First-generation Apple products are for suckers. Only lemmings with no self-control and excessive disposable income buy first generation Apple products, especially in a new gadget category. When they do, they pay the double the price for immature hardware and software.

It’s hard to believe, but Apple has been around for 34 years today. On April 1, 1976, Apple Computer, Inc. was founded by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak.

The company had an amazing childhood (Apple II, Mac), an awkward adolescence where it nearly killed itself with a broad, unfocused product line (Performa, Quadra, Newton), and then finally straightened itself out after reaching true adulthood in the late 90s and early 2000s (iMac, iPod).

Brownies at the end of the hall” announced @chnm, brought everyone out of their offices and away from their laptops.

Desk Phone Dock

(Reblogged from chrisbowler)
If they’re going to call it the HD, then perhaps the main camera will shoot HD video, too? I don’t see how a phone named “HD” could have a camera that only shoots standard-def video.
John Gruber, about the iPhone 4G that might be called iPhone HD. If the rumors are true (960 × 640 display, HD camera among other things) the forthcoming iPhone is going to be awesome.
MacRumors has reported on the likely features of iTunes 9.1, with built-in support for ebooks being the most obvious addition to the increasingly misnamed iTunes.
Chris Rawson, about the various sources of file types that iTunes currently manages. Now it’s like a Media Center capable of playing music rather than the straightforward Music Player that iTunes once was.
People who buy the iPad have more money (or insight into secret Apple plans) than sense.
yenoom commenting “10 amazing iPad App Video Demonstrations” in Mashable

If Apple allows some sort of a three-column view in iPad’s Mail, why not include the same view in OS X’s Mail?

Permute surely it’s a good looking media converter and it might replace VisualHub as my converter of choice, but I don’t understand what were thinking the guys at Fuel Collective with that ugly icon. It’s like it was some weird robot head that nowhere represents the great looking app that Permute really is.
Please change it.

Permute surely it’s a good looking media converter and it might replace VisualHub as my converter of choice, but I don’t understand what were thinking the guys at Fuel Collective with that ugly icon. It’s like it was some weird robot head that nowhere represents the great looking app that Permute really is.

Please change it.