Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Apple : Blip: Steve Jobs memorial statue unveiled to the sound of the internet saying, 'WTF?'

Apple : Blip: Steve Jobs memorial statue unveiled to the sound of the internet saying, 'WTF?'


Blip: Steve Jobs memorial statue unveiled to the sound of the internet saying, 'WTF?'

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Blip: Steve Jobs memorial statue unveiled to the sound of the internet saying, 'WTF?'

Now, we're no artologists here at TechRadar so we won't talk about the understated Gutfreund influence on the design of this five metre statue that's bound for Cupertino, nor its cubist overtones.

Instead we'll just say, "Say whaaaat?" to reports that Apple management chose the design because they "appreciated the imperfections of the piece".

Yes, let's celebrate the man famed for unrelenting perfectionism with a monument to imperfection. Is this some kind of post-ironic statement? Either that or it's meant to make Apple feel better about the whole 'hon' iPhone 5C case debacle.

More blips

Blips are more than our Jobs are worth

Explained: Wi-Fi Direct: what it is and why you should care

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Explained: Wi-Fi Direct: what it is and why you should care

Its 2014 and the world that we all know, the one is connected by miles and miles of cabling, is all changing. The world of Wi-Fi has taken over to spread internet love without wires and is proving immensely popular - but that doesn't make it the best way to connect devices.

Wouldn't it be great if you could effortlessly connect your Wi-Fi-enabled devices without messing around with access points and lengthy passphrases? That's what Wi-Fi Direct promises.

Here we explain just what Wi-Fi Direct is and why you should be paying attention to it; it does an awful lot today that maybe you just didn't realise.

Wi-Fi Direct doesn't need a wireless access point

Wi-Fi Direct devices can connect to each other without having to go through an access point, that is to say you don't need to use your router.

This is because Wi-Fi Direct devices establish their own ad-hoc networks as and when required, letting you see which devices are available and choose which one you want to connect to.

Bluetooth

If you think that sounds very like Bluetooth, that's because it is... only a lot faster.

Wi-Fi Direct is an official standard

It comes via the Wi-Fi Alliance, the global industry association in charge of certifying Wi-Fi kit. This means that you can be sure that any Wi-Fi Direct enabled technology has been set to work with all the others without the need for special hardware.

Wi-Fi Direct is Wi-Fi without the internet bit

The idea behind Wi-Fi Direct is that simple tasks need simple connections. Lets sat you want to print from your laptop or smartphone to a wireless printer, share images with someone sat across the room, or even send your holiday video from your phone to your TV.

None of these things require an active internet connection, or an internet connection at all, but they do need to connect - to the printer, or to the other person's hardware, or to the TV. With Wi-Fi Direct, that bit's easy.

Wi-Fi Direct uses Wi-Fi Protected Setup

Much like you have password protection on your home network, you don't want any Thomas, Richard or Henry to be able to connect to your stuff. You won't want to see what the neighbours are beaming to their TV on your TV nor do you want them being able to use your printer.

In order to prevent this, Wi-Fi Direct uses Wi-Fi Protected Setup [PDF] and WPA2 to prevent unauthorised connections thus keeping your communications private.

Pairing devices can be done in multiple ways; physical buttons - "press the button on gadget X and then the same one on gadget Y", with PIN codes, QR Codes or even NFC.

Wi-Fi Direct knows what's nearby

Wi-Fi Direct includes two potentially useful things: Wi-Fi Direct Device Discovery and Service Discovery. Devices won't just know there are devices available; if developers have enabled it, your device will know what kind of devices are nearby and what's on offer.

This means that if you're trying to display an image, you'll only see devices that you can beam images to; if you want to print, you'll only see devices that are or that are connected to printers.

Crucially this can happen before you connect, so you don't waste any time trying to connect so something that doesn't do what you want it to do.

Wi-Fi Direct uses the same silicon

Manufacturers don't need to add extra radios to their kit: the idea is to have Wi-Fi Direct as part of the standard Wi-Fi radio. It's backwards compatible too, so you don't need to throw out your old Wi-Fi-enabled kit.

The Wi-Fi alliance currently claims that more than 1,100 devices have been certified since October 2010, including televisions, smartphones, printers, PCs and tablets.

Wi-Fi Direct is in DLNA, iOS, Android and BB OS and even your new Xbox

In November 2011, the Digital Living Network Alliance (DLNA) announced that it was including Wi-Fi Direct in its interoperability guidelines. Since then Google has added Wi-Fi Direct support to all versions of Android since Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.

Galaxy S2

Samsung has included Wi-Fi Direct since Android 2.3 on the Galaxy S2, although required to only connect to other Samsung devices. DLNA streaming is now common in every modern flagship including the HTC One, LG G2 and Sony Xperia Z1.

Wi-Fi Direct is even found inside the iPhone 5S having been baked into iOS7 in the form of Air Drop. Not keen on missing out, BlackBerry has updated its OS BB10.2.1 to include Wi-Fi Direct and even screen mirroring through Miracast has Wi-Fi Direct running underneath.

Even the new Xbox One comes equipped with the Wi-Fi Direct allowing it to connect to your smartphone or tablet allowing apps like SmartGlass to work a little quicker and a lot easier.

YouTube : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=je2lWjfpywQ

Apple's new iBeacon standards could pave the way for the iWatch

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Apple's new iBeacon standards could pave the way for the iWatch

Apple has formalized its standards for iBeacon, specifying the required specs for devices and apps with the Bluetooth tracking technology to be added to the ranks of other "Made for iPhone" (MFi) devices.

In short that means that future iBeacon products and services will carry the MFi stamp of approval and will be guaranteed to be up to Apple's standards.

iBeacon is a technology new to iOS 7 that lets iOS devices communicate among themselves via Bluetooth signals.

Apple began using iBeacon in December 2013 to track users in its retail stores and offer them alerts and notifications.

Paving the way

Other companies have already begun using iBeacon for their own uses, and Apple is no doubt hoping adoption will spread even further.

The feature is a perfect way for iOS devices to communicate with one another, provided they have Bluetooth capabilities.

That's led to speculation that Apple could be pushing iBeacon forward in order to pave the way for the iWatch, which could potentially take advantage of the tech.

If we learned anything from Samsung's Unpacked keynote at MWC 2014, it's that wearable tech is not going anywhere, and it would be very surprising if Apple let this trend pass it by.

  • Here's what TechRadar thought of the iPhone 5C!

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