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Apple Stores still selling screen protectors, but not for long
(via - Ars Technica )
I read it on 03/18/10 at 06:36 PM
Posted on 03/18/10 at 10:51 PM

Reports have been swirling that Apple plans to ban screen protectors from its brick and mortar retail stores, but for the time being, the items seem to be plentiful throughout many store locations. Several Apple Stores we contacted Thursday afternoon assured Ars that there were currently "plenty" of screen protectors in stock, and did not indicate that this would change anytime soon. (One sales associate went as far as listing off all the variations that were in stock.) None of the outlets mentioned anything about the impending ban or removing the product from inventory in the future.

Rumors of Apple's supposed ban started Wednesday when iLounge reported that several companies had been informed that, starting in May, Apple would no longer carry screen protectors in their retail stores. According to iLounge's sources, stand-alone solutions as well as those bundled with cases will eventually be removed.

There were so many pundit theories about what could have sparked the decision that iLounge wrote a follow-up article to address them. The conspiracy theorists came up with all kinds of reasons: Apple is making room for iPad accessories, Apple wants you to ruin your phone so you have to buy another, the iPhone is too classy for a flimsy piece of plastic, etc. Our personal favorite theory was that Apple might be planning a new product or technology that doesn't work properly with the film applied. iLounge even got an e-mail from an Apple Store employee, suggesting that the ban might be due to the difficulty in applying the protective layer. Apparently, this employee's store barred employees from doing this for customers some time ago.

In our experiences here at Ars, the iPhone screen is extremely hard to scratch, though some of us have admittedly had much better luck than others. It seems much more likely that an iPhone screen will crack due to a fall than it will develop noticeable scratch. In that case, no amount of thin, flimsy, plastic is going to save your device from that.

What Apple is up to is really anyone's guess. We would like to think that Apple is coming out with its own line of overpriced iPhone screen protectors, but it's more likely they are just more trouble than they're worth for Apple. Screen protectors may still be available at Apple Stores, but probably not for long. Don't worryyou can get the exact same thing for your iPhone from places like Best Buy, Fry's, and almost any other outlet that sells iPhone accessories.

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Tags: apple  screen  iphone  protectors  stores  
 
 

High-Tech Research Moving From US To China
(via - Slashdot )
I read it on 03/18/10 at 06:38 PM
Posted on 03/18/10 at 10:00 PM

Hugh Pickens writes "The NY Times reports that American companies like Applied Materials are moving their research facilities and engineers to China as the country develops a high-tech economy that increasingly competes directly with the United States. Applied Materials set up its latest solar research labs in China after estimating that China would be producing two-thirds of the world's solar panels by the end of this year and their chief technology officer, Mark R. Pinto, is the first CTO of a major American tech company to move to China. 'We're obviously not giving up on the US,' says Pinto. 'China needs more electricity. It's as simple as that.' Western companies are also attracted to China's huge reservoirs of cheap, highly skilled engineers and the subsidies offered by many Chinese cities and regions, particularly for green energy companies. Applied Materials decided to build their new $250 million research facility in Xi'an after the city government sold them a 75-year land lease at a deep discount and is reimbursing the company for roughly a quarter of the lab complex's operating costs for five years."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Tags: china  research  applied  companies  materials  


 
 

Windows Phone 7
(via - Chris Pirillo )
I read it on 03/06/10 at 09:08 AM
Posted on 03/06/10 at 07:33 AM

Windows Phone 7 is a post from Chris Pirillo


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First, if you have any questions for the Windows Phone 7 Series team, I'd be more than happy to ask on your behalf (as I do live around the corner from Redmond's campus and will be meeting with the team again at some point in the future). Post a comment and/or video response.

I was invited to a behind the scenes look at elements of the Windows Phone 7 Series developer platform. At Mobile World Congress (covered earlier in this channel), Microsoft provided a first look at Windows Phone 7 Series and I'm pleased to offer you the opportunity to see a live demonstration up close.

Yes, I got to play with the phone, too. It works as advertised even as a prototype. Unfortunately, we could not adjust the brightness settings in this particular device. The Metro interface is a bucket of win in my book.

Charlie Kindel partner group program manager, Windows Phone App Platform & Developer Experience was hosting an intimate reception this evening in San Francisco. I wasn't able to make it, but Microsoft arranged a somewhat more private meeting with Greg Sullivan from the Windows Phone team a little closer to home.

I met Greg a few years ago through the Longhorn Labs project (back when Microsoft Windows team leads worked actively with their most vocal community supporters). I'm not sure if I can reveal any more device details at this point, but suffice it to say

I want one.




Tags: lt  gt  li  pirillo  href  
 
 

Big City: $400 Hourly to Get Them Off the Sofa
(via - NYT > Business )
I read it on 03/06/10 at 09:10 AM
Posted on 03/06/10 at 04:20 AM

A new company in New York is offering coaching, at a price, for college graduates who are struggling to find a job.




Tags: college  price  graduates  struggling  job  
 
 

A Cover Ad That Mimics a Newspaper's Front Page
(via - NYT > Media & Advertising )
I read it on 03/06/10 at 09:08 AM
Posted on 03/06/10 at 02:30 AM

The entire first page of The Los Angeles Times on Friday was an ad for the film Alice in Wonderland that was designed, in part, to look like the front page.




Tags: page  front  ad  alice  film  
 
 

Amazon Tries End Run Around Publishers
(via - Tech Observer )
I read it on 03/06/10 at 09:08 AM
Posted on 03/05/10 at 05:00 PM

Amazon reportedly talking with U.K. literary agents and authors about selling books direct to Kindle.



Tags: amazon  authors  selling  books  kindle  
 
 

Public Radio Is Thriving on iPhone
(via - Tech Observer )
I read it on 03/06/10 at 09:08 AM
Posted on 03/05/10 at 01:50 PM

The Public Radio Player app has been downloaded 2.5 million times. There's even an app for This American Life. But what's good for national programs isn't always good for local stations.



Tags: public  app  radio  national  life  

 
 

New Material Patterned After Spider Hair Refuses to Get Wet
(via - Tech News Daily RSS )
I read it on 03/02/10 at 09:32 AM
Posted on 02/27/10 at 09:23 AM

Scientists have created a flat surface patterned after the body hair of spiders that refuses to get wet.

The surface also has the added benefit of being self-cleaning, since water does a pretty good job of picking up and carrying off dirt as it is being repelled.

This makes the material ideal for some food packaging, windows, or solar cellsthat must stay clean to gather sunlight, scientists say. Boat designers might someday coat hulls with it, making boats faster and more efficient.

But what makes the new surface really unique is that unlike other similar products out there, such as shoe wax and car windshield treatments, the new material doesn't rely on chemicals with water-repellent properties to stay dry. Instead, its surface blocks out water by mimicking the shape and patterns of a spider's body hair. In other words, physics, not chemistry, is what keeps it dry.

Spiders "have short hairs and longer hairs, and they vary a lot. And that is what we mimic, said Wolfgang Sigmund, a professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Florida.

It's been long known that spiders use their water-repelling hairs to stay dry or avoid drowning. Water spiders use their hairs to capture air bubbles and tote them underwater to breathe. But it was only five years ago that Sigmund began experimenting with microscopic fibers, turning to spiders for inspiration.

At first, Sigmund's natural tendency was to make all his fibers the same size and distance apart. But he later learned that the pattern of hairs on a spider's body consists of both long and short hairs that are both curved and straight. So he decided to mimic Nature and replicate this random pattern using plastic hairs varying in size but averaging about 600 microns, or millionths of a meter.

Most people that publish in this field always go for these perfect structures, and we are the first to show that the bad ones are the better ones, Sigmund said.

The technique, detailed in the science journal Langmuir, can be applied to keep even absorbent materials like sponges from getting wet. It may also be safer than other forms of water-proofing since the method doesn't involve the use of chemicals.

Sigmund says that he has even developed a variation of the surface that repels oil. However, he noted that the process is not reliable enough to continually create good working surfaces, and different techniques need to be developed to produce such surfaces in commercially available quantities and size.

We are at the very beginning, Sigmund said. But there is a lot of interest from industry, because our surface is the first one that relies only on surface features and can repel hot water, cold water, and if we change the chemistry both oil and water.




Tags: water  surface  hairs  sigmund  spiders  
 
 

One in Six iPhone Owners Intend to Buy an iPad
(via - The Magical Tablet )
I read it on 02/27/10 at 12:30 PM
Posted on 02/25/10 at 09:25 PM

iPad Purchase Intent - AdMob January 2010AdMob, the hotly contested mobile advertising company that was eventually acquired by Google in November 2009, published its monthly mobile metrics report. In addition to the report, they included survey results of existing iPhone users about their fondness for the iPad.

One in six iPhone owners intend to purchase an iPad much lower than Palm owners (one in nine) and even lower still for owners of Android phones (one in seventeen). Does this mean that Stevie J. is right that there is a need for a device in between a laptop and a smarthphone or are we iPhone owners just a bunch of fanboys/girls?

Probably a little of both.

Regardless, it does indicate that there is a preliminary market for the iPad that numbers in the millions of units.

Are you going to buy an iPad? What kind of phone do you own?

[Press Release] [AdMob Blog]

Disclosure: http://dsclzr.us/0

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Tags: mobile  ipad  iphone  owners  advertising  
 
 

That Smartphone is So Qt
(via - NYT > Technology )
I read it on 02/16/10 at 02:24 PM
Posted on 02/16/10 at 06:37 PM

Intel and Nokia have gambled that Qt - pronounced 'cute' - will win the hearts of software creators and then win the mobile wars.




Tags: win  qt  software  hearts  mobile  
 
 
 
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