Skip to main content

Ipad 3 Review




According to an Apple insider, the second-generation iPad is merely a pit stop on the path to our ultimate destination: The iPad 3.
With today’s big iPad 2 event only hours away, an unnamed Apple staffer has revealed to CultofMac that the second-generation tablet is totally lame — it’s the iPad 3 we should all be getting excited about, and it will be out later this year.
The person didn’t give too many details about what we could expect from the iPad 2, just that it isn’t that big of a deal.
“For the iPad 2 don’t get your hopes up too high. That’s all I’m going to say,” said Apple staffer. “They’ve had a number of problems along the way, and the third-generation iPad is the one to make a song and a dance about.”
In addition to smothering all our iPad 2 dreams, the Apple staffer also revealed that MobileMe, Apple’s cloud storage service, would take center stage at today’s event. MobileMe rumors have been flooding out for weeks, including talk that Apple could incorporate iTunes and MobileMe, which would allow users to stream music from the MobileMe cloud on any device, rather than having their media trapped on a particular computer.
Expanding on that rumor, the staffer said there had been some talk at Apple about users being able to upload all their music and video content to a MobileMe online “locker,” whether the media had been purchased through iTunes or not. That functionality would mimic that of the LaLa music service, which Apple purchased in late 2009, and shut down last April (presumably to repackage it as an Apple-exlusive function).

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to turn off Ringbacks on Rogers

Rogers just update you to the latest iPhone value pack, or figure out some other way to stick you with their ringbacks service, and you’re desperate to find out how to turn it off? They don’t want to make it easy — they want you to pay money for more Ringbacks — but after over an hour of waiting on 3 different customer service and tech support reps, I got the answer. Here it is: From your Rogers iPhone, text 555 with the word OFF. You’ll get an autoreponder with a link to http://rogers.com/ringbacksoff Tap the link. You need to be on Rogers’ network (i.e. not Wi-Fi) to access this page! Scroll down to the bottom and turn OFF both Ringbacks and Voice Greetings. (Yes, Ringbacks are so annoying they require and additionally annoying Voice Greeting to beg the people who call you not to hang up while they’re annoyed by the Ringback.) Rogers tried to get me to give Ringbacks a chance, saying if I loved the Beatles and my friends new I loved the Beatles, I could entertain them w...

How to Reload Operating System on Nuked or Bricked BlackBerry

Good Afternoon Class! I’ve been a bit slack in my  BlackBerry 101  lectures as of late – I blame the  Smartphone Round Robin , all the  Contests  we’ve been running on the site and the busy Holiday Season. My apologies! This will be the last 101 lecture of the year… but we’ll be back in 2008 bigger and better than ever. Today’s lecture isn’t really a “newbie” topic, but it’s one that I wanted to cover because in the past three weeks I’ve gone through it half a dozen times and that is  Reloading the Operating System on a BlackBerry that’s totally “Nuked” . I’m not sure if nuked is the technically appropriate word for it (I also use one that starts with an F and ends in an ED and has a CK in the middle), but it is how I refer to a BlackBerry that is stuck in a permanent reboot cycle and is completely, completely unusable. With a Nuked Berry, essentially the device turns on (red LED comes on for a few seconds), then you see the white screen with the hou...

Best Ipad and Iphone Photography Apps

Longtime Exposure Calculator Price: Free/ Available for iPhone, iPod touch, iPad Long-exposure photography fanatics will know that an ND filter can be essential when it comes to extending exposure time for those all-important open shutter shots. Longtime Exposure Calculator by HPR-Solutions is a free iPhone,iPad and iPod touch app that enables you to dial in a projected shutter speed to one column and then 'add' an ND filter as graded in both f/stops and filter names (eg 3 stop or ND8) in the other column. The app then calculates the adjusted exposure. While it is, in part, possible to TTL meter with an ND filter attached to the front of a camera's lens, the results won't always be accurate, and there's a point where things get so dark that it's not possible - especially with in-vogue super-dense filters. Having an off-camera calculation method such as this makes it quick and easy to figure out exposures without so much as needing to put those brain...