[Video] MacWorld Highlights: Buffalo, CarMD, Tap11, Verbatim

February 11, 2010

There were probably more people attending the MacWorld 2010 Media Reception than in any other session at the show. The food and drinks perhaps!

On the eve of the opening of MacWorld 2010, the organisers (IDG Expo) set up a small press reception at the show’s press centre to show off some of the companies that will exhibit at the show.

There were actually more press/bloggers/analysts than I expected, probably close to 100 – food and booze always work!

But no familiar faces though, aside perhaps from my friend Sam Whitmore, founder of the Sam Whitmore’s Media Survey (SWMS) and a regular emcee at PRSA Silicon Valley’s events.

This "lonely" table had products from Doxie (scanner), Shure (sound isolating earphones), BlueMic (Yeti USB microphone)... but nobody to really talk about them: useless!

Among the few companies present at the press reception we met with Buffalo, CarMD, Tap11 and Verbatim.

A bunch of other companies (Doxie, BlueMic, Shure…) didn’t even bother to send their staff to answer questions from the press but instead, let an unprepared PR person from Schwartz PR (apparently too busy texting on his Blackberry anyway) to fill out the void.

Buffalo shows dock for iPhone and USB disk drives

CarMD releases Mac version of car diagnostic software

Tap11 unveils iPhone application

Verbatim unveils TitanXS for Mac


Can MacWorld Survive Without Apple?

February 10, 2010

Where's everybody at MacWorld 2010?

After 25 years, could this be the last MacWorld show?

Well, from what I’ve seen so far, it’s hard to believe MacWorld could survive another year.

On Tuesday, there was hardly anyone. Mind you, this was day 0 (zero) of the show, with just a few sessions going on.

MacWorld 2010 is bigger than one company… not!

But today, when the event supposedly kicks off, just a few people showed up at the registration desks despite the free passes available for the expo floor. Hopefully more people with show up tomorrow when the expo floor actually opens!

Anyway, the absence of Apple is striking. Less buzz, lower attendance, few exhibitors. So why come? Maybe to say goodbye, one last time :-(


Opinion: Apple Will Not Attend CES 2010

July 30, 2009
CES 2010 will have a dedicated iLounge pavilion for everything Apple

CES 2010 will have a dedicated iLounge pavilion for everything Apple

Update 1: we just received a response from the CEA press office. Although they did not respond to our question about Shapiro’s dinner comments on Apple’s presence, they did confirm that they invited Apple CEO Steve Jobs to keynote at CES 2010. More at the end of the post.

Update 2: The WSJ finally changed its story headline from “Will Apple CEO attend CES ’10″ to will he “headline” the event. I guess that says it all?

Depending on who you read – the Wall Street Journal or leading gadget blog Engadget - Apple will, or actually will not attend next year’s largest consumer electronics show in Las Vegas.

And we did send an email to CEA, the organisers of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) to find out what really was said during this “dinner de cons!”

The organisers of the CES has yet to confirm the comments of its chief Gary Shapiro about Apple presence at the shows 2010 edition

The organisers of CES has yet to confirm the comments of its chief Gary Shapiro (pictured) about Apple's presence at the show's 2010 edition

The controversy: did the WSJ reporter “exaggerate” CES’ chief comments?

According to the respectable business daily, Apple plans to attend the show – which will have a dedicated “iLounge” pavilion for Apple related products – next January “marking the first time in memory the Cupertino, Calif., consumer-electronics giant will be there.”

But for Engadget founder Peter Rojas who also attended the media dinner hosted by CEA on Tuesday in San Francisco, CEO Gary Shapiro made it “very clear that Apple would not be exhibiting at CES 2010. In fact, when asked if CEA could make space for them if they did happen to change their minds he said it may be possible to find them a limited amount of floorspace.”

Rojas added in his comments to the Wall Street Journal story that “at no point during the discussion did he [Gary Shapiro] ever indicate that Apple would be participating in any formal way at CES. Nor did he even imply that there was an outside chance that Steve Jobs would keynote, which is suggested by your linkbaiting headline. I’m frankly a little shocked that anyone could have come out of the dinner with a post like this.”

And who cares?

But as Apple explained in it’s reasons to leave MacWorld, “trade shows [like MacWorld or CES] have become a very minor part of how” it reaches its customers.

So my guesstimate, is that Apple – like it did in the past – will simply host smaller launch events, either in its Cupertino campus or in San Francisco and just skip those big venues. And that’s the end of it.

CEA’s response on the “Apple affair”:

Apple is a valued member of the Consumer Electronics Association. As for the 2010 International CES, we have invited Steve Jobs to keynote.  Should he accept our invitation, he would join an outstanding keynote lineup that includes Steve Ballmer of Microsoft and Paul Otellini of Intel.  Apple has not signed up to exhibit at the 2010 CES, but there will be more Apple-related products at the show than ever before in our exciting new iLounge Pavilion. The iLoungePavilion is a unified iPod®, iPhone® and Mac® exhibition area, that will be located in South 2 of the LVCC. The exhibit will display manufacturers and retailers of iPod and iPhone applications, along with accessories and other related services and products. The exhibit space has already grown from 4,000 sf to 25,000 sf due to high demand.


New Rumors Of Apple Netbook Dismissed

March 30, 2009

AppleBlog and MacWorld are dismissing rumors that Apple is developing a book-sized netbook.

An image of a 10.4-inch MacBook-looking device began spreading on the Web this weekend, apparently traced to a Russian magazine.

Both Web sites claim the image was mostly likely made in Photoshop and is not a real prototype.

Apple has so avoided the low-cost laptop market saying its engineers could not build a quality machine at a netbook price, which is typically under $500.

Image of rumored new Apple product said to be Photoshopped

Image of rumored new Apple product said to be Photoshopped


What’s New From Apple At MacWorld: New 69 Cents And $1.29 ITunes Pricing

January 6, 2009

(Updates from the MacWorld show and SVP Phil Schiller’s keynote address.)

Perhaps most poignant in Schiller’s address was his announcement of new pricing at Apple’s iTunes online music store.

Record companies can assign prices to their songs

Record companies can assign prices to their songs

The company said that starting in April it would impose three tiers of song pricing and let music companies determine which price tag to put on their compositions. The traditional 99-cent price will remain. But new 69 cents and $1.29 fees will be added for more popular and less popular tunes.

In exchange, Apple will begin offering songs DRM-free: 8 million immediately and 10 million – its entire catalog – by the end of the quarter. This will give users the freedom to copy them to multiple machines at will. The company also will begin using higher-fidelity 256-kbps encoding.

Schiller boasted that iTunes now has sold 6 billion songs to become the number one music channel in the U.S. The online music service also has 75 million credit card accounts on file, he said.

Oh, and one more thing: starting today, songs can download over 3G wireless networks, not just from Wi-Fi connections.


What’s New From Apple At MacWorld: Redesigned 17″ MacBook Pro

January 6, 2009

(Updates from the MacWorld show and SVP Phil Schiller’s keynote address.)

After plowing through demos of the new iLife ’09 and iWork ’09 software, Schiller uttered the familiar Apple refrain, “one more thing,” and unveiled the redesigned 17-inch MacBook Pro.

New 17-inch MacBook Pro has an 8-hour fixed battery

New 17-inch MacBook Pro has an 8-hour fixed battery

The 17-inch was the only laptop not reworked in October, when Steve Jobs released the aluminum unibody 13-inch MacBook and 15-inch MacBook Pro.

The 17-inch will get the same lightweight cover and weigh in at 6.6 pounds . It also will be just 0.98 inches thin.

Schiller said the machine will ship in late January and sell for $2,799 with a 2.66 Core 2 Duo chip from Intel, 4 GB of RAM memory, two graphics processors and a 320 GB hard drive.

The computer also boasts 8-hour battery life, but has a fix battery than can be recharged 1,000 times but can’t be removed. Apple claims the battery is 40 larger because it is fixed.


What’s New From Apple At MacWorld: IWork ’09

January 6, 2009

(Updates from the MacWorld show at SVP Phil Schiller’s keynote address

Phil Schiller stands in for Steve Jobs

Phil Schiller stands in for Steve Jobs

After unveiling iLife ’09, Schiller outlined Apple’s new version of iWork ’09, its personal productivity package.

The software was last updated in August 2007 and will keep the same price: $79 to upgrade, $99 to buy new and $49 to install on a new Mac.

In Keynote, the presentation software, new features enable a smoother transitions between slides, the more clever use of charts and even the ability to control a presentation with the iPhone.

Pages, the word processor, and Numbers, the spreadsheet, get spiffed up as well. Users also can now share documents at iWork.com.


What’s New From Apple At MacWorld: ILife ’09

January 6, 2009

(Updates from Tuesday’s MacWorld show and SVP Phil Schiller’s keynote address.)

First up from Schiller is a new version of iLife, Apple’s movie, photo and music-making software. ILife ’09 is the first update of the software suite since iLife ’08 was unveiled in August 2007.

Apple bring focus to software

Apple bring focus to software

Its cost will be the same: $79 for an upgrade, $99 for a new version. Included are new versions of iPhoto with:

*Facial detection that recognizes faces;
*Places, or geo-tagging that locates a photo;
*A sync feature that syncs iPhoto with Facebook and Flickr.

iMovie with:

*Video stabilization for shaky shots;
*An ability to see edits close up;
*Easier drag and drop interface.

GarageBand ’09 with:

*Music instruction feature teaches people to play an instrument.


Skype Releases New Mac Client 2.8 With Global Wi-Fi HotSpot Support, Screen Sharing

January 6, 2009


At MacWorld‘s Showstoppers event last night, Skype unveiled its latest Mac client (version 2.8) with better audio quality and 2 new features currently not yet available for the Windows version:

  1. Screen sharing that lets users share their desktop, data and application;
  2. And Skype Access which lets users seamlessly sign-on to Boingo‘s global Wi-Fi HotSpots in 20 seconds or less and on a minute base price, using your Skype credit. Forget the expensive hourly, daily or monthly pass.

According to Skype Access director Linnar Viik, the cost for the service will be around 14 cents a minute or $10 per hour. Skype Wi-Fi HotSpot service has been in the works for over a year. “And it’s so natural, Skype and Internet,” says Viik.

I wouldn’t have used it in any other ways :-)


MacWorld 2010 Sans Apple, A New Era? You Betcha!

January 6, 2009

macworld-2010-new-era

MacWorld 2010 is already scheduled to be held January 8-10 in San Francisco next year.

The tagline for this first MacWorld sans Apple or Steve Jobs? The start of a new era :-)


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