Aug 30

Apple shall introduce the final version of iOS 4.1 for iPhone and iPod touch (though probably not for iPad) soon.  Apple released the first beta for iOS 4.1 on July 14 and stuck to their every-two-weeks cycle for beta 2 on July 27 and beta 3 on August 3.

What we know about iOS4.1 is that it includes a new, font-crazy version of Game Center, which was also included in the iOS 4 betas but removed for the general release, and FaceTime connections over email, which will be required for non-phone devices like iPod touch 4.

It will also likely contain bug fixes for the proximity sensor, and hopefully performance fixes for iPhone 3G.

Those features are certainly impressive, those fixes certainly much needed. But is that all we’ll get? There’s no way to know what Apple will do in the future, but we can look at what they’ve done with past iOS x.1 releases for clues…

iOS 3.1 (iPhone 3.1)

iOS 3.1, originally referred to as iPhone 3.1, was released on September 9, 2009following Apple’s It’s only rock and roll but we like it special music event. It fixed issues with iPhone 3G Wi-Fi and icon display. It also added:

  • Triple click Home for accessibility options
  • Voice control over Bluetooth
  • Remote passcode lock with Find my iPhone
  • Save MMS to camera roll
  • Event location in popup alert
  • Non-destructive video clip trimming
  • Tethered data usage stats
  • Fraud warnings toggle for Safari
  • iTunes account credit display
  • Top Grossing in App Store
  • Genius for apps
  • Genius mixes
  • Copy and paste in Phone and Contacts

iOS 2.1 (iPhone 2.1)

iOS 2.1, originally referred to as iPhone 2.1, was introduced on September 9, 2008 at Apple’s Let’s rock special music event and released on September 12, 2008. It fixed problems with call drops, battery life, backup times, email reliability, 3rd party app installation speeds, SMS performance, contact loading and search, “improved accuracy” of 3G bars (which have since been “corrected” again in iOS 4.0.1). Features included:

  • Screen shot added camera shutter sound
  • Load earlier SMS messages
  • SMS alert repeat
  • Disable Camera in Settings Restrictions
  • Option to wipe data after 10 failed passcode attempts
  • Genius playlist creation
  • Tap icon to pause/resume app install
  • App icons remain in place following on-device update

Note: Unlike iOS 3, where iOS 3.2 was exclusive to iPad, there was an iOS 2.2 (iPhone 2.2) update for iPhone and iPod touch. iPhone 2.2 added Google Street View, Transit and Walking directions, the ability to turn off auto-correct, audio and video podcasts in the iTunes Store app, App Store “rate app on delete” (since removed in iOS 4), the return of Update All for apps, and a rejiggered Safari search bar.

iOS 1.1 (iPhone 1.1)

iOS 1.1 (iPhone 1.1) was originally shown off on the first generation iPod touch on September 14, 2007 during Apple’s The beat goes on special music event, but was released as iOS 1.1.1 (iPhone 1.1.1, or September ‘07 update) for iPhone on September 27. Added were:

  • iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store app
  • Louder speaker volume
  • Double click home to launch favorites or iPod controls
  • Double tap space bar for a period (.)
  • Landscape support for Mail attachments
  • Re-ordering for Stocks and Weather items
  • Apple Bluetooth headset (RIP) battery status
  • Disable roaming data
  • Additional passcode lock time settings
  • Adjustable alert volumes

There was no iOS 1.2 (iPhone 1.2) update, but there was a significant iOS 1.1.3 (iPhone 1.1.3 or January ‘08) update shown off at Macworld on January 15, 2008 that added Mail, Maps, Stocks, Weather, and Notes to iPod touch (for a price), gave Google Maps the “locate me” function, introduced “jiggly mode” to re-arrange icons, added iTunes gift card redemption on-device, gave lyrics to music, let you add Web Clips to the home screen, enabled multi-person SMS, included Gmail as a default set up type, made the keyboard multitouch, and put chapters, language, etc. into movies.

So what does this mean for iOS 4.1?

Smaller version updates mean smaller feature additions. If you’re holding out hope for a brand new notification system you’ll probably have to wait for next March and the iOS 5 sneak preview event. If Game Center, and FaceTime moving beyond the iPhone, interest you, then you’ll probably have lots to be happy about. It’s always possible we’ll get “One more thing…” but looking back over previous iOS x.1 (iPhone x.1) updates, I’m not holding my breath. Too much.

Related Blogs

  • Related Blogs on Guess about iOS4.1
Aug 30

While the Netflix app was originally meant for the iPad, this free app has been modified to cater for those who are rocking to the iPhone and iPod touch, thanks to the availability of the free Netflix App for iPhone and iPod touch. Basically, this app enables current Netflix members to enjoy watching their favorite shows and movies anytime, anywhere on the mentioned two iDevices for just $8.99 a month. To put it in layman’s terms, you will be able to instantly watch a vast selection of TV episodes and movies streamed to your iPhone or iPod touch at no additional cost.

You will be able to pick up the Netflix App for free from the App Store on iPhone and iPod touch or at www.itunes.com/appstore/. According to Reed Hastings, Netflix co-founder and chief executive officer, “Apple has changed the game for mobile devices. We’re excited that our members can now carry Netflix around in their pockets and instantly watch movies and TV shows streamed from Netflix right to their iPhone or iPod touch.”

You can be assured that the Netflix App is able to deliver a high-quality viewing experience, courtesy of a broad array of movie and TV choices and a clean, intuitive interface that ought to have just about anyone use it without having to go through a prior user experience. Of course, regardless of whether you’re rocking to Wi-Fi or 3G networks, you can still enjoy your streaming video although Wi-Fi does seem like a better bet if you happen to stay in an area that has spotty 3G connection. All TV episodes and movies have been conveniently organized into a variety of categories based on members’ personal preferences, popular genres, new arrivals and members’ individual instant Queues. As usual, you can always pick a show of your choice and watch instantly or save the title for viewing later. In addition to that, you can also fast forward and rewind the video stream, stopping at any time of your pleasure. The Netflix App will play nice with any iPhone or iPod touch device running iOS version 3.13 or later.

Related Blogs

  • Related Blogs on Netflix app is available in iPhone and iPod touch
  • Night Life
May 07

The Apps

The native iPad apps have shrunk in number versus the iPhone, and—with the exception of Safari, Mail and the App Store—the remaining apps carry much less weight. Which is to say, you won’t use them as much as you do on an iPhone. The iPad is really all about the applications and content that developers will create.

App Store and iTunes
Quite honestly, the App Store on the iPad is now the best way to get apps. Navigating and finding apps feels far more serendipitous and engaging than pointing and clicking on a desktop, and with the screen real estate, you can actually see the store and app previews, unlike the iPhone. It manages to fracture one of biggest advantages, though, by jerking you out of the App Store every time you buy an app. This should feel seamless, and allow for more of a shopping spree. If the transactions happened almost invisibly, it wouldn’t feel like you’re spending money as apps pop onto your iPad, and you wouldn’t feel like you’ve got whiplash, either.

Also, the most fundamental problem with the App Store remains: The interface breaks down when you’re trying to sort through a sea of 150,000 apps to discover a few you’d really want. And the iPad’s sole surviving instance of Cover Flow, a floating widget of app previews at the top of the home screen? Kinda gross lookin’.

The iTunes store looks and feels like the App Store in terms of basic navigation and layout, but it’s obviously built around previewing and purchasing music, movies and TV shows, so the interface is kinda like a touchified version of the main iTunes Store interface on the desktop. Tapping album covers or film posters flips them around to show you the basic info with previews. One of the big changes is being able to download movies—even 5GB HD flicks—over Wi-Fi. (Though I wouldn’t really recommended it, since my bigger download errored out a whole bunch.)

Safari
The velocity of scrolling, zooming and panning around web pages in Safari is one of the first “whoa” moments you’ll have with the iPad. It’s superfast, which is why it feels so awesome. The size is the other component—being able to see that much of a website radically alters the experience, turning it into something that’s incredibly satisfying. Really, you’ve never felt anything like it.

There are a few problems, though. (And I’m not even talking about Flash. In case you were wondering, no, there’s still no Flash. It hasn’t affected me once since so many sites have remade themselves for the iPad, and the one time I did get upset, I quickly remembered that a Hulu app is coming. YMMV without Flash though.)

Safari’s one place where the iPad’s memory shortage makes itself apparent, since you’re limited to nine windows, and quite often, it dumps the contents of a window, so when you go back you’ll have to reload the whole page. That’s pretty annoying. This is also, I suspect, why it doesn’t have true tabs: People aren’t encouraged to open a bunch, because it can’t handle it. Still, tabs would be incredibly welcome for the sheer fact that the iPhone-originated process of switching between windows (click the button, you’re taken to a thumbnail view of your windows, then click the window) feels more tedious than ever. With this nice big display, it shouldn’t take two screens and multiple seconds to switch to a new window when everything else practically flies.

Something else we’d like? Text enlargement, like in desktop Safari. Our own Jesus, like many old dudes, prefers larger text. There’s no reason it can’t be done now. And when we’re scanning whole, giant web pages, there’s really still no “find in page” search feature?

Photos
The traditional photo album grid has never felt slicker. Zooming in really fast, incredibly smoothly, on huge photos is definitely one of those “oooo” moments, as is “pinch to peek.” The problem? Getting your photos on there and syncing is still pretty messy, pulling them in albums via iPhoto or in specific shots via iTunes. Legitimate connections to online photo services would be nice too, so you could populate it with your Flickr or Picasa or Facebook photos. Hopefully these services will soon roll out apps to handle this from their end.

Mail
Given that it looks so much like its iPhone forebear, perhaps more than any other iPad app, you’d be forgiven for not realizing it’s one of the most important apps on the iPad. In truth, it makes use of every new bit of user interface, and it’s the starting ground for so many other apps, from RSS readers to Instapaper to Twitter clients.

In landscape, it uses the split view, with your inboxes or messages on the left, and the contents you’ve selected on the right. The panes look and feel like their respective iPhone screens, just fused all together. If you hit “new message” or “reply,” an overlay pops up with the keyboard, which takes up half the screen, and a message box that doesn’t quite cover the entire top half of the screen. (You’ll see this messaging overlay pop up again and again in apps like Twitterific.) Adding contacts takes place via a scrollable popover—like the old contacts list, but it doesn’t take up your entire screen.

Portrait mode is more focused: When you select a message, it’s all you see. To switch to a new email or look elsewhere in your accounts, you have to bring up a popover, which runs down the entire length of the iPad shows you the rest of your inbox. The mode overall is good if you have a hard time concentrating, but navigating via the popover can feel a little disjointed.

Overall, Mail works great, but the same functional limitations as the iPhone version still apply, like no unified inbox, no push Gmail, and the inability to attach a file to a message from inside the app. The list goes on, and these shortcomings feel more pronounced because of the power and size of the iPad.

Contacts, Notes and Calendar
Contacts is one of the literal “I’m a book!” apps that takes it a little far for no apparent reason. But cheesy art effects aside, in structure it’s like iPhone contacts but with a two-pane view, like the Mac Contacts app. Notes is essentially the same as the iPhone with more “realism” added via the subtle outline of stitched leather surrounding the yellow legal pad. It’s still gross.

Calendar, on the other hand, is a graceful application that makes the iPhone Calendar feel too constrained, and the desktop iCal feel too convoluted. Sort by day, week, month or list (showing the next 10-15 events). In day or list view, the list of events is in the left pane, and a closeup of individual events or days is in the right pane. Week and month views zoom out to a traditional calendar view, where popovers reveal event details. A scrubber on the bottom lets you quickly zip to any day or week, depending on the view. It’s really nice, at least for basic calendar usage.

Maps
It’s iPhone Maps, but bigger and so, so much faster, and that’s a world of difference when you’re talking about zooming around the world.

YouTube
It’s hard to believe this is YouTube, almost—it looks too polished. The streamlined interface is miles ahead of what you get when you type youtube.com on your desktop. I can actually just sit and watch YouTube for the first time ever, also thanks to the surprisingly great video quality.

iPod and Video
iPod seems a little out of place, I have to say. It doesn’t quite look like anything else, though that’s not necessarily a bad thing. It’s the jukebox essence of desktop iTunes, stripped to the silver bone because it only does one thing: Play music. Considering what iTunes is like on the desktop, that’s kind of refreshing.

Videos is similarly stripped down. It shows you videos. Touch, and it flips to info about the video. Touch again, and it plays. (Our test notes on iPad video here.) Generally speaking, anything shot in artsy super widescreen looks a little weird—like any Wes Anderson movie—since there’s a ton of black between the bars and the bezel. The rub is that the movies where that effect is the worst also suffer the most from zooming to fill the screen, chopping off massive amounts of the picture. (A necessary evil, unfortunately.)

Apps that essentially mono-task are fine, and they definitely expose how goddamn unwieldy the desktop iTunes as grown (as well as the fact that Apple is aware of this), but there are definitely missing features we’d like to see. If the iPad is designed to be used in your house, why can’t you music and videos from your desktop to your iPad using iTunes, right inside these apps? Seriously. And why isn’t iTunes Remote iPhone app updated for iPad, to be used to control your desktop’s iTunes? Little things like that would add up to make the iPad feel that much more connected.

Magic Spells, a Computer and a Cloud

The moments where the iPad’s spell dissipates are when it runs into this uncanny valley between unique modal tablet and standard personal computer: It feels so much like a computer from the future sometimes that you just expect it to do stuff you can do with your laptop. When it can’t, you get kind of depressed. Like when you want to flip a couple of IMs out without ditching your entire Scrabble game, or you really just want to send an attachment in Mail, or do something really basic like save a PDF so you can read it later. (You can’t do this without a separate 99-cent program, GoodReader; without that, you have to re-download your PDF every time.)

And how about the entire setup process, which slavishly ties it to another computer with iTunes. It can’t replace your parents’ complicated desktop, because you need that complicated desktop to setup the iPad, and then to manage your music and videos (not to mention software updates down the line), so it’s frozen as a secondary device. Then are the moments you wish it was more connected, like a phone. Take the Nexus One. Two minutes out of the box, a minute after punching in my email address, all of my contacts and emails are there. I didn’t plug it into anything.

In other words, it’s the moments where the iPad feels like it could be more, and you know it in your hands, in your fingers, as you’re holding it. That it has this potential to do this or that, but it doesn’t yet, and you really really want it to, because you’re so incredibly enthralled with everything it already does.

Potential. Promise. Hope. That, if anything, is the real magic of it. In the meantime, it’s off to a pretty good start.



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May 07

On Multitasking

The iPhone evangelized the rather retro notion of running just one app at a time. And this has been mostly fine (though by no means excellent), given the screen size, and with workarounds like push notifications. The limits of these workarounds are more painfully exposed by the iPad’s giant screen: Switching out of a game or movie or email to dedicate the entire display to instant messaging feels absurd and wasteful, even considering that, in landscape mode, half the screen is dedicated to the keyboard.

What’s sad is that the kinds of things people commonly want multitasking for—mostly people who don’t even care what true “multitasking” means—seem simple enough, even for this operating system: Messaging, geolocation and playing music from apps like Pandora in the background. Even though Pandora makes beautiful use of all the room it’s granted, not being able run it in the background while surfing the web, typing out an email—or hey, sending an IM—just feels ridiculous in so many ways. Every time you have to close it to do something else, a little bubble of fury rises in your throat, erupting as a flustered sigh. I really can’t respond to my friend’s message without closing everything I’m doing on this huge thing? The choices you’re being forced to make feel false and arbitrary, like bacon or eggs.

The modal nature of push notifications stabs your brain harder too, like when your zombie slaying groove in Call of Duty is wrecked without warning by a little blue square that takes over your entire screen, informing you that a new IM is waiting. It just doesn’t work. At the very least, notifications need to be implemented very differently, because the iPad is meant to be immersive—and it really is—and to have that shredded by a workaround for capabilities it currently lacks, that’s kind of heartbreaking. Something like Growl, that’s unobtrusive, could work. (This will hopefully change with iPhone 4.0.)

The hardware constraints that made running one app at a time make sense are nearly obliterated in the iPad—the battery and screen are an order of magnitude larger, the processor markedly zippier. I suspect the remaining hardware cramp may now be the paltry amount of RAM in the iPad, a mere 256MB—the same amount that’s in the iPhone 3GS—but it doesn’t really matter why. As Apple’s fond of intoning, people just want it to do what they want it to do.

Put simply, the iPhone might not need multitasking. The iPad does.

Mimesis, or a Love Affair with Paper

For a blank slate that can magically transform into anything, Apple’s preoccupation with mimesis might seem a little curious. The Contacts app looks like a Moleskine address book while Calendar imitates a real-world datebook—though it functions so beautifully and smoothly it’s very possibly my favorite native app. iBooks uses a bookshelf metaphor that practically smells of rich mahogany, and books whose pages turn with a realistic animation that you can’t turn off. Ticking off messages in Mail stacks them like a pile of paper. In other words, Apple wants their apps to feel something like real-world experiences.

As Jesus noted, “Apple designed this device to be treated like a book,” and this carries through to any app that’s an abstraction of paper. Maybe it’s meant for your parents to feel more comfortable using the iPad to read books and organize their contacts and calendars, but the implementation of the realism feels so cheesy in some places that it’s simply not comforting, not even to that target audience, I suspect.

Typing

Yes, it’s pretty much a jumbo iPhone keyboard. (An idea that seemed so silly, we made fun of it.) We have been typing on the iPad in depth here, but simply put, an external keyboard is ideal. Still, as we noted earlier, the compromise here “is going to be inherent to all touchscreen keyboards on tablets.” There’s no novel solution, not for Apple or anyone else.

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May 07

I got several email from my readers, asking why choose iPad.

Michael from Oregon dropped me a line as below “There have been lots of tablets or MIDs before the iPad. Why no one pick them up?”

Yesterday I found one post in gizmodo written by Matt, which answered Michael’s inquiry ” Those tablets weren’t as beautiful or well crafted, but that wasn’t why we chose not to pick them up. It was the software.”.

Yes, iPad is iPad because of the software.

Those who call the iPad “bigger iPhone” ignore one simple fact: changing the screen size really does change everything. Yes, everything changes. It’s more than the difference between SD and HD, between 5 1/4-inch action figures and 10-inch scale, between vegan facon and real pork belly. In a word, “The iPad functional objective was to make the product as invisible as possible, a simple, elegant stage for the real important actors: The applications.”

iPad’s Interface

The iPad looks familar to iPhone/iPod users, with a grid of glossy icons—touch one, and the app balloons out of nowhere to fill the screen. It’s a simple, slick and natural interface designed to be manipulated entirely with your fingers, and the basic elements of all translate, just on a slightly grander scale.

Speed. Speed matters. When the hardware disappears, and there’s just software in front of you, speed is what makes the verisimilitude of directly manipulating whatever’s the on the screen bleed into the sublime. It’s the responsiveness that makes you feel like you’re actually zipping around a map, not swiping at a screen that’s merely interpreting electrical signals generated by your fingers into commands. The second “wow” moment—after you turn the iPad on and the screen bursts to life—is when you flick through a entire web page with a single swipe, instantly and smoothly.

One of the ways it’s fundamentally different from the iPhone is that the interface and software are now truly designed to be used equally in both portrait mode and landscape. It sounds like a small thing, but it’s not—it gives power to the idea that you can use it however you want, that it’s really a blank slate that morphs to become whatever you want it to be. It’s remarkably proficient at figuring out exactly how you’re holding it, and the software gracefully, speedily adjusts itself accordingly, rolling into position. All of the core applications—Safari, Mail, iPod, Notes—shift into new layouts, optimized for whichever way you’re holding it. It feels so natural so quickly that you simply expect it to be the case, so when third-party applications don’t remold themselves to how you’re holding the iPad, it’s jarring.

Two new user interface conventions in particular transform apps to make real use of the extra space with either more information density or greater focus: Split view and popovers. (Twitterific isn’t a native app, but it shows off both here.) Split view appears in landscape orientation, and presents two windows panes—typically, on the left is navigation (your various inboxes in Mail, music sources in iPod, all of your notes in Notes) and on the right is whatever you’ve selected (a message, an album, a note). On the iPhone, this would be two distinct screens—you click on something in one pane, and suddenly you get the other pane—drilling down instead of working in parallel. Many apps, particularly ones that are using mail as a UI model, like Instapaper, use this.

Popovers, a kind of contextual pop-up dialog box layered on top of whatever you’re looking at, are in almost every app. Completely contextual, they can act as navigation panes (like when Mail’s in portrait mode, a popover shows all of your messages or inboxes); or typing a URL in Safari, a popover will appear, showing suggested URLS based on your history; or a scrolling list; or as a navigator to pick out a photo to load into iWork. It’s a second layer, one that never existed on the iPhone because there isn’t enough space.

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Apr 27

I got my iPad this Friday, as a royal Kindle fan, I don’t have Kindle owner’s remorse, but I understand the angst of those who do. With its grayscale display and does-one-thing-well approach, Amazon’s e-reader is neither as stylishly alluring nor as powerful as Apple’s gadget.

iPad uses the free, open e-book standard, ePub format. The format is meant to function as a single format that publishers and conversion houses can use in-house, as well as for distribution and sale. it looks like ePub is as close to the MP3 of ebooks as it comes. And it supports digital rights management, something that’s sure to warm the cockles of the hearts of publishers, but there’s no DRM scheme that is currently specified as part of the format.

This post will teach those who want to read in iPad how to create ePub ebook easily with guidance in this post.

iPad ebook

There are a number of ways to create ePub content:

  1. Calibre (http://calibre-ebook.com): a free tool for Windows, Mac OSX, and Linux that allows you to convert to ePub from a wide variety of formats. Calibre currently does a better job than Stanza Desktop at preserving styles and formatting of source documents.
  2. Adobe InDesign (http://www.adobe.com/products/indesign/): InDesign is a high-end publishing tool for authors and publishers, and supports the creation of ePub files.
  3. Feedbooks (http://feedbooks.com/share/): You can log into Feedbooks and create your own content, which will be made available in ePub, as well as other formats like PDF and Kindle. In addition, any books you create and share will automatically be included in the “Free Books by Feedbooks” section of Stanza’s Online Catalog under the “User Created Books” area, so you don’t need to download and transfer the book separately.
  4. BookGlutton API (http://www.bookglutton.com/api): If you have your book in HTML format, you can convert it into ePub using their online conversion API
  5. ePub Tools (http://code.google.com/p/epub-tools): Command-line tools suitable for batch processing and integration into toolchains. Includes tools for conversion from Word, RTF, DocBook, TEI, and FictionBook.
  6. Adobe PDFXML (http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/mars) – Per Adobe’s blog, this is useful for making small changes to existing EPUBs.
  7. eScape – ePub Creator (http://www.infogridpacific.com/igp/AZARDI/eScape%20-ODT2ePub) – “It lets you instantly and effortlessly turn Open Office Writer documents (ODT) into perfect ePubs…”
  8. eCub (http://www.juliansmart.com/ecub) – “a simple to use EPUB and MobiPocket ebook creator”
  9. Sigil (http://code.google.com/p/sigil/) – “Sigil is a multi-platform WYSIWYG ebook editor. It is designed to edit books in ePub format.”
  10. Easy EPUB (http://www.easypress.com/products/aqpep/) – By simply uploading your InDesign or Quark book files, EasyEPUB will quickly produce a fully compliant EPUB version of your book within 5 minutes.
  11. DNAML’s PDF2EPUB (http://www.pdftoepub.com/) – Convert PDFs to EPUBs in 6 easy steps. The nice thing about this software is that it can handle headers and footers which are often challenging when converting PDFs.
  12. Stanza Desktop (http://stanza.lexcycle.com): Stanza allows you to convert from a large variety of formats like MS LIT, Mobipocket, Kindle, RTF, PDF, MS Word, and many more into ePub.

I will use Calibre as example to show how to create/convert PDFs or other ebooks to the ePUB format:

Step 1: Download and install Calibre, the free and cross-platform ebook management tool. The below screenshots below is taken on OS X, and Calibre also works on Windows and Linux, as well.

iPad ebook

Step 2: The first time you start Calibre, select Default as your device type.

iPad ebook

You could get more specific, but I found going with default worked fine for me, and I wanted to keep this as device agnostic as possible.

Step 3: Drag and drop the ebook you want to convert to ePub into Calibre

edit any metadata if it’s not already to your liking (right-click the book in Calibre and select Edit meta information -> Edit metadata individually), then click the Convert E-books button in the toolbar.

Step 4: Verify that you’ve got the correct Input/Output formats:

On the far left of the Convert window, you’ll see the Input format. On the far right, you’ll see the Output format. The input format should default to the format the ebook is already in, and the output format should default to EPUB. If it’s not, just choose EPUB from the drop-down.

Step 5: Convert!

iPad ebook

When everything looks how you like it (you can change the book cover if you’re not happy with how it looks here), click OK and let the conversion roll.

Step 6: Move Your New ePub Book to iPad.

Once the conversion’s complete, right-click your newly-converted book and select Open containing folder to find your new ePub-formatted ebook. You can stop here if all you wanted was to convert the ebook to ePub. If you’re an iTunes/iPad user and you want to get that ePub book on your device, simply drag and drop the converted ePub book into iTunes. If you’re using an iPad, plug it in, make sure you’ve got iBooks installed, and just drag the book from iTunes to your iPad in the iTunes sidebar under Devices.

Enjoy! And that’s it. Next time you launch iBooks, you should see your newly converted ePub ebook, ready to read.

More Info about ePub:

The ePUB is a free and open standard for eBooks created by the International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF). It’s designed for reflowable content that can be optimized to whatever device is being used to read a book file. The IDPF has championed ePUB as a single format that can be used by publishers and conversion houses, as well as for distribution and sale of electronic books.

It consists of basic XHTML for the book content, XML for descriptions, and a re-named zip file to hold it all in. Anyone can make these eBooks, and since they’re essentially just XHTML, anyone can read them.

While ePUB is a popular format, it’s not without criticism. The format is great for text-centric books, but is considered unsuitable for publications that require advanced formatting or detailed layout, such as comic books and technical tomes. That could result in some issues for textbook publishers. The lack of a standard DRM scheme could cause the format to splinter into different factions unless Apple forces the issue by adopting an open scheme.

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Apr 13

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Search for music on your iPod. The search results can be saved to your computer or transferred into iTunes as a playlist.
iPod Transfer
Play music and video on your iPod through your PC without having iTunes installed. Use it to change your musics rating.

Software ScreenShot:

iPod Transfer
Software Reference:

Output Device Support
iPod, iPod nano, iPod classic, iPod shuffle, iPod Mini, iPod touch, iPhone, iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS
iPhone/iPod touch Firmware 3.1.3 or below
iTunes 8.2 or above
File Format Support
CD/DVD: CD, DVD-Video, DVD folder, ISO file
Video: 3GP, 3G2, ASF, AVI, DV, DIF, VOB, FLV, M2TS, MTS, M4V, SWF, MKV, DVR-MS, MJPG, CDA, MJPEG, MOD, MPG, MPEG, MPA, DAT, TS, MPV, NSV, MOV, QT, H261, H264, RM, RMVB, WMV, ASF, XWMV
Audio: AAC, AIF, AIFF, AC3, APE, CUE, AU, FLAC, MPA, MP2, MP3, OGG, RA, WAV, WMA, CDA, M4A, MP4
Image: BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG

Software Details:

Tool Name: Xilisoft iPod Rip
Version: 2.0
License: Shareware
Price: 29.95$
File Size: 15.37MB
Trial Limitations: Transfer a maximum of 500 files
System Requirements: OS Microsoft? Windows XP (SP2 or later), Windows Vista, Windows 7
Processor 1GHz Intel/AMD processor or above
RAM 256MB RAM (512MB or above recommended)
Free Hard Disk 50MB space for installation
Graphic Card Super VGA (800×600) resolution, 16-bit graphics card or higher
Others iTunes 9.0.3
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Apr 09

Combining iPad transfer, DVD to iPad converter and video to iPad converter into one,  iPad Magic helps Apple iPad tablet users to manage, organize, transfer, and convert media files to iPad. It is the best assistant for iPad users.
It allows you to

  • transfer video/ audio/ photo  between PC and iPad
  • convert DVDs/Video/Audio to iPad formats
  • also supports all versions of iPod, iTouch and iPhone.
buy iPad transfer Buy now price: $59.95 download ipod transfer Free Download Size:20.7MB
iPad Transfer

iPad Transfer

iPad Transfer provides the greatest solution for you to manage your iPad. With iPad Transfer, what you need to do is just connect your iPad to PC and click your mouse, all the iPad transfer or iPad conversion process can be finished in a short while.

  • Transfer and Backup between iPad and PC
    Transfer iPad to and from PC
    Transfer iPad to iTunes
    Simulatenous transfer between iPad, iPhone and iPod touch
    Supports all iPad/iPod/iPhone models: iPad Wi-Fi, iPad Wi-Fi+3G, iPad 16GB, iPad 32GB and iPad 64GB; iPod nano, iPod touch, iPod classic, iPod shuffle; iPhone, iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS
  • Convert CD/DVD/Video/Audio to iPad
    Rip CD/DVD to iPad
    Convert videos and audios to iPad
  • Search and customize iPad Movies and Music
    Quickly Find Your File
    Customize Track Info and Rate
    Capture iPad Movie
    Preview iPad Files
  • Usages of iPad Magic
    Use iPad as a Hard Disk
    Install iPad Magic to iPad in USB HDD Mode

strengths of iPad Transfer

  • More than expected – not just iPad Transfer, it’s iPad Transfer + DVD to iPad Ripper + Video to iPad Converter
  • Easy-to-use – Load and convert, good interface
  • Fastest transfer compared with similar tools- Save your time
  • Quick Search - search files in the categories of Genre, Artist and Album and find what you are looking for as soon as possible
  • No virus, spyware or adware – No risk

Software Reference:

Output Device Support
iPad Wi-Fi, iPad Wi-Fi+3G, iPad 16GB, iPad 32GB, iPad 64GB
iPhone, iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS, iPod touch
iPhone/iPod touch Firmware 3.1.3 or below
iTunes 9.1 or above
File Format Support
CD/DVD: CD, DVD-Video, DVD folder, ISO file
Video: 3GP, 3G2, ASF, AVI, DV, DIF, VOB, FLV, M2TS, MTS, M4V, SWF, MKV, DVR-MS, MJPG, CDA, MJPEG, MOD, MPG, MPEG, MPA, DAT, TS, MPV, NSV, MOV, QT, H261, H264, RM, RMVB, WMV, ASF, XWMV
Audio: AAC, AIF, AIFF, AC3, APE, CUE, AU, FLAC, MPA, MP2, MP3, OGG, RA, WAV, WMA, CDA, M4A, MP4
Image: BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG

Software Details:

Tool Name: iPad Magic
Version: 3.0
License: Shareware
Price: 59.95$
File Size: 20.7MB
Trial Limitations: Transfer a maximum of 500 files
System Requirements: OS Microsoft? Windows XP (SP2 or later), Windows Vista, Windows 7
Processor 1GHz Intel/AMD processor or above
RAM 256MB RAM (512MB or above recommended)
Free Hard Disk 50MB space for installation
Graphic Card Super VGA (800×600) resolution, 16-bit graphics card or higher
Others iTunes 9.1 or above
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Mar 18

Don’t be too happy that your Apple contraption (be it an iPhone, iPod touch or the upcoming iPad) is more or less capable of doing everything under the sun that a road warrior needs, otherwise there would not be room for improvement thanks to the genius of the folks at i-Got-it Corp., where they have come up with the launch and immediate availability of i-Got-Control. Surely you would ask just what i-Got-Control is – well, it comprises of a plug-and-play accessory which is capable of transforming your iPhone, iPod touch or iPad into a universal remote control, yes, universal, I use the correct word. So this tool virtually giving you a free reign of any infrared device in your home, be they TVs, stereo systems and more. Hmmm, sounds interesting, but could the Gizmodo guys equipped with this zap away TVs at showfloors and conventions just like how they did a few years ago at CES?

The i-Got-Control will feature an industry-leading database of over 40,000 IR codes for consumer electronic devices worldwide, and its associated iTunes app is able to support a nearly unlimited number of IR electronics globally, virtually making it a snap to take control anytime, anywhere. Thanks to the inclusion of i-Got-Control’s built-in IR library, you will be able to CONNECT, SELECT and CONTROL your A/V components in a jiffy without having to worry about issues such as the lack of a Wi-Fi network, wires or batteries.

If you are adamant on getting started with this, then just download the free i-Got-Control application through iTunes, hook up the compact accessory to an iPhone (OS is 3.0 or higher), iPod touch or iPad, launch the i-Got-Control application and you are good to go once the selection process of the device is complete. Selection is painless thanks to pre-defined, user-friendly screens that ought to give you full control in a jiffy thanks to a highly intuitive user interface. Just in case of the rare occasion of not finding your device’s IR code, the i-Got-Control’s user-friendly learning capabilities will let it learn so in a snap. Interested parties might want to think about forking out $69.95 for the i-Got-Control.

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Mar 17

If you backup iPhone contacts as .csv file (refer How to copy/backup/export iPhone contacts? ), you can open it with Windows computer excel; What’s more, you can restore the .csv to your Outlook and iPhone if necessary.  You won’t feel frustrated like this man.

How to Restore Contact from CSV file to iPhone?
Step 1: Backup all your contacts from iPhone to computer as .csv file format using Tansee iPhone Transfer Contact.
Step 2: Click on Start – All Programs – Accessories, click to open Address Book.
In Address Book, click File – Import – Other Address Book…, select “Text File (Comma Separated Values)”, click Import, then browser the CSV file, click Next, Map the fields you wish to import, click finish. After all this, you had import the contacts to your Windows Address Book.
Step 3: Open iTunes, connect iPhone, click to select the iPhone on iTunes, choose Info tab, in Contact section, check “Sync contacts with Window Address Book”, click apply.

How to Restore Contact from CSV file to Outlook?
Step 1: Backup all your contacts from iPhone to computer as .csv file format using Tansee iPhone Transfer Contact.
Step 2: Click on Start – All Programs – Accessories, click to open Address Book.
In Address Book, click File – Import – Other Address Book…, select “Text File (Comma Separated Values)”, click Import, then browser the CSV file, click Next, Map the fields you wish to import, click finish. After all this, you had import the contacts to your Windows Address Book.
Step 3: Open Outlook; Open the File menu; Choose “Import and Export”; In the “Import and Export Wizard” dialog box choose “Import Internet email and address”, then choose “OUTLOOK EXPRESS 4.X 5.X 6.X”, click “Next”.

Easy?

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