announcement and the device's 
  specifications, see "The iPad Arrives, 27 January 2010.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10954>


**Speed and Smoothness** -- We definitely noticed the speed. Even 
  after minutes of using the iPad, the performance was still 
  surprising. Web pages load in Safari ridiculously fast. Full-screen 
  video plays as smoothly as it would to a TV set from a DVD or 
  Blu-ray player - often better than our experience on some Macs. The 
  animation for moving between pages in the iBooks app provides a neat 
  interactive scrolling page-turn effect that keeps up with the finger 
  if you keep it pressed against the screen as you move. (You can also 
  simply tap the left or right side of the screen to turn the page.)

  Perhaps the best term for how the speed and smoothness combine is 
  immediacy: there's no wait for something to happen, and no delay in 
  following a finger or gesture. Even the seemingly most complicated 
  and arbitrary activities have the same fluid sense of something 
  happening in the real, not virtual world.

  For instance, the Photos app on the iPad lets you see photo groups 
  by albums (and also by events, Faces, and Places if you sync with 
  iPhoto on the Mac). Use two fingers on a stack of photos in the 
  events view to stretch the photos apart and back together, like you 
  had just randomly spread out and restacked pictures. No matter how 
  many times Glenn did this, it still seemed remarkable.


**The Screen** -- Once we found a suitable lunch spot, we joked about 
  the many "artists' renditions" of Apple tablets that appeared before 
  the introduction, because the iPad turns out to be what we expected 
  from a design standpoint: a large iPod touch. Most of the front face 
  is a beautiful, high-resolution color LCD screen. A black bezel 
  surrounds the 9.7-inch screen to give you someplace to put your 
  thumbs (otherwise you're activating the multitouch sensors). The 
  1024-by-768 pixel size is enhanced by its 132 ppi resolution. Items 
  onscreen are crisp and clear, and even resized objects such as 
  current iPhone app icons and upscaled graphics aren't painful to 
  view.

  The upscaling of iPhone apps is noticeable (when you tap the 2x 
  button to fill the screen instead of running at actual size), 
  especially in games such as Bejeweled where most everything is 
  bitmapped. But apps that rely on the iPad's graphics engine to 
  render resizable items such as text appeared to cope well. We 
  couldn't tell whether the operating system is cleanly changing the 
  size of text or just doing a great job of doubling the pixel counts, 
  but we suspect the former.

  The screen has the same oleophobic fingerprint-resistant coating as 
  the 3GS, but it definitely smears up fast. The cheerful and 
  informative Apple employees assisting us in trying out the iPad 
  devices would regularly ask to clean the screens - although that was 
  to keep them fresh for the tens of thousands of photos being taken, 
  too.


**Of Transitions and Polish** -- We expect excellence from Apple when 
  it comes to visual styling, but the iPad surprised us. Subtle 
  animations abound, imparting the sense that the iPad is a single 
  cohesive, consistent design. For example, tapping an iBook to read 
  it doesn't just immediately fill the screen with the text. The 
  "book" opens and moves toward you; it's a very quick animation, so 
  it doesn't feel like the designers tacked it on to be cool or burn 
  CPU cycles. When you switch from portrait to landscape orientation 
  in the Mail app, the Inbox list appears as if it were a piece of 
  paper that had been folded behind the current message.

  Then there are visual cues that work to integrate the iPad into the 
  real world. When the keyboard is visible, the F and J keys appear 
  with the "bumps" typically used as guides for touch typists. It's 
  silly to put them there, because the screen is a flat piece of 
  glass, but it makes the keyboard seem more "real" for people who use 
  keyboards all the time. Or, consider the List view in the Calendar 
  app. When viewed in the iPad's landscape orientation, an event 
  selected from the list appears to the right, and if you look closely 
  you see little clumps of torn paper where previous days' entries 
  appear to have been removed.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/ipad_visual_details.jpg>

  The surprise comes not just in the level of detail that Apple has 
  created, but that the company is adhering to images of physical, 
  real-world objects to make the iPad experience more believable. It's 
  not necessary for the iPad's functionality, but it will likely go a 
  long way toward making the experience more comfortable for people 
  who want to bring it to a couch or on vacation.


**Size and Weight** -- We spent about 30 minutes holding and using an 
  iPad, and came away with distinctly different feelings about the 
  weight and heft of the iPad. 

  Glenn: I worry that the iPad is a bit horsey. The 1.5-pound weight 
  doesn't sound like much, and I don't have weak wrists or forearms, 
  but I found it tiring to hold the iPad in one hand for more than a 
  few minutes. I'd definitely want to prop it somewhere. During Steve 
  Jobs and Phil Schiller's demonstrations, they sat in a chair and 
  propped on a knee or in a hand supported by a knee.

  Jeff: Glenn is criminally insane. Not because he thinks 1.5 pounds 
  is too heavy, but because he seems to be envisioning that he'll be 
  holding the iPad at arm's length for hours at a time. When reading, 
  I always prop a book on a table, my lap, or other surface. Maybe I 
  have minimal muscle mass, but I don't foresee weight as a problem.

  We both found the curve of the back surface to be subtle and 
  comfortable in the hand. Unlike the iPhone or iPod touch, the edges 
  aren't completely rounded: the back curves up, and then squares away 
  to create a flat edge around the device.

  It also feels sturdy, no doubt thanks to the solid aluminum 
  processes developed for the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. The glass 
  screen makes us unwilling to throw the iPad into a bag unprotected, 
  but we're not worried that it will bend or otherwise feel flimsy. 
  Cases and slipcovers will undoubtedly be available well before the 
  iPad itself.


**The Handwriting Is on Some Other Wall** -- At no point did we wish 
  we could write on the iPad with a stylus and have it recognize our 
  handwriting. Although handwriting recognition has improved 
  significantly since the days of the original Newton, it's just not a 
  good computing input mechanism. Just because you're holding 
  something that roughly resembles the shape of a notepad doesn't mean 
  it needs to be treated like one. 

  What's funny, though, is that the Notepad app on the iPad goes to 
  great lengths to _look_ more like a notepad, especially in landscape 
  orientation.) Instead of asking the iPad to attempt to decipher 
  swirls and loops (which are nearly incomprehensible to us, and we're 
  the ones doing the writing), using the iPad's onscreen keyboard 
  ensures that the data you input is legible and searchable.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/iPad_Notebook_App_Landscape.jpg>


**Minor Nits** -- We did find some annoyances and outstanding 
  questions, some of which may be eliminated by the time the shipping 
  versions appear. It was clear that the software on the demo models 
  were still being baked; some features had non-functional controls 
  (like the search capability in the iBooks app), many preferences 
  were missing, and Glenn managed to crash the iPad by trying to 
  access Wi-Fi network settings. None of the iPads on display included 
  3G networking (which is due to arrive in April 2010 in the United 
  States).

  The icons on the home screen seem too small and too widely spaced. 
  Given that all iPhone app icons must be delivered to Apple at 512 by 
  512 pixels, we would think the home screen on the iPad could display 
  more of them and make better use of the space. The iPhone can hold a 
  4-by-4 grid of icons on each home screen, plus the 4 icons on the 
  home row. In comparison, the iPad appears to have a 6-by-4 grid, 
  plus only 4 spots on the home row, but it could easily increase that 
  to an 8-by-6 grid and 6 spots on the home row.

  The iBooks app has a problem with page numbers. When you change the 
  font size or type face, iBooks repaginates the book silently and 
  without any noticeable slowing of the interface. However, it makes 
  using page numbers for academic reference impossible, something 
  about which fiction readers and most non-fiction readers won't give 
  a fig. However, we hope Apple will think more about this before the 
  release, given its obvious utility for schools and universities. One 
  suggestion: use a reference edition, perhaps hardcover, to allow the 
  optional display of absolute page breaks in that edition.

  The iPad works fine in either portrait or landscape mode, featuring 
  an accelerometer that detects changes and rotates accordingly. 
  However, there's only one dock connector, below the Home button in 
  portrait position. This is sensible from a feel and production 
  standpoint, but we can envision many circumstances, from using it 
  with a keyboard to watching videos, that you'd want to dock it 
  lengthwise. The optional iPad case lets you stand it on end, but 
  that prevents you from connecting a cable - if you don't opt to 
  spring for the dock - for charging.

  The revised Photos app provides better organization, a better 
  interface, and better integration with iPhoto in Mac OS X. You can 
  even import pictures from cameras (using a $29 USB dock adapter) or 
  SD cards (via a $29 dock card reader). But you seemingly can't 
  organize photos once imported, nor upload photos en masse to a 
  storage location, a service like Flickr or Facebook, or even a 
  MobileMe gallery - it's limited to just one photo at a time. (You 
  can email multiple photos simultaneously, but that's hardly the same 
  thing.) The Flickr app for iPhone OS lets you upload multiple 
  photos, and third-party apps will likely fill this gap.

  Also, photos currently do not reveal any metadata, even basic items 
  such as date, title, and caption (a characteristic shared by the 
  current version of the iPhone OS). Given the new feature to use the 
  iPad as a slideshow viewer when docked (a button on the lock screen 
  enables this mode), as well as the capability to import photos 
  directly from a camera or SD card using an optional adapter, we'd 
  like to see some method of exposing that information.

  The room in which we viewed the iPad was crammed with journalists, 
  so we couldn't tell whether audio from the built-in speakers was 
  acceptable. However, there's just one speaker port on the bottom. 
  Jeff attempted to listen to the output and noticed that the bass 
  response made the back of the unit vibrate, so perhaps there's more 
  oomph than was discernible during the event. Our suspicion is that 
  you wouldn't want to rely on the built-in speakers as the main 
  source of audio when playing music.

  (As an amusing side note, photographer Justin Sullivan captured a 
  shot of Jeff listening to the iPad, which, in addition to looking as 
  if he's caressing the device, ran on the front page of the paper 
  edition of USA Today (PDF), in the Wall Street Journal, and online 
  at the Huffington Post.)

<http://www.newseum.org/media/tfp_archive/2010-01-28/pdf/USAT.pdf>
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/28/ipad-features-what-you-ca_n_439232.html?slidenumber=gocgkv7J1TQ=&&&&&>

  Whether Apple will be successful at selling the iPad, no one can 
  predict. But the firm has certainly built a remarkable device, and 
  one that sets a new bar for mobile device performance, even if it 
  were to sell just a handful. (Seriously, does anyone think Apple 
  will sell just a handful given the $499 price?)

<http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4026/4309829213_433828bb3a.jpg>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10960#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10960>


Photo Tour of Apple's iPad Introduction
---------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10961>
  6 comments

  No one does a demo like Steve Jobs, but a successful Apple event 
  involves far more than just Steve on stage. Glenn Fleishman and I 
  attended Apple's iPad introduction last week, and while you've read 
  all about the iPad in TidBITS and other publications, here I'd like 
  to give you a feel of what it's like to be there in person. I hope 
  my photos capture the spirit of an incredibly long and exciting day: 
  the crowds, the characters, and the feel of being among the first to 
  see and handle a new Apple product.

  (Click any photo to view a larger version. You can also view this 
  photo essay as a slideshow at Flickr or at my MobileMe Gallery, 
  though without the explanatory captions.)

<http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffcarlson/sets/72157623305966174/show/>
<http://gallery.me.com/jeffc?fullscreen#100302&fullscreen=true&view=slideshow>


**Pretty Darn Early** -- To get to the 10:00 AM event in time, Glenn 
  Fleishman and I flew from Seattle to San Francisco on a 6:00 AM 
  flight, which meant I was up and making coffee at 3:30 AM.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Pretty_Darn_Early.jpg>


**Sunrise and Email on the Plane** -- Glenn gets online on our Virgin 
  America flight from Seattle to San Francisco. Flying Virgin America 
  was a dream: Wi-Fi, great service, and power outlets between the 
  seats.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Sunrise_and_Email_on_the_Plane.jpg>


**Jim Dalrymple and The Beard** -- Jim Dalrymple of The Loop on his 
  way to Apple's iPad event. The hype around the iPad drew hundreds of 
  technology and mainstream journalists. Contrary to appearances, The 
  Beard did not, in fact, eat that bicyclist.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Jim_Dalrymple_and_The_Beard.jpg>
<http://www.loopinsight.com/>
<http://twitter.com/dalrymplesBeard>


**Waiting for the Event** -- Members of the media gather outside the 
  Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. It's not the same as waiting in 
  line at 4:00 AM for the Macworld Expo keynote addresses of yore, but 
  there's still a lot of standing, waiting, chatting, waiting, and 
  maybe even some slow jockeying for position.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Waiting_for_the_Event.jpg>


**Xeni and Glenn** -- Boing Boing's Xeni Jardin and Glenn wait in the 
  media area for the iPad event to begin.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Xeni_and_Glenn.jpg>
<http://boingboing.net/>


**John Gruber** -- John Gruber of Daring Fireball chats with fellow 
  press people before we're allowed into the auditorium.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/John_Gruber.jpg>
<http://www.daringfireball.com/>


**Apple Employees Waiting** -- Shortly before opening the doors to the 
  iPad event, Apple employees peer out at the throng waiting to enter.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Apple_Employees_Waiting.jpg>


**Doors Open** -- Media are a polite and patient lot - just don't cut 
  ahead as we try to squeeze through two doors to see what Apple is 
  going to introduce.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Doors_Open.jpg>


**Milling Inside** -- The inside of the Yerba Buena Center for the 
  Arts isn't terribly large, so many had to scramble to find seats. 
  Camera crews get their own platform, while special guests and VIPs 
  socialize in the seating area closest to the stage.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Milling_Inside.jpg>


**Steve Jobs Onstage with Young Steve Jobs** -- Note that the screen 
  reads "Apple Computer...Available at Byte Shop", and then below 
  that, "HELP ME".

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Steve_Jobs_Onstage_with_Young_Steve_Jobs.jpg>


**VIPs after the Event** -- After the iPad introduction, Apple CEO 
  Steve Jobs (at left, facing away) talks with special guests. Stephen 
  Fry, multi-talented multi-hyphenate and technology geek 
  extraordinaire, looks out over the crowd.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/VIPs_After_the_Event.jpg>
<http://www.stephenfry.com/>


**Hands-On with iPad** -- Following the iPad introduction, members of 
  the media were escorted to a nearby building where we could use 
  Apple's new device. For the first half hour or so, it was difficult 
  to get any closer than this.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Hands-On_with_iPad.jpg>


**Crowds around the iPads** -- Despite Apple's high-resolution images 
  of the iPad, everyone (including me!) had to snap their own photos 
  of the new device. We're getting closer to being able to touch it.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Crowds_around_the_iPads.jpg>
<http://www.apple.com/ipad/gallery/>


**Andy Ihnatko's Hand Writing Recognition** -- When I spotted Andy, it 
  looked like he had picked up an iPad and begun writing on its 
  surface with a pen. (He was actually writing on his hand.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Andy_Ihnatko_Writing_on_an_iPad.jpg>


**Glenn Demoing iPad** -- Despite the crowds, we got to spend a good 
  amount of time with the iPad. The Apple employees in charge of each 
  demo unit were extremely polite and open about what they did or did 
  not know about the device. (One commented that we had experienced 
  more hands-on time than he had. Apple employees usually don't know 
  what the magic product reveal is until shortly before they're 
  expected to answer questions about it.)

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Glenn_Demoing_iPad.jpg>


**Steve Jobs in the Demo Hall** -- Steve Jobs took a quick tour 
  through the demo hall where members of the media were getting 
  hands-on time with the iPad. Jobs is always easy to spot: look for 
  the denser-than-usual crowd and lots of television lights.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Steve_Jobs_in_the_Demo_Hall.jpg>


**Writing at Starbucks** -- Glenn works on his coverage of the Apple 
  iPad announcement at a nearby Starbucks. Mmmm... lattes and Wi-Fi...

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Writing_at_Starbucks.jpg>


**Your Tired Correspondent** -- That's me, Jeff Carlson, waiting for 
  the BART train to take us back to the airport. We flew to San 
  Francisco at 6:00 AM that morning and flew back to Seattle 12 hours 
  later at 6:00 PM.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/Your_Tired_Correspondent.jpg>


**San Francisco Airport** -- After a long day, we say goodbye to the 
  San Francisco International Airport.

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2010-01/San_Francisco_Airport.jpg>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10961#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10961>


iPhone Developer License Points to New Devices?
-----------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10957>
  8 comments

  As developers went to download the new iPad SDK last week (see "The 
  iPad Arrives," 27 January 2010), they were asked by the iPhone 
  Developer site to agree to a new version of the iPhone Developer 
  License Agreement. Curious as to what the changes were, we compared 
  the new and old versions.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10954>

  Along with some tweaking of legal mumbo-jumbo, Apple changed one 
  significant definition and added another. Previously, the agreement 
  used the term "Apple OS" to describe "the iPhone operating system 
  software." Apple has now switched to using "iPhone OS," and more 
  tellingly, has stopped referring to the iPhone and iPod touch 
  specifically. Instead, the license relies on the new term "iPhone OS 
  Product," defining that as "an Apple-branded product that runs the 
  iPhone OS."

  Though this may seem like a minor point, it has long been a sore 
  spot for authors who have either had to write out "iPhone and iPod 
  touch" regularly in books and articles, or assume that readers will 
  understand "iPhone" to mean both the iPhone and the iPod touch. The 
  addition of the iPad to the line means that the previously awkward 
  full description of what some app runs on, for instance, would have 
  to become the even more awkward comma-delimited phrase, "iPhone, 
  iPod touch, and iPad." Try saying that five times fast.

  For legal purposes then, Apple has switched to "iPhone OS Products" 
  to describe all three, which also ensures that the license agreement 
  will support any future devices running the iPhone OS. And those of 
  us writing about the field can now use the less formal "iPhone OS 
  devices" when we mean any of the three, though I suspect "iPhone" 
  will remain the shorthand version for headlines and when the full 
  phrase feels clumsy. (A similar change happened years ago when the 
  release of new devices from Palm forced us to switch from 
  "PalmPilot" to "Palm OS handhelds.")

  But could this seemingly minor change in terminology foreshadow a 
  more significant sea change in Apple's product line? To those of us 
  watching Apple closely over the last 25 years, it seems clear that 
  these iPhone OS devices are really what Steve Jobs has always wanted 
  a computer to be, ever since the early days of the Macintosh. While 
  still acknowledging that Apple can't provide every piece of 
  functionality on its own, the iPhone OS devices are as close to 
  appliances as you can get, and far more so than Macs. 

  After all, iPhone OS devices are closed systems that insulate users 
  from the complexity of a highly capable operating system. While 
  their ease-of-use is arguable (the multitouch interface isn't hard, 
  but its gestures are still virtual representations of what we would 
  actually do with real-world objects), the fact that users manipulate 
  onscreen objects directly seems like something Jobs would have 
  wanted from the beginning, if it had been possible. Plus, although I 
  doubt the Steve Jobs of 1984 had the iTunes Store in mind, the idea 
  of an integrated marketplace controlled (and taxed) by Apple has to 
  have huge appeal to the Jobs of today. And finally, in today's 
  world, a closed system offers an attractive solution to the 
  ever-increasing problem of digital security, particularly for 
  less-experienced users. 

  I'm not suggesting that Apple will stop paying attention to the Mac 
  side of the business - after all, it still accounted for $4.45 
  billion in revenue last quarter (see "Apple Reports Record Sales and 
  Profits for Q1 2010," 25 January 2010). But I am suggesting that in 
  the coming years, we will see more iPhone OS-based devices that 
  tread into ground previously occupied by laptop and desktop 
  computers. The availability of the iWork suite - Keynote, Pages, and 
  Numbers - for the iPad is the first significant acknowledgement from 
  Apple that an iPhone OS device could take the place of a Mac, and I 
  expect that trend to continue.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10950>

  With the iPad as a model, is it that hard to imagine an "iDesk" 
  that's the size and orientation of a drafting table, complete with 
  advances to the iPhone OS that make it possible to work in multiple 
  apps simultaneously? Such a device would provide users the same 
  kinds of functionality as a modern day Macintosh, but with the 
  direct manipulation of the iPhone OS's multitouch interface and 
  integrated extensions made possible by the App Store. Obviously, it 
  would have to stand on its own, rather than syncing to a Mac or PC, 
  but it would still be part of a larger iPhone OS-device ecosystem, 
  where you would have access to exactly the same data and (barring 
  screen size limitations) apps on the iPhone in your pocket and the 
  iPad on your nightstand or in your briefcase.

  Don't get me wrong, this isn't going to happen in the next year, but 
  I think it's where computing is going in the next ten years.

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10957#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10957>


TidBITS Events at Macworld SF 2010
----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10970>

  Apple may be boycotting Macworld Expo, and it may be odd having it a 
  month later than usual, but many TidBITS and Take Control authors 
  will still be in attendance during the show, which takes place from 
  Tuesday, 9 February 2010 through Saturday, 13 February 2010 (but 
  note that the exhibit hall floor is open only on Thursday, Friday, 
  and Saturday of that week; Tuesday and Wednesday are for conference 
  sessions). Here's our current schedule, and please do come by and 
  say hello! 

<http://www.macworldexpo.com/>

  Note that once again Macworld Expo takes place in both the new 
  Moscone West and the old Moscone South, so plan for some walking 
  time between the two. If there are any changes or additions, or if 
  we learn about more room numbers, we'll update this article on our 
  Web site, so check back there for the latest right before the show.


**Tuesday, February 9th** -- Although this event isn't specifically 
  related to Macworld Expo, Jeff Carlson will be at the Apple Store (1 
  Stockton Street) at 5:00 PM to talk about Photoshop Elements 8 for 
  Mac.


**Thursday, February 11th** -- Things kick off for other members of 
  the staff on Thursday. 

* 10:30 AM: Joe Kissell will be giving a Users Conference session in 
  Room 2022, West Hall, titled "Upgrading to Snow Leopard." As you 
  might imagine, Joe knows a lot about that topic.

* 3:00 PM: After lunch, Joe is back on stage in another Users 
  Conference session in Room 2004, West Hall, with "The Paperless Mac 
  Office," based on his need to keep paper in his tiny Paris apartment 
  to a minimum.

* 5:00 PM: To finish off the day, you can listen to TidBITS Security 
  Editor Rich Mogull talk about "Truths, Lies, and Fictions in Mac and 
  iPhone Security" (we're unsure of the exact location of this talk, 
  but it will probably be in West Hall).

* 6:00 PM: Many of us will be meeting at the top of the South Hall 
  escalators in preparation for the annual Netter's Dinner. At 6:30, 
  we'll all parade to the Hunan at Sansome and Broadway, where the hot 
  and spicy Chinese dinner (vegetarian dishes are available) costs 
  $20. You must register in advance by Tuesday, February 9th, via 
  Kagi; the link has all the details. Jon Pugh will once again be 
  hosting, and it promises to be another great night of food and 
  conversation.

<http://www.seanet.com/~jonpugh/nettersdinner.html>


**Friday, February 12th** -- Joe has even more to do on Friday, and 
  you can come see Adam and Joe together late in the day.

* 10:30 AM: In Room 2022, West Hall, Joe will be talking more about 
  Snow Leopard, specifically "Working with Services in Snow Leopard." 

* 1:00 PM: With only a brief break for food, Joe will be back in Room 
  2022, West Hall, to give "Text Magic in Snow Leopard," although we 
  doubt he'll be revealing just how he manages to write Take Control 
  ebooks so quickly.

* 3:00 PM: Once again in Room 2022, West Hall, Adam will moderate a 
  panel discussion called "Email Client Showdown" with Joe and a 
  variety of experts on different email programs, including Jason 
  Snell, Chuck Goolsbee, and John Welch. If you're at all unhappy with 
  your current email program and wonder what features others might 
  give you, don't miss this session.


**Saturday, February 13th** -- The date change and loss of Apple has 
  freed IDG World Expo to extend Macworld to a Saturday, making it 
  easy for San Francisco residents who can't take time off during the 
  work week to attend. We have a couple of sessions on Saturday too.

* 10:30 AM: Jeff Carlson will be in Room 2004, West Hall, to give a 
  Users Conference session called "Livin' the iLife: A Beginner's 
  Guide to the iLifestyle." We imagine it involves iMovie, iPhoto, 
  iTunes, iDVD, iWeb, and, well, GarageBand, which clearly needs a 
  leading i.

* 1:00 PM: If you haven't been able to see Joe at any of his Users 
  Conference sessions, you can definitely find him at the Wiley booth 
  (#1765), where he'll be signing his "Mac Security Bible" and talking 
  about security on the Mac.


**Even More** -- Looking for more to do? IDG World Expo has plenty 
  planned, so be sure to check out the Macworld Expo Web site for full 
  details; their PDF-based Hot Sheet brings together all the special 
  events.

<http://www.macworldexpo.com/storage/12/documents/HotSheet.final.pdf>

  ----
  read/post comments: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10970#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://db.tidbits.com/t/10970>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 1 February 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10969>

**Mailplane 2.1.4** -- Uncomplex has tweaked Mailplane, its WebKit 
  wrapper for Gmail, with a handful of minor fixes and improvements. 
  Picture optimization in outgoing messages can now be controlled via 
  AppleScript, dragged messages now disappear as expected, dragging 
  images onto Mailplane's icon now optimizes pictures reliably, and 
  keyboard shortcut functionality broken by Gmail changes has been 
  restored. ($24.95 new, free update, 19.9 MB)

<http://mailplaneapp.com/>

  Read/post comments about Mailplane 2.1.4.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10965#comments>


**Keyboard Maestro 4.0.2** -- Automation lovers will be happy to hear 
  that Stairways Software has updated its popular macro utility 
  Keyboard Maestro. In version 4.0.2, macros can be imported via 
  double-clicking or drag-and-drop, Command-Shift-Tab can be used as a 
  hot key, the Hot Key view has been tweaked, Typed String triggers 
  can be single characters, and the Hot Key menu includes an Other 
  option to indicate that any key may be used. The update also fixes a 
  handful of bugs, including a crashing bug related to the Hot Key 
  pop-up menu and another caused by recording in 64-bit mode in Mac OS 
  X 10.5, along with an issue with Dvorak keyboards. ($36 new, free 
  update, 7.7 MB)

<http://www.keyboardmaestro.com/>

  Read/post comments about Keyboard Maestro 4.0.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10964#comments>


**BusyCal 1.2** -- BusyMac's latest version of BusyCal, the desktop 
  calendar application with built-in sharing capabilities, mainly 
  focuses on bug fixes, though it also includes a couple of handy 
  feature additions. While the release notes don't go into much 
  detail, BusyCal 1.2 fixes several crashing bugs, Google syncing 
  bugs, various miscellaneous bugs, and a bug related to row 
  highlighting in List View. The update also introduces a welcome 
  Calendar Groups feature (look in the File menu) and a new global 
  font size preference. BusySync, BusyMac's iCal synchronization 
  software, also received a minor update to version 2.2.7 to address 
  what we suspect are the same Google sync problems ($40/25, free 
  updates, 6.2/2.2 MB)

<http://www.busymac.com/>
<http://www.busymac.com/busysync/>

  Read/post comments about BusyCal 1.2.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10963#comments>


**Aluminum Keyboard Firmware Update 1.1** -- Apple has released a 
  firmware update for 2007 aluminum Apple keyboards. The update 
  improves battery performance when using the Apple Wireless Keyboard 
  in conjunction with other Bluetooth devices such as the Magic Mouse 
  or some Bluetooth headsets. It also fixes an issue that occurred 
  with both the regular and wireless keyboard wherein keys could 
  repeat randomly when typing. More information, including 
  installation instructions, is available on Apple's Web site. The 
  update is available via Software Update and the Apple Support 
  Downloads page. (Free,  1.52 MB)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL997>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4010>

  Read/post comments about Aluminum Keyboard Firmware Update 1.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10951#comments>


**PGP Desktop 10** -- PGP Corporation has released the latest version 
  of its communications and disk encryption software, PGP Desktop. 
  Version 10 adds support for Whole Disk Encryption and Boot Camp 
  under Snow Leopard, optimization for solid state drives, new Hybrid 
  Cryptographic Optimizer technology that results in enhanced run 
  times, a refreshed interface, and expanded support for Smart Cards. 
  Also, compliance is now ensured across any mixed-system environment 
  (i.e., a network with users running Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows). 
  To learn more about PGP Whole Disk Encryption, read Joe Kissell's 
  article "Securing Your Disks with PGP Whole Disk Encryption," 31 
  October 2008. (PGP Desktop Professional [including Whole Disk 
  Encryption], $239; PGP Desktop Email, $164; PGP Desktop Home, $99; 
  PGP Whole Disk Encryption, $149; volume discounts available; free 
  update to all users with subscription licenses or maintenance)

<http://www.pgp.com/products/wholediskencryption/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/9840>

  Read/post comments about PGP Desktop 10.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10949#comments>



ExtraBITS for 1 February 2010
-----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/10968>

  Most of our time last week was taken up with iPad-related writing, 
  but we found the time to check out Fraser Speirs's contention that 
  the iPad is the future of computing, look into the ongoing debate 
  about the proposed Google Books settlement, and note that Google has 
  created a Web app to work around Apple's continuing refusal to 
  approve or deny the Google Voice app. Plus, AT&T admits that its 
  network has problems in New York and San Francisco, and promises to 
  spend an additional $2 billion on improving it.

**Fraser Speirs on the iPad's Future Shock** -- Mac and iPhone 
  developer Fraser Speirs steps back from the specs and points out the 
  revolutionary aspect of the iPad: It could actually be the "computer 
  for the rest of us" in a way that even Macs have not achieved. 
  Instead of dealing with how the iPad works, people can focus on the 
  real work the iPad is intended to assist.

<http://speirs.org/blog/2010/1/29/future-shock.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10967#comments>


**New Google Books Settlement Fails to Placate Prominent Critics** -- 
  The latest revision to the Google Books settlement, an ongoing saga 
  we've written about regularly here on TidBITS, is still opposed by 
  Amazon.com and the Internet Archive, among others. The settlement in 
  this revised version would still anoint Google with court approval 
  as the only party in the United States that can scan and offer for 
  sale copyrighted works that are out of print and for which the 
  publisher isn't known.

<http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/28/despite-changes-many-still-oppose-google-books-deal/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10959#comments>


**AT&T Promises to Spend More on Network** -- AT&T told the Associated 
  Press it would bump wireless capital infrastructure spending by 
  about $2 billion this year, and admitted to the well-known network 
  deficiencies in New York and San Francisco.

<http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100128/ap_on_hi_te/us_earns_at_t>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10958#comments>


**Google Voice Web App Bucks the System** -- Wired describes how 
  Google has worked around its Google Voice iPhone app being stuck in 
  App Store approval purgatory (it's shameful that Apple hasn't 
  approved or rejected it by now). Google has instead updated its 
  iPhone-friendly Web site, accessible by any HTML5-capable browser 
  such as Mobile Safari, that enables users to place calls from their 
  Google Voice accounts. Since the page can be added as an icon on the 
  iPhone's home screen, the Web app ends up being largely 
  indistinguishable from the original iPhone app, though it lacks 
  direct integration with the iPhone's contacts list.

<http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/01/google-voice-web-app-circumvents-apples-blockade/>

  Read/post comments

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/10953#comments>



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