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Saturday, May 21, 2011

new york times magazine spread

new york times magazine spread. 29th 2011 11:48pm. loved
  • 29th 2011 11:48pm. loved



  • Reach
    Sep 16, 07:59 AM
    Now THAT's what I would like:

    "Since the release of the 15 inch MacBook Pro in January, speculation on the forthcoming Apple laptops is spreading throughout the net. Meanwhile, MacosXrumors has received a very unexpected report, providing information about one of the forthcoming MacBook Pros.

    The sources that can be qualified as �very reliable� (yes you read it well), are claiming that Apple plans to keep similar display size for its entry level Mac Book Pro by releasing what sources called an �ultra-thin 12 inch Mac Book Pro�."

    Source: www.macosxrumors.com

    I would buy one on the same day.
    Thats some optimistic reading mister. Not VERY reliable, just reliable. And the report is not connected to the newest rumor, it's something they heard about earlier this year and they're unable to confirm that it applies to the 25th. Oh well, maybe you read another article than me?





    new york times magazine spread. Sunday#39;s New York Times
  • Sunday#39;s New York Times



  • Noodlefarmer
    Apr 26, 02:31 PM
    Who is surprised? Not me.

    Android is for:

    People whose carriers don't have the iPhone.
    People who don't like Apple.
    Geeks who have to tinker.
    People who are willing to settle or be talked into something that "is just as good as the iPhone."

    Apple's recently reported financials show that they are doing just fine. And will continue to do so. And as the iPhone and iPad halo drives more and more people to Macs, Apple will continue to grow.

    I hope that Apple continues to make strides in phones and I think that they will.

    While in the past it was kind of cool to be an Apple person when we were a more exclusive club that not everyone could join, the fact that my stock is over $350 and will continue to grow helps me get over that.

    My 2�.





    new york times magazine spread. New York Times Magazine,
  • New York Times Magazine,



  • SilianRail
    Apr 21, 07:20 PM
    Agreed. The Mac Pro case has been perfected over years and doesn't look at all dated. The more Apple has to pour R&D into a small new case with almost certain version 1 cooling issues, the more likely prices will continue to rise.It would save money with the need for less raw materials.





    new york times magazine spread. The latest New York Times
  • The latest New York Times



  • JoshRtek
    Aug 7, 10:20 AM
    Everyone has been receptive except $#%#@@! Adobe

    And Avid. I'm really hoping they have the software ready to go once the new Mac Pros come out (whether it be today, or later). I can't wait to get off my freaking PC.





    new york times magazine spread. Kim Take New York#39; we saw
  • Kim Take New York#39; we saw



  • p0intblank
    Nov 22, 07:19 AM
    Talk about a bold assumption... Steve Jobs isn't stupid. He knows what needs to be done to make cell phones innovative and easy to use. After all, he does own the world when it comes portable music players. :rolleyes:

    Palm is just scared, that's all. It's kind of cute, really.





    new york times magazine spread. New York Times Magazine
  • New York Times Magazine



  • rdrr
    Sep 15, 05:05 PM
    According to this review, it runs measurably (not necessarily significantly) cooler with longer battery life, etc.
    http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=288

    And according to Steve, when he announed the Intel switch, one of the reasons was the G5 couldn't fit into the PB because of heat. Well the MBP runs hotter than my G4 PB. I'll believe it once I feel them at the store.





    new york times magazine spread. New York Times Magazine,
  • New York Times Magazine,



  • SilianRail
    Apr 21, 07:20 PM
    Agreed. The Mac Pro case has been perfected over years and doesn't look at all dated. The more Apple has to pour R&D into a small new case with almost certain version 1 cooling issues, the more likely prices will continue to rise.It would save money with the need for less raw materials.





    new york times magazine spread. New York Times Sunday Magazine
  • New York Times Sunday Magazine



  • Piggie
    Apr 24, 07:00 AM
    In the not too distant future we will be getting convertible iMac's. You have all seen the patents that Apple have applied for, where the screen tilts into a more horizontal position on your desk and is usable as a touch screen device.

    When in this mode the screen will be a lot closer to your eyes and would greatly benefit from being higher resolution

    That really is such a bad idea :(

    Can you imagine the terrible usability in having a screen tilted on it's back and having to lift our arms up to do finger painting.

    Who wants to cover their display with their hands?





    new york times magazine spread. New+york+times+magazine+
  • New+york+times+magazine+



  • alent1234
    Mar 29, 08:49 AM
    And if you stop subscribing?...What happens to your music files stored in the cloud?

    there is no subscription

    you buy music from amazon you download an mp3. or you upload your own and listen to it on an android phone. if you stop using the service you still have your music on your computer





    new york times magazine spread. a New York Times Magazine
  • a New York Times Magazine



  • BlizzardBomb
    Aug 7, 02:57 PM
    So if I want a mid-range tower, I can configured it to have less RAM, a smaller HD and a completely useless graphics card, and still come in $200-300 more than a comparable machine from Dell/Gateway/etc.? Why can't Apple sell me a desktop with 2GB RAM stock and a 250GB HD for less than two grand?

    Yes, the Apple is a quad instead of a dual - but exactly which apps does that matter on? Is a quad really going to be a vast improvement for Photoshop through Rosetta over, say, a single Xeon or 2.4 Conroe?

    We'll have to wait for some benchmarks, but I'm willing to bet that Photoshop even under Rosetta will be phenomenal.

    All I ask for is a moderately priced OS X desktop that isn't crippled in any way (still paying for 802.11g! $350 to get a usable graphics card!).

    Some people may not use wireless, this stamps down on prices. As for the graphics card, you have to realize not all professionals need a super-duper chip. Lots of professional apps are more processor intensive then anything.

    SO in the Paris expo is where we'll most likely see updated MBP?

    Yes, highly likely. Probably along with the Mac Mini, MacBook, iMac and iPod.





    new york times magazine spread. New York Times Clip- Gear Test
  • New York Times Clip- Gear Test



  • Mac Fly (film)
    Jul 30, 10:19 AM
    iChat + Address Book for Windows (one app). Firstly I think the phone itself will be called "iPod Phone" as the trademark for iPhone is already taken, Apple would want to make it clear that it has iPod functionality, it's the next obvious choice for its name, and it's a very Apple thing to do. Right that's settled.

    Now how will it integrate with Mac's and PC's? Simple, iChat 4.0 will have the Address Book built-in, maybe a calander/scheduler apps functionality too and it will go Windows, as iTunes did. Mac users will get their photos from iPhoto, and Windows user from the Windows *equivalent. Contacts from iChat4, schedules form iChat4, music from iTunes, photos from photo apps. Job done that's iChat and the iPod Phone covered.

    Please note: the above is wild speculation ;)
    *may not be equivalent:D





    new york times magazine spread. image: NY Times Magazine
  • image: NY Times Magazine



  • mabaker
    Apr 25, 09:02 AM
    Google servers are receiving every single bit of tracking info. Apple’s servers don’t. As easy. Let’s not forget this big picture here.


    Besides if you encrypt your backup, nothing can happen. Thank you, have a good day.





    new york times magazine spread. ny-times-style_364x447
  • ny-times-style_364x447



  • Number 41
    Apr 20, 12:33 PM
    A processor update only matters if software is written that requires it -- and no developer is going to risk cutting off access to a huge segment of the customer base by writting software that specifically requires the latest iPhone.

    So, really, you're paying for power that you can't use 99% of the time.





    new york times magazine spread. New York Times Magazine#39;s
  • New York Times Magazine#39;s



  • marvel2
    Jan 14, 11:51 AM
    So I solved my problem. Erased the TomTom kit from the iPhones BT memory and repaired the two devices. Now the iPhone automatically pairs when I dock it in the TomTom kit.

    One thing I think the kit can improve on is the voice volume of a call conversation. It could be a bit louder.





    new york times magazine spread. The New York Times Magazine
  • The New York Times Magazine



  • Al Coholic
    Apr 7, 12:48 PM
    I see people still don�t understand what a monopoly is.And I see people are still taking the word monopoly used here too literally.

    Yeah, we know what a real monopoly is. Thanks.

    And here in the U.S. It generally starts with a company getting too much of the market and stifling out the competition. That's why there's the FTC.





    new york times magazine spread. NEW YORK - OCTOBER 21: Kim
  • NEW YORK - OCTOBER 21: Kim



  • justinLONG
    Mar 29, 10:56 PM
    I would not want to work in an american plant that manufactured apple products. could you imagine that?. there would probably be an apple union i'd have to join. :eek:





    new york times magazine spread. The New York Times ran a
  • The New York Times ran a



  • peterdevries
    Mar 28, 11:10 AM
    This better not happen. Seriously.

    Or else what?





    new york times magazine spread. In today#39;s New York Times
  • In today#39;s New York Times



  • milozauckerman
    Aug 7, 09:59 PM
    Not everyone is going to use a powerful card for gaming, and I wouldn't want to pay more than I need for my uses.
    Uh, that's the point: you shouldn't have to 'pay more' - it should be standard, and shouldn't raise the price-point, if other manufacturers can do it.

    I don't get the apologists who defend every questionable component from Apple by saying 'well, I don't want to pay extra in the base price' (for a reasonable amount of RAM or for a decent videocard) - demand more from Apple.

    Ask why you can't have a $2500 flagship desktop with a graphics card that didn't cost Apple $40, why Apple can't eat the extra $45 to offer their consumer items with a usable amount of RAM standard.





    new york times magazine spread. Kim, whose W Magazine spread
  • Kim, whose W Magazine spread



  • dethmaShine
    May 4, 06:03 PM
    It'd be cool for Apple to start building a small, fast SSD "drive" (memory chips) into every Mac, that would be dedicated to the core System, and only the System. Small enough to be inexpensive, large enough to easily accommodate current and future System files, fast enough to be faster than any current hard drive. Make the drive say 32 GB, with two partitions. One partition holds the installed System, the other partition is just scratch space for downloaded and uninstalled software, including the System itself. Possibly this partition contains some minimal boot system in order to re-download and install the package from the app store in case the installation gets botched.

    I think that has been the idea in the recent disclosures. In my opinion, with the next iMac refresh/redesign, Apple will incorporate a small SSD for system tasks. But I don't think Apple will waste a partition of the expensive and intelligent SSD for just an OS Install.

    SSD caching is going to be very important in the future so wasting 4 or 8 gigs of space for no reason sounds a bit stupid to be honest.

    But on the same track, Apple could well include the OS in a partition on the HDD itself. Why not? Instead of giving 995.5 GB (out of TB) to users after the OS install, give 990GB. For a user buying more than 500GB of HDD or HDD+SSD combined, it doesn't make much a difference; also make it optional.

    I think I did mention this in one of my previous posts that Apple should keep the OS in the HDD itself so there's no need of a disc in most situations.





    oscillatewildly
    Apr 10, 06:04 PM
    I get 61,835, but I'm beginning to think someone has mucked around with the keys on my calculator.

    Cheers,
    OW





    KnightWRX
    Apr 24, 12:09 PM
    I do wish people would stop using the "marketing name" Retina displays.

    Just say what screen resolution you would like.

    Also, this story probably isn't about "retina" displays per say as people view them (4 times the pixel count) but more akin to new monitors that use DP 1.2's available bandwidth, finally breaking the 2560x1600 barrier we've had for the last few years.

    This news item is probably mostly about new ACD resolutions/new iMac resolutions than it is about a whole revamp of the entire line-up to use the misused "Retina" monicker.

    Apple knows what they meant by Retina, too bad most people around here fail to accept that meaning and go for the simpler "300 PPI screen".





    syc23
    Apr 26, 03:53 PM
    Fiat owns 85% of Ferrari.
    Volkswagen owns 49.9% of Porsche.

    Yes I know that they operate under their parent group so what's your point? I salute you for having the ability to google that information.





    Chads61
    Nov 7, 08:04 AM
    I downloaded and installed the Sophos AV - but both times I ran a full scan, it locked up my machine - MacBook Pro 13" 2010 model. Both times I found badly corrupted directories on my BootCamp partition (Windows XP SP3).

    I have now uninstalled it and no more issues with my Windows partition.

    It appears that, on my configuration anyway, that this does not cope with a Windows XP partition.

    Hopefully no-one else has had any problems - I think it is great that Sophos has done this, but it appears it can't cope with a windows partition.





    ChickenSwartz
    Aug 4, 03:25 PM
    Intel said they expect Merom-based machines to be available for purchase toward the end of August. What's this about Apple receiving a large shipment of CPUs in September? They'd be a month behind the rest of the market by the time they started delivering systems. Intel said they were shipping Merom when they announced their earnings for last quarter.

    They could be shipping computers with Merom end of August, IMO maybe even earlier.

    Recieving large shipment in September may indicate they are going into other computers to be ready for Paris (mini, MacBook, who knows).