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Archive for August, 2009

PostHeaderIcon A sketchbook for iPhone apps

Filed under: Accessories, Developer, iPhone

Want to sketch out your iPhone apps? There's a notebook for that.

App Sketchbook is a pretty nifty notebook for iPhone developers who want to sketch out their products out on paper as part of the brainstorming process. App Sketchbook has three pre-drawn, full-sized iPhone templates per page with ruled lines beneath for notes. A pixel ruler runs alongside the template. You can use them in conjunction with iPhone UI stencils to get your ideas down on paper.

The App Sketchbook is a wire-bound notebook with 100 double-sided pages. It costs $12.95USD.

TUAWA sketchbook for iPhone apps originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

PostHeaderIcon A sketchbook for iPhone apps

Filed under: Accessories, Developer, iPhone

Want to sketch out your iPhone apps? There's a notebook for that.

App Sketchbook is a pretty nifty notebook for iPhone developers who want to sketch out their products out on paper as part of the brainstorming process. App Sketchbook has three pre-drawn, full-sized iPhone templates per page with ruled lines beneath for notes. A pixel ruler runs alongside the template. You can use them in conjunction with iPhone UI stencils to get your ideas down on paper.

The App Sketchbook is a wire-bound notebook with 100 double-sided pages. It costs $12.95USD.

TUAWA sketchbook for iPhone apps originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

PostHeaderIcon Make your time fly faster with World … - CNET News


CNET News

Make your time fly faster with World Wars for iphone
CNET News
If you need something to quickly stimulate your brain while waiting for the bus, this 99-cent simple iphone game would do the job so well that ...
AddictingGames Brings Top Online Casual Games to the iPhone(TM)PR-CANADA.net (press release)

all 2 news articles »

PostHeaderIcon Clear Photos of Dell Mini 3i Show It’s Unholy Son of iPhone and Palm Pre [Smartphones]

Chinese site Sina has snapped a ton of clear photos of the Dell Mini 3i, their China-only Android-based smartphone. It looks like a genetic experiment between the Palm Pre and the iPhone.

Looking at the new photos, the Dell Mini 3i has a 3.0-megapixel camera, GPS with included software, and a horrendous interface. [Sina]




PostHeaderIcon Grand Theft Auto game coming to iPhone - CNET News


IntoMobile

Grand Theft Auto game coming to iPhone
CNET News
iPhone and iPod Touch owners will be able to control Lee as he travels through the streets of Liberty City. Chinatown Wars is currently available on the ...
'Chinatown Wars' targets iPhone's turfUSA Today
Rockstar Games' Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars & Beaterator ...IntoMobile
Grand Theft Auto is Coming to iPhoneTom's Guide
WELT ONLINE -Blast -Gizmodo.com
all 59 news articles »

PostHeaderIcon More Battles Ahead for IPhone in China - PC World


Reuters

More Battles Ahead for IPhone in China
PC World
Apple has emerged from winding negotiations with an iPhone deal in China, but the handset will still face government pitfalls and look-alike competitors in ...
Apple: iPhone Deal In China Not Exclusive To China UnicomCNNMoney.com
China Unicom to sell Apple's iPhoneComputerworld
China Unicom, Apple iPhone deal is non-exclusive agreementApple Insider
BloggingStocks -Mac Rumors -MarketWatch
all 119 news articles »

PostHeaderIcon Apple iPod Event Officially September 9 [Breaking]

It's here: The official invite for Apple's September 9 iPod event. It kicks off at 10AM Pacific—that's 1PM Eastern—and we'll be there bringing it to you live, as always.

What do you think we're gonna see? iPods with cameras? MMS for iPhone in the US? A time machine that'll take us back to 2005, like this dancer? (Maybe they'll be dragging Mick Jagger and Keith Richards through it, judging by the caption. Does that mean no Beatles? Hmm)

One thing it looks like we won't see, if the photo is any indication, is a coffin for the iPod classic.

Drop your predictions—and desires—right here.




PostHeaderIcon MobileMe Catches iPhone Thieves - WIBW


Phones Review

MobileMe Catches iPhone Thieves
WIBW
Cell phone thieves beware: that shiny iPhone you just nicked from a naive tourist could be leading police to your location quicker than a trail of donuts. ...
GPS nails iPhone thieves - shopping at WalmartZDNet
Man robbed catches thieves with iphone they stoleGeek.com
A victim's iPhone GPS helped to find muggersExaminer.com
the iPhone Blog -Gearlog -Gizmodo.com -WCBS-TV New York
all 44 news articles »

PostHeaderIcon Analyst: Apple to offer iPhone on US … - ZDNet


Gadgetrepublic

Analyst: Apple to offer iPhone on US carriers within a year ...
ZDNet
In his latest note to investors, Piper Jaffray senior research analyst Gene Munster suggests the iPhone could be available for carriers other than AT&T in ...
AT&T Gets a Fuzzy Signal on Apple's iPhoneWall Street Journal
Analysts believe iphone will become non-AT&T exclusive in a yearCrunchGear
Analyst: iPhone iphone exclusivity likely to end next yearFierceWireless
PC World -CNET News -CNNMoney.com
all 68 news articles »

PostHeaderIcon Riding a Surfboard Made By An Old Apple Designer [Summermodo]

Jaimal Yogis is an award-winning journalist and the author of Saltwater Buddha. Here he takes a ride on the strangely shaped surfboard by ex-Apple designer Thomas Meyerhoffer on SF's Ocean Beach.

Let me be honest, I don't want surfboards to be designed on computers, sent to factories in Thailand and shipped back to us en masse without the shaper ever touching the material. I'm not a purist – really I'm not. And as someone who doesn't make surfboards, and will never try, I have no right to expound righteously on this subject. But still, a big part of me – I think the part that wishes we all grew a different rare vegetable on our windowsills and bartered with each other from our front porches at meal time – wants surfboard shapers to be people who still draw their visions in the sand and give boards away from banana leaf huts.

To anyone actually trying to make a living from designing surfboards, which have notoriously low profit margins, that's unfair. But you should know my bias, and know that as I drive to meet this former Apple designer guy, Thomas Meyerhoffer, the man who designed that translucent eMate for Apple in the 90's and has become recently renowned for using his technology chops to design some revolutionary type of surfboard, one that looks like a compressed hour-glass alien spaceship, I have my reservations. It doesn't help that Meyerhoffer, a very hip man with a Swedish accent, a thin goatee, and a shaved head, meets me in the parking lot of his home break in Montara in a shiny white BMW.

Man, this is not how it should be, I'm thinking from the smelly confines my rusting van with 230,000 miles on it (you do detect a hint of jealousy). This is just not, not – not wholesome.

But neither would it be wholesome for me to judge this man so early in our daylong relationship. I have to give him a chance. It's our first date. And since the waves are slop here in Montara, we decide to drive up to Ocean Beach, San Francisco, for a better shot at testing out his gizmos. (And no, I don't like calling surfboards gizmos, and yes, I'm feeling a little bitter that Meyerhoffer wouldn't let me take photos of his Miami Vice looking home to remember the scene. I mean, what surfer cares about that kind of stuff? But the drive will give me a chance to drop into a less judgmental space. We are all one, all one.)

We are rounding the bluffs on Highway 1, chatting casually now, and while Meyerhoffer explains about quitting Apple 10 years ago and starting to surf everyday, I'm not really listening. I'm thinking about the fact that I too am so dependent on technology, recording our conversation on my iPhone. I'm forcing myself to see myself as the same as Meyerhoffer. These are the exercises strange people have to do to feel normal. And surprisingly, it doesn't take long.

For starters, Meyerhoffer is nice. And I like nice people. And he doesn't seem at all weirded out by the fact that the doors on my van don't work, which goes a long way in my book. Also, he went to art school. One I haven't even heard of. And he's deep. "A surfboard is a very complex shape, a never-ending curve," he says at some point in the conversation, and I like this statement. With his accent, it sounds like a sort of koan. Can curves really never end?

And like this, five minutes into our drive, Meyerhoffer has transformed into a sort of bohemian guy who just happens to have lots of money, a friend you might want to give you advice on your love life or what sort of refrigerator to buy or whether to quit your job and take up oil painting.

In other words, I can finally listen to him.

So let's start over, shall we?

Curves are a good place to start. Meyerhoffer is all about them. He recently designed the first "soft computer" for a start-up called Chumby, which is like a little beanbag with Wifi. It's very cute. He also designs bubbly ski goggles, snowboard bindings, expensive chairs that look like something George Clooney would model in, windsurfing sails. He is a refiner, taking stuff that already works well and making that stuff work better, in an out of the box kind of way of course.

That's cool. Whatever.

But a surfboard? This is sacred terrain. Every surfer knows that real shaping is an art that only a select few – usually hand-craftsman who have been surfing since they were in the womb and who have been anointed by the Hawaiian gods – really excel at, and even fewer become innovative enough to design something that is profoundly innovative and functional. Meyerhoffer started surfing later in life and he designed these alien boards with CAD software, which would be the equivalent of making French wine in steel barrels. You might get away with it in Napa, but you'd be barred from Bordeaux for life.

Meyerhoffer is clearly used to the heavy skepticism. "I never did this to get famous," he says without my prompting. "I did it so people could enjoy a different feeling…People see the board and they think that I made it like this to differentiate it from other surfboards. Or they think, ‘oh parabolic, it's like a ski.' But it has nothing to do with that. I didn't design the board to look like this. It just became like this. I started to take away, and I took away a lot of mass. So where do you take away? You take away where you don't need."

Meyerhoffer determined that what you don't need is all that rail, and he basically scooped out chunks at the waist of the board and took in the tail drastically, making it long and narrow.


The idea came over five years of trial and error at solving a problem. Meyerhoffer loved longboarding because of the momentum you get with a big boat-like plank. But he missed the agility of a high performance shortboard. He also liked single-fin hulls, a sort of in between model, for their speed and glide. But those boards, Meyerhoffer found, really only work well on point waves that usually have a predictable way of peeling down the line. Most of us surfers find ourselves in the same predicament and so spend enormous amounts of time and money acquiring just the right combination of boards to fit the changing conditions and our fickle moods. Meyerhoffer set out to make a board that could do it all. He was bound to be criticized, at least by those closed-minded surfers, whoever they are.

The model he has started to settle on, the one we are about to ride, is the result of letting himself make a lot of boards that simply failed. "Sometimes I'd go out on these really weird boards that I know won't work at all and I look like a total kook," he laughs. "But I still have to take them out to test a theory." Anyone who has suffered the stink eye one gets from surfing poorly on a good wave knows what a sacrifice that is. But it appears, at least from the press, to be paying off with this model, which has been receiving praise from the likes of pro surfer Peter Mel. Retired pro surfer Mike Tabeling has gone so far as to buy one Meyerhoffer in every size. He recently told Surfer Magazine, "That's what the Meyerhoffer does-it brings back the fun of your shortboard days, as you can make this longboard really turn."

But this is all rhetoric. I may like Meyerhoffer after our friendly drive, but I still think his alien babies in the back of my van are likely dripping radioactive material into the bag of stale chips I'm planning on salvaging for lunch. And since I'm not a longboarder, I wonder if Meyerhoffer's claim that I can surf it like a shortboard will be even close to true. Doubtful.

We've arrived at Ocean Beach, which is basically slop as well: two to three feet and disorganized. Meyerhoffer doesn't seem like the stressed out type, but he is visibly uncomfortable from this. Even after good press in Surfer Magazine, The Surfer's Journal and some The New York Times, Meyerhoffer seems to be trying to convince the surfing community that his works of art are worth around $800 a pop, not to mention worth every single person you meet on the beach asking, "what the hell is that?"

"It's just going to feel like crap if we go out here," he says.

Excuses excuses. He's already lowering our expectations.

And there is no time to keep looking for waves. So, after fielding 10 or 15 questions from surfers who approach with their heads cocked – "are you the Apple surfboard guy?" –in we go, paddling over the rough, textured deep green lines, through wisps of fog, on our brand new Meyerhoffers, which, to my surprise, feel really good to paddle: light, streamlined, comfortable.

I have a theory that any good board feels that way from the very first paddle. So far, I have to admit that the alien board feels down right proper. And fortunately, it's not as bad as it looked from shore. A relatively clean line churns toward me.

Game time.

I get in easy, just like I would on a longboard, minimal paddling, and begin cruising down the line of a waist-high crumbler. I do some pumps along the face and – wow, ok — it bobs along the face much more easily than a normal board this length. Less responsive than a shortboard, but still, impressive. Without much rocker, the board is certainly fast and as the wave peters out, I edge toward the nose to hang five. That works too. Damn it, these things actually surf – like, well.





I paddle back unable to conceal my grin, but trying. Meyerhoffer grins back. He can tell I like it. Technology is winning. Maybe a dolphin will come and bite the nose off. Yea, that'd be cool.

And besides, that was just one wave. I didn't need to turn. I'm pretty sure that when I do the board will just topple over with all that rail missing. But, on my next wave, as I go to cut back, the thing just flips around in a 180, like one of my little twin-fin boards would. And that's just weird. Boards this long and buoyant don't turn like that, not the ones I've ridden.

This is – I admit – very, very fun.

And so I surrender to the superiority of the machine. My crusade is over. Insert a chip in my head and get it over with. And the icing on the cake is that you can feel how the Meyerhoffer works while you're riding. If feels just the way he described it to me in the car. "Once you're on a steeper wave," he explained, "you ride on the back of the board, the tail, so you don't need the stuff on the front of the board and it will feel like a shortboard. But you still want to be able to nose ride it and have that length, plus have the board transition so that once you paddle into a slightly steeper wave it has the drive of a shorter board too. And that's it." I get it: a shortboard inside a longboard. It's sort of like, oh screw it, an iPhone.

And there's your sure sign of the apocalypse – comparing a surfboard to a mini computer. We might as well, as Stephen Colbert recently put it, go have "end of the world sex".

I'm still holding out some hope that Meyerhoffer will stop having his boards manufactured in Thailand and start hand shaping them from recycled egg carton foam and sell them only to Tibetan refugees within a 10-mile radius of his garage. (He'll have to make an exception for my friends and me, of course.)

But I have a hunch that his new design may be the beginning of a whole new wave of surfboards. I still think the design has something to do with aliens and radioactivity, but that will just be fodder for a cool comic book series where Meyerhoffer becomes immortal.

Trademark on that idea by the way. I'm not that much of a hippie.


[Video/Photos by Robert, who took many waves to the head to get them]

Summermodo is a chance for Giz to get outside and test our gear where it belongs.




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