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5/31/12 09:24 pm - [info]girlgeniuscomic - Girl Genius Comic for Friday, June 01, 2012

Girl Genius Comic for Friday, June 01, 2012 )

<3 Phil will be at the Wizard World convention in Philadelphia this weekend. I will not, for various reasons, but I hope everyone has a wonderful time!--Kaja <3

Pre-order Volume 11!
 

6/1/12 01:36 am - [info]iphone_blog - iPhone 4S part costs breakdown compared to Nokia Lumia 900 illustrate Apple's insane margins

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/NoRt3Lh2-3g/story01.htm

http://www.imore.com/?p=114111

iPhone 4S part costs breakdown compared to Nokia Lumia 900 illustrate Apple's insane margins

Recent research from iSuppli shows that even though the iPhone 4S is more expensive than the Lumia 900, Apple actually pays less per part than Nokia does. The biggest individual price difference is between displays; Apple pays $37 for theirs, Nokia pays $58. All told, Apple pays $190 in parts, while Nokia pays $209, which leads to Nokia making a $241 margin per device, and Apple making $459.

To be fair, Apple has some pretty great agreements in place with manufacturers thanks in no small part to the massive scale at which they place orders, plus the Lumia 900 has a bigger screen and an LTE antenna to pay for. In any case, when boiling costs down to a per-device basis, it's easy to see why Apple is sitting on a mountain of cash. You would think that Nokia would have mastered churning out a bajillionty phones at scale and reaping the benefits of scale, but those glory days of the dumbphone reign are long gone, and clearly not translating well to their future in smartphones.

As much as we can on Nokia for having such slim margins, that's more a result of their market position rather than cause of it; Windows Phone is still very young, and even though it's set to overtake BlackBerry market share given its current momentum, it will be a long time still before Nokia (or anyone else) will be able to see the same margins as Apple.

Source: WSJ



 

6/1/12 01:36 am - [info]iphone_blog - iPhone and iPad factory conditions haven't improved says activist group

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/HQxp3h_jRUQ/story01.htm

http://www.imore.com/?p=114037

iPhone and iPad factory conditions haven't improved says activist group

A Hong Kong-based activist group called The Student & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior has recently issued a report concluding that very little has change in terms of working conditions since the Fair Labor Association published the results of their in-depth audit. SACOM's conclusions come from the result of over 170 employee interviews and visits to several Foxconn factories. Apparently unreasonably high production targets, inhumane worker treatment and salary cuts "remain the norm". SACOM demanded four changes of Foxconn: proper election of trade union officials, wages in line with living costs, proper training in safety protocols and access to appropriate protection, and sufficient compensation for those who have been infringed upon.

It's good to see another watchdog getting involved with Apple's factories, considering the FLA and Apple are suspiciously cozy. Other groups, like the China Labor Bulletin, agree with SACOM that there hasn't been much other than PR stunts after the audit. SACOM has found that even with the increased wages, the reduced hours have ultimately lowered salaries.

To be fair, it's only been a few months, but one would have hoped that the requested changes were being implemented a little more speedily. At best, Foxconn factories have seen a slightly increased compliance with overtime laws, but the changes needed at iPad and iPhone factories are far more broad than that. Apple has certainly taken an active interest in improving worker conditions, but in the end, Foxconn is their supplier, not their subsidiary, and there's only so much pressure they can apply.

Source: SACOM via Reuters



 

6/1/12 01:36 am - [info]iphone_blog - iMore community spotlight for May 2012

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/yZri3b6N-Go/story01.htm

http://www.imore.com/?p=114018

iMore isn’t just a website, it’s a community fueled by millions of people who comment on the stories, give and get help on the iPhone and iPad forums, and join us each and every month in discovering great new ways to enjoy our iPhones, iPod touches, and iPads. This month we chose JustMe'D and he is exactly that kind of super engaged, incredibly helpful, truly awesome iMore community member.

But enough from us, let’s let Ty do the talking.

Tell us a little about yourself?

I am 49 year old retiree (City of Orlando), married w/4 kids, and I enjoy life, reading, technology, fitness and my God.

How long have you been an iPhone or iPad user?

I bought an iPhone 3G in 2007 and although I enjoyed it, I enjoyed Blackberry devices more so I had it for about 2 months before it slipped into the ocean off the coast of South Carolina. I purchased the iPad 2 last summer and the iPhone 4S in October so I guess my total time with iOS devices is just under a year.

What brought you to iOS?

I was looking for a professional looking device with power, speed and simplicity. I found what I was looking for in both the iPad 2 and the iPhone 4S. I purchased them and have been content ever since.

What brought you to iMore?

Whatever device I use, I try to become a part of a collection of users and such was the case with iMore. I perused it for a while, like the information on the blog and the knowledgeable people throughout the forum and I wanted to be a part of it.

What are your favorite apps?

What are some of your favorite accessories?

  • Apple Bluetooth Keyboard
  • iPad Smart Cover
  • Bose IE2 headset
  • Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset

What are you most looking forward to from Apple in the future?

Just more great products and services.

Thanks JustMe'D!

If you haven’t joined our incredible community yet, there’s never been a better time. Meet great people, get help with your iPhone and iPad, share your ideas, and enjoy fantastic conversation. Perfect for newcomers and pros alike — Join now and maybe you will be picked for our reader spotlight along with a free iPhone case of your choice!



 

6/1/12 01:35 am - [info]iphone_blog - Contest Winners: $110 (not billion) dollars, Remarks for iPad and stylus pens!

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/xip8rZfZXcE/story01.htm

http://www.imore.com/?p=112932

Contest WinnersIf there's one thing iMore loves even more than iPhones and iPads, it's giving cool iPhone and iPad accessories and apps to our awesome readers. This week we have...

What would you do with $110 (not billion) dollars?

  • ckalli
- What would you do with $110 (not billion) dollars?

Remarks for iPad

  • dino195
  • fastfrank
  • FendrGuitPlayr
  • marcsimons
  • rajkumr
- App Store link

Win 1 of 8 FREE stylus pens from the iMore Store!

Adonit Jot Pro

  • acevedodaunas
  • astralisdustin
Wacom Bamboo
  • iceDreeHD
  • twenty8elven
SGP Kuel H12
  • doc10house
  • Joselito Castro
Ten One Design Pogo Sketch Pro
  • carltonarts
  • lionelandknight
Didn't win anything this time? Never win anything? We know how you feel! Luckily, we have more chances for you to win all the time, so hurry up and enter everything!



 

5/31/12 10:15 pm - [info]iphone_blog - iOS 6: Higher hanging fruit

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/fI4VK95W7BE/story01.htm

http://www.imore.com/?p=113926

Higher hanging fruit: Features and functionality from Android, BlackBerry, webOS, Windows Phone and more, still ripe for iOS 6 inspiration

Features and functionality from Android, BlackBerry, webOS, Windows Phone and more, still ripe for iOS 6 inspiration

What will Apple bring to iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad with iOS 6? What will be the "tentpole" features to take Apple's mobile software into 2013? With WWDC 2012 coming in just over a week, and an iOS 6 beta widely expected to come with it, now's the perfect time to take a look and see what makes sense.

We've already seen some of what is likely coming in iOS 6, including a new version of the Maps app that replaces Google data with Apple data. It wouldn't surprise us in the least if it brings turn-by-turn navigation with it either, by way of Siri...

But what else could Apple bring with iOS 6?

Making smart choices

No company can do everything at once. Opportunity cost means that when you spend time developing feature A, you can't spend that same time also developing feature B. Even if you pull engineers from other projects, even if you work around the clock, there are limits to how much any company, even Apple, can do at one time. You have to choose. The key is choosing smartly.

When Apple launched the original iPhone in 2007, it didn't have many of the traditional features that established smartphone platforms had for years already. But it didn't matter. The revolution in user interface was enough that people simply didn't care (or were willing to carry two devices to make up for it.)

Obviously, prioritizing the multitouch interface was the right choice to make.

Apple then proceeded to add back those smartphone staples. Among other things, iOS 2 (then iPhone OS 2) got the App Store, iOS 3 got MMS (outside the U.S.), video, push notifications, and copy and paste, iOS 4 got folders, better email, and limited 3rd party multitasking, iOS 5 got better notifications, Siri voice control, and went PC free with iCloud.

The rest of the industry didn't stand still, however. Android was released and is now at version 4.x, Ice Cream Sandwich, with more on the way. Palm rebooted with webOS, and while their business failed, their interface work was more than impressive. Microsoft rebooted with Windows Phone and let the world know that some people in Redmond did indeed have taste. And now RIM is poised to reboot with BlackBerry 10, and take gesture-based phone interfaces to the next level.

Interestingly, many of the newly rebooted operating systems lacked -- and some still lack -- all the features of their predecessors. And because they rebooted, Apple's iOS, once the new smartphone operating system on the block, is now one of the oldest.

That doesn't mean Apple can and should make sure they replicate each and every competing features. I'd argue many of the ones listed below shouldn't be copied, perhaps shouldn't even be re-imagined. But they should be considered. Apple is famous for saying "no" more than they say "yes", however, so that shouldn't be a problem.

In fact, as we approach iOS 6, Apple might have already reached feature parity, and it might be hard to look at other platforms and see what else needs to be matched -- that there's no longer any low hanging fruit.

But what about the (slightly) higher hanging fruit?

What iOS could take from Android

Android isn't a singular phenomena the way the iPhone is. There are multiple versions of Android currently on the market, and multiple manufacturer interfaces layered on top of them. Still, there are a few common threads in Android that iOS could draw inspiration from.

Better home screen information density

With very few exceptions, an icon on an app launcher like the current iOS Home screen (aka Springboard) tells you only which app will launch when and if you tap it. They're static images and there's typically no information about the current state of the app, or any relevant data beyond the static image.

In the case of Apple's iOS, Calendar will show you the current date on its icon, and Apple created a badging system to overlay the number of outstanding alerts an app has pending. But that's it. With Notification Center, with a little extra effort, you can pull down snippets of those alerts, and see widgets for Weather and Stocks. However, the level of immediately available, glanceable data remains low.

While Apple has widgets in Notification Center and Siri, Android lets you pin them to Home screens as well.

The iOS Home screen isn't designed as a place to hang around, but as a launcher to get you quickly into apps. With widgets, however, you don't have to get into apps to get high level data, and sometimes that's more efficient. If rumors of a 16:9, 4-inch iPhone are to be believed, there could also be an extra 117 pixels on the Home screen to house a swipe-able widget space.

Here are some more examples and concepts for what Apple could do to with the Home screen, both in general and if they do go with a 4-in, 16:9 display.

HTC Sense 4.0 Home screen widgets, left, and a 16:9 4-inch widget area concept for the iPhone, right.

Direct file access

If I start writing an email in iOS, then decide I want to attach a document, I can't. It's not just difficult, it's impossible. Even if I trash the email, go to a document app, and share via email, I can only share what's in that app. I simply can't attach a Keynote, PDF, and image file to an email in iOS. I can only send out a bunch of emails, from a bunch of apps, with the document they support.

Likewise, If I have a text document in iOS, I have no way to directly access that text document. I have to go to an app and hope that I can access the document from that app. If I created a text document in Simple Note, I have to remember I created it in Simple Note because chances are I can't easily open it in Drafts, much less in Apple's Notes app. If I have a Document in the Cloud, it's the same problem only worse. I can't just see Documents in the Cloud. I have to keep a mental list of what I've created over time and their associations, which is a lot of overhead for something that's supposed to be simple.

Here's a concept for a document picker, done almost exactly the same way iOS currently handles the image picker, and a Files.app with an interface in the same spirit as the Photos.app would go a long way to making iOS more convenient:

Concept for an iOS 6 email attachment feature, left, and document picker, right.

More granular privacy settings

Right now ifan app, any app, even a built-in Apple app, wants to know your location, it has to ask for permission. If it wants to send you Push Notifications, it has to ask for permission. If it wants to access Twitter integration, it has to ask for permission. If it wants access to any of your personal information, however, like Contacts, it doesn't have to ask at all.

Just like with Push Notifications back before iOS 5, however, their popup requester system doesn't scale. Right now, if you launch a new Twitter app for the first time and you get popup after popup, asking you to tap to approve Twitter account access, location, and Push Notification. Imagine when Contact access, Calendar access, and conceivably other information is added to the list. As the number of popups grow, the likelihood that a user will read and consider each one falls precipitously. They'll just start tapping through to get to their app.

Here's an attempt at a better solution beyond popups, and beyond Android's overkill, using a permissions sheet:

How Android handles permissions, left, and how a mockup "privacy sheet" could be implemented in iOS 6, right.

More personalization options

Android has a stock interface, but with manufacturer layers like Sense, TouchWhiz, and Blur, apps that change keyboards, and many other options, you can often change your phone's appearance considerably and frequently.

Apple won't be making a Theme Store any time soon, but they could increase customization options in Settings, even if only for the Home screen and built-in apps. Rather than Aqua and Graphite like OS X, they could even call upon iOS conventions...

Sense 4.0 personalization options, left, and a tongue-firmly-in-cheek iOS 6 appearance settings mockup, right.

What iOS could take from BlackBerry

The traditional BlackBerry OS is a dinosaur soon to go the way of the dinosaurs, but there's still a few things iOS could learn from the old beast. Likewise, [BlackBerry 10]( won't be out until later this fall -- maybe around the same time as iPhone 5 and iOS 6 -- but what little we've seen of it shows potential.

More granular notification control

What if I want my iPhone to beep and buzz if my girlfriend calls, but not her mother? What if I want different tones or vibration patterns for work and personal email, or for my boss's or partner's email? What if I want notifications to demand my attention during the day, but mute themselves and let me sleep at night? What if I want a work-centric set of options when I'm at the job site, but a I don't want work following me home? While iOS currently has settings for notifications based on app, it doesn't have anywhere near BlackBerry's level of granularity.

That leaves implementing more specific settings up to individual apps, like Tweetbot and it's sleep options. iOS could handle that, both globally (a Notifications on/off toggle), per Contact, and including time and location.

(And, in the name of all that's civilized, there should be a way to suppress notifications when on a call so we no longer feel the shock of an unexpected tone/vibe combo punch to the ear.)

Arguably this might all be better handled as part of a greater iOS time- and location-based profile system that includes additional elements like network settings, Home screen layouts, and more but functionality always needs to be balanced by simplicity. While more granular notification options sound more complex, examples already exist in iOS -- like per-Contact ringtones -- that could be built out.

Examples for more granular notification options already exist in ringtone settings in iOS, left, and apps like Tweetbot, right.

Better gesture shortcuts

With BlackBerry 10, RIM is trying to solve the problem of maintaining one-handed ease-of-use on larger screen sizes. For example, reaching all the way to the top of the screen to pull down the Notification Center shade is just doable for most users on a 3.5 inch screen, but as screens blow past 4 inches and approach 5, it breaks down. Like on the iPad's 9.6 inch screen, it requires a second hand.

RIM is relying far more heavily on gestures as a way around this. Start swiping with your thumb from offscreen to on, and a transitional notification bar comes up letting you "peek" at your alerts. Keep swiping, and it takes you into the messaging center where you can handle them. Swipe the other way, and you're in the app switcher grid, and then the app launcher.

Gestures are typically much harder to discover than buttons, and suffer from the potential for collision between system and app, (e.g. trying to slash something in Fruit Ninja and ending up in Mail), and the limits of manual dexterity and accuracy on small screen sizes.

That's probably why Apple restricted gesture shortcuts to the iPad in iOS 5 (and to developers only in iOS 4). However, there should be a balance that can be reached where gestures allow more advanced, adept users to more quickly navigate and triage elements of the OS and apps, even if the gestures to do so remain gross and few.

What iOS could take from webOS

webOS debuted at CES 2009 and was shown off by former Apple executive, Jon Rubenstein. It was the most impressive mobile product introduction since the iPhone in 2007, in part because Palm seemed to specifically target things the iPhone wouldn't, or couldn't yet do. And to this day, webOS still does some of those things better than iOS.

Better fast app switching interface

The current iOS fast app switcher does a good job listing open apps by putting them in a horizontally scrollable list, sorted in reverse chronological order. It does a great job making them easy to visually distinguish by using their icons. It does an okay job making them quick to switch between -- great if they're chronologically proximate, like jumping back and forth between two to four apps. (It's basically alt/cmd + tab for mobile, with some controls thrown in.) It also lets you kill apps.

webOS uses a metaphor called Cards, the early implementations of which showed one app or window (e.g. a website or email) in very similar fashion to iPhone Safari Pages. You could horizontally swipe between them but could also, very naturally, touch and flick a Card away to close an app or window. Palm later expanded the Cards visualization beyond what Apple did with Safari Pages by introducing Stacks in webOS 2.0.

It's a more approachable, more informational way of showing open apps and their state, and a more natural way of navigating and closing them. That's probably why Apple chose it for Safari Pages in iOS 1., and why almost every major OS uses some variation of it today. It's also probably why Apple supposedly experimented with a grid-based, Exposé version of it in iOS 4 before settling on the current, Dock-based model.

As the iPhone continues to evolve, and the mainstream market becomes more mobile-sophisticated, it could be worth re-assessing fast app switching on iOS.

Here's a more complete rundown of the history of fast app switching in mobile, and what some of those concepts might look like rendered in iOS.

webOS Card Stacks, left, and a completely over-the-top iOS Mission Control concept, right.

Better account and social handling

My iCloud, Gmail, and Exchange contacts currently sit in the Contacts tab of my Phone app and in the Contacts app proper. My Twitter contacts have been recently integrated with them, but my Facebook, LinkedIn, and other social contacts still live in their own apps, though they can impregnate themselves into my Contacts app resulting in varying levels of chaos and confusion. It's a mess.

webOS Synergy handles this much, much more elegantly. You enter you account info, much as you do for email and Twitter in iOS now, but also Facebook, LinkedIn, and other sources that plug in to the system. Then all of that information is kept in neat silos behind the scenes, but presented as a unified view in the interface. I don't have to care where any particular bit of data comes from -- Gmail, Facebook, whatever -- I just see it all in one place, and any time any of those sources update, I see the updates.

Taking it a step further, messaging could be unified as well. Rather than having to go from Messages to Twitter to Facebook to Mail to see what Leanna is saying, a unified view of recent public status updates and private messages could be presented.

If I said something, and a contact of mine wants to find it, it makes a lot more sense for them to go right to my card than than to jump to and scour through a half dozen separate apps.

webOS Synergy, right, and a unified account and messaging concept for iOS, left (nowhere near dense enough, but the gist.)

More actionable notifications

webOS still handles the arrival of notification banners, and the subsequent stacking of them, in a more elegant manner than iOS. But there seems like much more that could be done.

Currently, in iOS, notifications aren't actionable within the notification system. I can't "quick view" a Tweet or a Facebook message, I have to go to the Twitter or Facebook app. I can't "quick reply" to them in-app, I have to go back to the associated apps to respond. That either causes me to ignore messages I may not really wish to ignore, or to wrench myself out of what I'm doing to go handle them immediately.

By contrast, jailbreak apps like BiteSMS let you quickly respond to a text no matter which app you're in. Your app (or game) pauses, a text entry box is overlayed, you enter your message, you hit send, and you're current app resumes. With apps like LockInfo, you see an email notification, and you can tap a button, and read it without even unlocking your device.

Those may seem like subtle differences -- a pause of state rather than change of state and back -- but in practice it's far more efficient. It reduces a lot of friction, and makes the experience far, far better.

Here's some more behind the idea:

Current iOS notifications alert you but force you to switch apps to take action. A better notification system would allow for simple actions within the alert.

What iOS could take from Windows Phone

Better inter-app communication

Currently the only way for iOS apps to exchange information is via the limited URL schemes protocol. Some amazing things can and have been done with it, perhaps none better than Launch Center and the upcoming Launch Center Pro. However, developers and users keep knocking their heads against that "limited" part.

Windows Phone 8 will employ something called "contracts", which will allow sandboxed apps to communicate with each other under certain, secure circumstances. For example, Instagram could present itself as a camera option, Sparrow as an email client, Elements as a text editor.

Then, other apps can hand off to those apps when they want or need to. We already see this done as a work around in iOS, for example, Tweetbot now gives you the option to take a photo with Camera+ instead of the built in Camera app, if you have Camera+ installed. The aforementioned Launch Center lets you tap a button to jump into an app and start an action, for example launch Tweetbot right into the new tweet sheet, or launch Safari right into a specific search.

It's tough to see Apple letting users set their own default apps, for example, set an alternate default browser to Safari. However, it's easier to see Apple creating a more robust system for inter-app communications than URL schemes.

Launch Center lets you go straight to actions within apps, left. Tweetbot lets you launch Camera+ instead of the default Camera app, right. Apple could make both easier and more powerful with a a contracts-style inter-app communications system.

Better gaming network

Microsoft is still kicking and screaming its way out of decades of disparate, non-interoperable systems, but they're starting to get it right. Xbox Live is an example of that. Sure, it costs a silly $50 a year for the far more useful Gold version, but it's otherwise well executed and is being pushed from TV to mobile with increasing efficiency.

Sure, Microsoft botched things badly by not calling their new mobile devices Xphones and having Halo-branded, Halo playing versions available at launch, but what they lack in smarts they make up for in tenacity.

Luckily for them, gaming is something Apple doesn't yet "get". But Apple's also showing signs that might change. Apple has already announced they're bringing Game Center to OS X Mountain Lion, for example.

But it needs to do more. Game Data sync, via iCloud, across devices is a start. If I'm playing Angry Birds on iPhone, I should be able to pick up my iPad and keep going, and then switch to Mac and keep on keeping on.

Cross-platform multiplayer will be a must-have soon as well. If I'm at the coffee shop gunning in N.O.V.A on my iPhone, I should be able to pwn Chad at home on his iMac, and Georgia at work on her iPad. (And, eventually, Simon on his Apple TV as well.) And hey, voice chat and beacons to let friends know what you're doing, and when, and to talk while doing it, would be nifty.

It's a lot of heavy lifting, but it's heavy stuff that needs to be lifted. (And yeah, I wouldn't say no to niftier avatars either.)

The Games hub for Windows Phone promises, one day, to unite gaming from living room to desktop to mobile.

Better non-gaming network

Xbox live, wisely, wasn't called Xbox Gaming Live, because it's used for more than just gaming. All of Microsoft's living room ambitions are channeled through it, from Netfilx to social parties.

Even less than Apple gaming, Apple has repeatedly shown they don't understand social yet. Apple chose not to call their network Apple Live, but Game Center, for example. And they released Ping. But they do seem to know it's important. They're partnering with Twitter and might one day partner with Facebook. But Apple tends to like to own core technology.

iCloud is a good example and a good start towards a personal cloud. It needs an accompanying social cloud. Not just for sharing personal data like Calendars and Photo Streams with spouses and partners, but to share everything -- movie watching, music listening, app usage. Everything.

Xbox live goes far beyond gaming to provide a wealth of social, communal features. Apple has Ping.

What iOS could take from jailbreak

Jailbreak concepts Apple should implement in iOS 6

Instead of competing platforms, Apple can also draw inspiration from their own platform -- as it's been tweaked and modified by jailbreak developers. They've done it before, so there's no reason they can't do it again.

A lot of it is similar to what I've already listed above -- the jailbreak community has been picking the slightly higher hanging fruit for years and years. The way they've implemented it is often different, however, and often several different implementations exist. That makes it an incredibly fertile ground, and a free, pro-level beta pool for Apple when it comes to large scale testing deployments of new features and interfaces.

Here's more on what Apple could explore from the jailbreak community this time around:

What iOS could take from OS X

Screens 2.0 review: The best designed, easiest to use VNC app for iPhone, iPad, and Mac

For a while now Apple has been working to take iOS "Back to the Mac" -- to take what worked best in iOS in general, and the iPad in specific back to the Mac. To make an Apple experience that's more consistent across their two platforms.

But how about a little quid pro quo? There are several aspects of OS X, including some of what's being implemented in Mountain Lion, that would be great to see in iOS.

More app loading options

The thing most power iPhone users have dreamed of since the original, no-third-party-apps iPhone launched in 2007 -- the thing that led to the jailbreak scene -- is the ability to side-load apps. The ability to run apps not approved by Apple. The ability to run app that come from outside the App Store.

With Gatekeeper in OS X Mountain Lion, users have a choice -- run only App Store apps, run App Store apps and non-App Store apps signed by identified developers, and run any app, no matter where it comes from. The App Store provides a lot of security -- it minimizes the chance for malware or other malicious software. It creates user trust. Non-App Store apps signed by identified developers is a good middle-ground, however. They don't need Apple approval but if any of them are found to be malicious, their certificate can be revoked.

Unfortunately, I don't think Apple would do this. It wouldn't really change the type of apps that are available -- for example, the system-level hacks of jailbreak -- and it would almost certainly lead to developers cutting Apple out of the 30% share of app sales Apple takes to maintain the App Store. Apple has shown they're not fond of end runs around the App Store for subscriptions, and they'd likely be even less so for paid apps.

More minor enhancements

  • FaceTime conference calls. Like the iChat that Mountain Lion kills off, the big iPad screen -- especially a Retina display on a quad-core iPad 3! -- should allow for multi-person calling.
  • Print to PDF. A built-in PDF printer option, perhaps added to AirPrint, that goes right to Documents in the Cloud, would be great for everything from Mail to Safari.
  • Per-account mail signatures. No reason the current signature setting can't be moved down a step in the Settings hierarchy. Work and play can't always have the same signature.
  • Top Sites for Safari. I could do without the forced curve effect, but quickly getting my most common sites as thumbnails is very convenient.
  • Development options. Beyond Xcode, HTML5, and cross-compilers, support for other development options exists on OS X but not iOS.
  • AirDrop. Quickly send files (from Files.app!) or photos from one iOS or OS X device to another over local Wi-Fi.

Here's more on what Apple could take from OS X and bring "Back to the iPhone and iPad":

Conclusion

Operating systems are like art -- you add material then take away what you don't need. You add features and trim away bloat. While iOS may now be one of the older, more mature mobile operating systems, it's not perfect.

Just like OS X, Apple will keep adding features, then it will pause and re-soldify like it did with Snow Leopard, then focus anew like Lion and Mountain Lion.

The question is -- what will they do this time with iOS 6? Apple may or may not have plucked all the low hanging fruit in previous releases, but they haven't plucked all the fruit hanging just a slight bit higher. And they certainly haven't finished polishing it.



 

5/31/12 09:23 pm - [info]iphone_blog - Timer for iPhone review

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/bVf5tXt00us/story01.htm

http://www.imore.com/?p=114086

Timer for iPhone review

Timer is a new iPhone app by one of our favorite development teams, App Cubby. As its name implies, Timer is all about setting timers and doing it fast. And because it was designed by App Cubby, it also features a gorgeous design.

The best trait of Timer is its simplicity. It's a 3x4 grid of 12 buttons. The first 9 buttons are the default timers preset for 1, 2, 3, 5, 10, 15, 30, 45, and 60 minutes. The bottom three buttons are for custom spur-of-the-moment timers that allow you to quickly set a timer for any length of time.

To start a timer, you simply tap its button. To stop it, tap it again. When the timer goes off, the button will blink (and a sound will of course be emitted) and a count-up timer will start in its place. Tap the button to stop the count-up timer.

Yes, you can set all 12 timers at once.

To edit the presets, simply hold down your finger on one of the buttons. The edit screen will slide up and allow you to set the timer length, alert sound, and button color. You can also disable the preset. Similarly, you can convert one of the non-presets into a preset by the same method.

My only real (and rather trivial) complaint about Timer is that you cannot rearrange the order of the presets. For example, I added a 4-minute timer (the time it takes to brew a French press of coffee), but since it replaced my first non-preset, it's not in numerical order like the other timers. I wish I could drag it up to appear after the 3-minute timer. Because I'm OCD, I opted to change the 2-minute timer to 3 minutes and the 3-minute timer to 4 minutes, instead. I'd love to see an Edit button added in the future.

The good

  • Beautifully designed
  • Amazingly simple
  • Editable presets

The bad

  • Can't reorder timers

The conclusion

Where has Timer been all my life? I keep saying it, but the simplicity of Timer is what makes it a total win.

$0.99 - Download Now



 

6/1/12 03:58 am - [info]fremontcanews - Oxnard's Fremont School celebrates 50 years

http://www.topix.net/city/fremont-ca/2012/05/oxnards-fremont-school-celebrates-50-years?fromrss=1

Fremont Intermediate School in Oxnard celebrated its 50th anniversary Thursday, uniting former and current students to socialize over dessert and praise the school's traditions andA accomplishments.

 

6/1/12 01:53 am - [info]fremontcanews - Rally scheduled for Sierra LaMar at Fremont's Washington High School

http://www.topix.net/city/fremont-ca/2012/05/rally-scheduled-for-sierra-lamar-at-fremonts-washington-high-school?fromrss=1

Friends of Sierra LaMar and her family have scheduled a rally Friday night at her former high school in the Centerville district.

 

5/31/12 09:48 pm - [info]fremontcanews - Fremont man arrested for kidnapping wife, children

http://www.topix.net/city/fremont-ca/2012/05/fremont-man-arrested-for-kidnapping-wife-children?fromrss=1

A 44-year-old man was arrested Wednesday after he forced his wife and small children into a vehicle and led officers on a brief pursuit before crashing in the Irvington district, police said.

 

5/31/12 10:37 pm - [info]whitehouseblog - President Obama Unveils the Official Portrait of President George W. Bush

http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2012/05/31/president-obama-unveils-official-portrait-president-george-w-bush

President Obama hosts a ceremony to unveil the official portraits of former President George W. Bush and former First Lady Laura Bush (May 31, 2012)

President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama host a ceremony on the occasion of the unveiling of the official portraits of former President George W. Bush and former First Lady Laura Bush, in the East Room of the White House, May 31, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

Today marked a rare moment in White House history -- three different Presidents came together to unveil the official portraits of President George W. Bush and Laura Bush.

President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama hosted the event. President George H.W. Bush and Barbara Bush were in attendance.

And as Presidents 44 and 43 spoke, each had warm words for the other.

"George, I will always remember the gathering you hosted for all the living former Presidents before I took office, your kind words of encouragement," President Obama said. "Plus, you also left me a really good TV sports package."

When it was President Bush's turn to speak, he also had a thought for his successor.

"I am also pleased, Mr. President, that when you are wandering these halls as you wrestle with tough decisions, you will now be able to gaze at this portrait and ask, what would George do?" he said.

By tradition, the paintings are commissioned by the White House Historical Association, which in turn presents the portraits to the White House. Each President chooses the artists tasked with painting his likeness.

 

 

5/31/12 08:59 pm - [info]whitehouseblog - May Morning Harvest in the White House Garden

http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2012/05/31/may-morning-harvest-white-house-garden

Back in March, a group of students from across the country joined First Lady Michelle Obama to plant a new crop in the White House garden.

Today, a new batch of students stopped by to harvest some of the lettuce, broccoli, peas, and garlic that have been growing ever since.

read more

5/31/12 08:23 pm - [info]firecat - BAKICIDW/LJ: diabetic dog question

My dad's Miniature Schnauzer has recently been diagnosed as diabetic. Are any of you using a human glucometer and test strips to monitor a dog's blood sugar? (Dr. Internet gave me conflicting advice about whether this works.)

This entry was originally posted at http://firecat.dreamwidth.org/775817.html, where there are comment count unavailable comments.

5/31/12 08:14 pm - [info]galtine1 - As The World Turns...So Are the Days of Our Lives...Chapter 2

( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )

5/31/12 09:49 pm - [info]punkspacewafers posting in [info]fursuit - Best way to glue foam?

So, I have no idea how to glue foam together. Hot glue works to a point, but it tends to fall apart easily.
I've heard that spray glue is good. If so, what's the best brand?

Thanks in advance!
 

6/1/12 12:27 am - [info]tmccaffrey_fd - Baycon 2012

http://pernhome.com/tjm/?p=2732

Bacycon 2012 ran from the 25th through the 28th of May.  It was the first time I'd been, although it was the site of Mum's Hugo win for Weyr Search over 40 years ago.

I got to be on a marvelous panel with Brandon Sanderson about The Writer's Toolkit.

Of course, we had an Anne McCaffrey memorial Saturday evening.  We laughed and cried — we laughed more than we cried.  Sunday we had a panel on Anne McCaffrey's universes to talk over those people loved and to ask about what was to come (I gave hints).

The uproarious Dani and Eytan Kollin were toastmasters and propelled the height of toastmasterdom to new levels.  I mean, really! The toast catapults will live on in many bewildered memories.  Later, Dani and Eytan asked me if I would join them in the toastmaster interview and I gladly obliged.  They are really cool guys! (They'll be at Worldcon, look them up.)

The nice people of the Sword and Laser podcast interviewed me.  We talked pretty much about everything which was a lot of fun. You can listen to it here.

Next year's Baycon (2013) will have Lois McMaster Bujold as Guest of Honor (woo-hoo!) which makes going next year practically mandatory.

At Baycon, I also had the pleasure of meeting up once more with the amazing John Del Arroz who asked me why I wasn't promoting my City of Angels more (here ya go, John!).

5/31/12 07:30 pm - [info]dsmoen - Mediating Cats and Dogs

Love this opening dream sequence from the upcoming Fairly Legal episode “Borderline”:

“They’re smart enough not to chase cars.”

Originally published at deirdre.net. You can comment here or there.

Tags: ,
 

6/1/12 01:20 am - [info]whedonesque - (SPOILER) Trailer for "The Bourne Legacy" Starring Jeremy Renner.

http://whedonesque.com/comments/28982

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdtUdEoE-Q4&feature=player_embedded

The movie hits theaters August 3rd.

 

5/31/12 10:14 pm - [info]whedonesque - The Avengers to be screened aboard the International Space Station.

http://whedonesque.com/comments/28981

http://www.stitchkingdom.com/disney-avengers-international-space-stations-20939/

It's been nearly five years since the Firefly and Serenity DVDs were delivered to the space station.

 

5/31/12 07:28 pm - [info]whedonesque - Joss Whedon HeroClix figure announced!

http://whedonesque.com/comments/28980

http://heroclix.com/announcements/comic-con-episode-iv-a-fans-hope-dvd-and-heroclix-exclusive-combo-pack/

It's part of a exclusive 'Comic-Con Episode IV: A Fan's Hope' DVD and HeroClix combo pack that will be coming out in July.

5/31/12 06:48 pm - [info]uniqueblog posting in [info]uniquenudes - What's new at Unique Nudes

First off, I know I haven't been posting a lot here, but I primarily reserve this blog for previews of upcoming shoots, and although I have been shooting a LOT lately, I'm not currently posting the images on UniqueNudes.com, just on deviantART. The reason for that is that the website is STILL down. I've already made arrangements so this type of outage won't happen again, but the site is basically being held hostage for a while until I can resolve some issues. In the meantime, if you want to see what I have been doing, just go to http://uniquenudes.deviantart.com/ (it's free to get an account if you don't have one) and check out my latest images. That is also where you can buy prints of my work.

Speaking of prints, I'm going to have a "scratch & dent" sale of some images from my 2007 show. There are only a few left, and they've all been *slightly* damaged (on the frames only, the prints are still signed and sealed in archival glass) and since I'm sick of hauling them around I'm going to sell them DIRT CHEAP. I'm thinking between $100-$250 (depending on the size, but they are all huge prints) which is the cheapest you will ever see my work for a long long time. (About a 75% discount, seriously.) The sale will be first come, first serve via PayPal.

As far as new stuff goes, I have booked at least 9 new shoots in the next few weeks, including 4 all new models. Lots of underwater stuff, a couple of "Beauty of Ink" shoots and some shots out on a boat on a private lake! And a lot of favorite models are returning this month as well, to make use of the wonderful weather we're having this summer. So expect a lot of outdoor shoots in the next few weeks as well.

Also, if you're not following my Twitter account (https://twitter.com/#!/UniqueNudes) you are missing out on the Archive Picture of the Day (hashtag: #ArchivePicOfTheDay). Just like I used to post here (but easier and faster for me) it's an image that is at least 1 years old from my archive, just in case you might have missed it first time around.

That's all for now. I'll keep this blog updated as often as possible as I have more stuff happen.

Cheers!
-- Richard Rasner
Nakayama Studios LLC

5/31/12 09:43 pm - [info]gerisullivan - Amanda Palmer's Kickstarter Project

I just saw "Lioness Elise" written on a piece of paper at the edge of the screen at Party on the Internet. It's a live UStream broadcast of the Brooklyn Block Party counting down and celebrating Amanda Palmer's delightful Kickstarter success funding her new record, art book, and tour.

The project started out with a $100,000 goal. It quickly blew past that, and is now more than $1 million over that $100,000 goal. I'm in at $25 for the backer-only version of the CD. Much as I'm faunching over several of the higher level rewards, I'm happy to be a supporter at a level fitting my budget. Win.

It looks like they're putting up the names of all the backers. There are 24,372 of us at the moment. There's Brad Ackerman's name, and I just saw Kyle Cassidy's name go by a moment ago. Lots of folks I don't know, too, of course, and lots of user names. "Runester" just flashed up. Hey, there's Kyle himself! I look forward to seeing some of the pictures he's taking at the party.

Big fun!


The party is epic. So's the Kickstarter project itself.

5/31/12 06:29 pm - [info]mactavish - western bluebird at Ardenwood

western bluebird at Ardenwood @ebrpd

5/31/12 05:39 pm - [info]koshka_the_cat - Have Fun!

I'm soooooo jealous. Such bad timing with such fixed vacations!!!

OK, now that that's out of the way...

Have so much fun everyone going to Dress U! Post lots and lots of pictures!

I meanwhile, am going to have a weekend of blissful nothing, working on a dress, fantasizing about winning the lottery, waiting impatiently for pictures, and daydreaming of a certain tiara I can probably never have...
Tags:

6/1/12 01:22 am - [info]silentsymphonie posting in [info]dw_cosplay - London MCM Expo River Song

So over the weekend I went to London MCM Expo and did my first cosplay ever. It was a last minute decision to go so I just modified my Halloween outfit from this past year but I thought it came out really well.



Read More )

5/31/12 05:17 pm - [info]koshka_the_cat - Cutest Hat Ever!!!

Untitled

It's a 50s hat for faire. Yes, faire. Last year, Regency fairies, this year, 50s sundresses.

I was going to use the fabric I got with the gift certificate after the historic masquerade, but that wouldn't go with this hat (sheer with a blue and yellow stripe--15 yards, hee!), so I'm going to repurpose the lightweight purple with purple and orange woven stripe I had meant for a Regency dressing gown. I will be very, very lavender...

And it has grippy things inside! It sits perfectly on my head :)

Grippy things!
 

5/31/12 03:00 pm - [info]snopes_dot_com - Utility Bill Payment Scam

http://www.snopes.com/fraud/identity/utilitybill.asp

Fraudsters claim a government grant will pay your utility bill in full for one month.
 

5/31/12 03:00 pm - [info]snopes_dot_com - LQP-79 Zombie Virus

http://www.snopes.com/horrors/cannibal/lqp-79.asp

Does a virus known as LQP-79 produce "zombie-like" cannabilistic behavior in humans?
 

5/31/12 03:00 pm - [info]snopes_dot_com - Produce Code

http://www.snopes.com/food/prepare/produce.asp

Do numeric codes used on produce stickers identify how those food products were grown?
 

5/31/12 03:00 pm - [info]snopes_dot_com - Trayvon Martin Photo

http://www.snopes.com/photos/politics/martin.asp#little

Another purported photograph of shooting victim Trayvon Martin is circulating.
 

5/30/12 03:00 pm - [info]snopes_dot_com - Neal Boortz Commencement Address

http://www.snopes.com/politics/soapbox/boortz.asp

Did talk show host Neal Boortz deliver a controversial commencement speech?
 

5/30/12 03:00 pm - [info]snopes_dot_com - Canal and Forever

http://www.snopes.com/history/document/vanburen.asp

Did Martin van Buren write a letter to President Jackson about the necessity of preserving canals over railroads?
 

5/31/12 06:26 pm - [info]leaky_cauldron - Phelps Twins to Attend Singapore Opening of the Harry Potter Exhibition

http://www.the-leaky-cauldron.org/2012/5/31/phelps-twins-to-attend-singapore-opening-of-the-harry-potter-exhibition

James and Oliver Phelps have decided to attend another opening of the Harry Potter Exhibition. This time the Exhibition will be opening at the ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore. The Exhibition will be open from Saturday, June 2 through Sunday, September 30, 2012. Warner Bros and museum representatives spoke highly of the twins involvement at the Exhibition openings, stating:“It...

5/31/12 07:33 pm - [info]gerisullivan - Looking back at an enthusiastic neo conrunner

Excerpts from two hand-written letters to Daddy, dated 3/30 and 3/31. Internal evidence and memory suggests the year was 1983:

3/30

Dear Daddy,

Hi! Happy Easter!

It's only 2 days until Minicon -- the convention in St. Paul. I'm getting pretty excited about it. Last night, I put together the "Pocket Program" - and it's now at the printer's. Last weekend, I helped to collate & staple the Program Book, we had 1,200 copies printed. There were lots of people helping, so the work went fast.

I also worked last weekend on a costume for the Masquerade, which will be held Friday night of the convention. I'm using the red flapper dress material you found in the basement. I attached it to backing fabric so the material wouldn't disintegrate whenever it was touched or pulled. I'm making a top out of it. I'll send a photo if any turn out.

Work continues to be just that…Work! The "bpi" is at the printer's and looks good, I think. This could be a full package to you if I include a copy of the "bpi" as well as Minicon stuff!


And...

3/31

Dear Daddy/Easter Bunny,

Thank You for the Easter Basket!

It arrived yesterday, along with my state income tax refund. WOW! It's a really neat treat & both Jan & I munched on jelly beans last night. I plan to take the basket along to the convention when I go to St. Paul tonight & share the goodies with people there. I particularly like the bird basket! Neat! I'll use the money to buy something special at the convention.

I'm REALLY EXCITED about the convention. Last night, I helped to stuff over 900 name badges into their appropriate envelopes. Now I just have to get through the day here at work and it's MINICON here I come!

Happy, Happy Easter!

P.S. The Easter basket was an extra neat treat because the night before it arrived I was up until 1:30 am making Easter baskets for friends who will be at the convention. It's not often that the Easter Bunny gets an Easter Basket!

Love,
geri


I still have the top from the red flapper dress, though I have no memory of wearing it or otherwise appearing in any Minicon masquerade. I still enjoy pre-convention excitement and anticipation, and I still love helping out when and how I can. But re-reading these letters 29 years later reminds me of the many enthusiasms of the young, of the neos for whom helping collate, helping stuff packets (which we mostly don't do anymore), helping do anything useful brings a sense of involvement and belonging.

For the record, I wasn't that young. I was, however, half the age I am now. Yowser, I've been in fandom more than half my life. Neat!
 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Can Machine Learning Replace Focus Groups?

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/doWFUb9RrCY/can-machine-learning-replace-focus-groups


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - How Hackers Listened Their Way Around Google's Recaptcha

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/Dus9qOi1-ts/how-hackers-listened-their-way-around-googles-recaptcha


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Windows 8 Release Preview Now Available To Download

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/MtVqLzosUUE/windows-8-release-preview-now-available-to-download


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Intel Ivy Bridge Processor Hits 7GHz Overclock Record

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/4VwSC2hK0SM/intel-ivy-bridge-processor-hits-7ghz-overclock-record


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Comptroller Accuses HP of Overcharging NYC $163m On 911 System

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/byFtK9Ldv38/comptroller-accuses-hp-of-overcharging-nyc-163m-on-911-system


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - MusOpen Releases Open Source Classical Music As Pro Tools Files

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/MrLi7_UWZI4/musopen-releases-open-source-classical-music-as-pro-tools-files


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Red Hat Will Pay Microsoft To Get Past UEFI Restrictions

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/0v5LZUHFBEc/red-hat-will-pay-microsoft-to-get-past-uefi-restrictions


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Ask Slashdot: Equipping a Company With Secure Android Phones?

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/1iuwR48QVDM/ask-slashdot-equipping-a-company-with-secure-android-phones


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - NC Planners May Be Barred From Using Speculative Sea Level Rise Predictions

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/pV0KrQFThOk/nc-planners-may-be-barred-from-using-speculative-sea-level-rise-predictions


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Next Generation Xbox and Playstation Consoles Will Have Optical Drives

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/NOXXlgrdHSc/next-generation-xbox-and-playstation-consoles-will-have-optical-drives


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Industry Groups Bid To Control New Business-Specific TLDs

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/glPA1NWwCYA/industry-groups-bid-to-control-new-business-specific-tlds


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - Backdoor Found In Hacked Version of Anti-Censorship Tool Simurgh

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/tD107DsztIk/backdoor-found-in-hacked-version-of-anti-censorship-tool-simurgh


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - BT Fibre Pulls Out of Chelsea Over Ugly Equipment Cabinets

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/u-u1FLbFVLc/bt-fibre-pulls-out-of-chelsea-over-ugly-equipment-cabinets


 

5/31/12 11:25 pm - [info]slashdot - After Trip to ISS, SpaceX's Dragon Capsule Returns Safely To Earth

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/to/~3/qhkpwYr1QYs/after-trip-to-iss-spacexs-dragon-capsule-returns-safely-to-earth


5/31/12 07:23 pm - [info]allisona - iPad2

So I broke down today and ordered an iPad2. It was pretty hard to resist- due to special teacher discounts it will only cost me $200.00. The iPads are being sold through a special teacher reward catalogue from Scholastic Canada, an educational book company that sends flyers to students every month to order books. Their gimmick, to get teachers to pass out the flyers and send back the student orders, is that they give the classroom teacher a percentage of the book money the students bring in back as bonus coupons, which can be spent on any product that Scholastic sells. The very first digital camera I ever bought was free with bonus coupons I had saved from Scholastic about eight years back.

Over the last 4-5 years I had built up $500.00 in bonus coupons and it did perk up my attention last September when I noticed that one of the items in this year's teacher bonus catalogue was an iPad2. I didn't really feel I needed one, though, at that time. I was more interested in an e-reader last fall and a Kindle suited my purposes better.

What probably tipped the balance for me was watching Tom Jeffers using Phil Mills songbook app on his iPad at FKO several weeks back. Not only was he able to store all his music in one handy device, but I thought it was especially cool that Phil's app allows the music to scroll, which would be very handy for a guitarist, not having to flip pages and all.

So it got me thinking about iPads again and the $500.00 I had in Scholastic bonus coupons. And THEN Jodi got a hand-me-down iPad from someone who had just upgraded their iPad, so I've seen both Debbie and Jodi using their iPads as "music binders" as we've been practising for ConCertino over the last few weeks and it does seem a very cool use for a tablet.

I had been wavering between buying one now or waiting until September when Scholastic might upgrade to an iPad3 or I could gather up more bonus coupons early in the school year (bonus coupons are really high in the fall when Scholastic is trying to lure teachers in for the year). But in the long run it makes more sense for me to have it now so that I'll have my summer holidays to figure out how to load my music into it and use Phil's app, etc.. Seems a lot of teachers have the same idea- the Scholastic woman on the phone today said the iPads are flying off their shelves right now as teachers cash in their coupons to buy them before summer.

She also assured me my iPad2 will arrive at school before the end of June, so I should have it when I go to Boston for ConCertino, though I rather doubt I'll have a chance to load my music in by then :).

But it will be a fun summer project.

5/31/12 07:16 pm - [info]wldrose

Welcome to the world Fiona Luthner

You have wonderful parents, amazing aunts and grandparents, and Your older sisters are great.

I wish you a life of joy and just enough hardship to make you grateful for it.
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