Apple Giving Away $10,000 Gift Card For Downloading 25 Billionth App

In a giveaway which is becoming a tradition at Apple when an app download number milestone is achieved, the world’s largest company by market capitalization today announced one lucky person will win a $10,000 iTunes Gift Card for downloading app number 25 billion. Apple last gave away a $10,000 iTunes Gift Card last year to a person who downloaded the 10 billionth app.

You can also participate by submitting an entry form available here. According to the rules, “either the downloading of the 25 billionth app from the App Store or the receipt of the non-purchase entry after the download of the 24,999,999,999th app, whichever comes first” will determine the winner.

A special page with a live countdown has been posted by Apple and is accessible here. The official rules are available here.

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OS X Mountain Lion To Roar Into Mac App Store In Late Summer

Apple today made available a beta version of OS X Mountain Lion to developers with over 100 new features. According to a press release, the overarching goal of OS X Mountain Lion is to bring “popular apps and features from iPad® to the Mac® and accelerates the pace of OS X innovation.” A preview version of OS X Mountain Lion is now available to registered Mac developers and Mac users will be able to download the update via the Mac App store in late summer this year.

Here’s a partial list of some of the features you can expect to see in OS X Mountain Lion:

* Messages (a new app to replace iChat)
* Notes
* Reminders
* Game Center
* Notification Center
* Share Sheets (share links, photos and videos directly from Apple and third party apps)
* Twitter integration (tweet from Safari, Quick Look, Photo Booth, Preview & 3rd party apps)
* AirPlay® Mirroring (wirelessly send video stream of what’s on your Mac to Apple TV)

Apple is also introducing a new security feature, Gatekeeper:

“Gatekeeper is a revolutionary new security feature that gives you control over which apps can be downloaded and installed on your Mac. You can choose to install apps from any source, just as you do on a Mac today, or you can use the safer default setting to install apps from the Mac App Store, along with apps from developers that have a unique Developer ID from Apple. For maximum security, you can set Gatekeeper to only allow apps from the Mac App Store to be downloaded and installed.”

One of the most interesting features is the introduction of Game Kit APIs which make it “possible to create multiplayer games that work across Mac, iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.” While not totally clear, this could mean the creation of “super universal” apps which work across all iOS and Mac devices. Right now, “universal” apps are those optimized to work with iPhone, iPod touch and iPad. This move would undoubtedly lead to the Mac App Store offering hundreds of thousands of apps instead of the roughly 10,000 currently available.

In conjunction with the announcement, Apple also released a video tour of OS X Mountain Lion:

You can read the full press release by clicking here.

Audio Webcast Of Tim Cook At Goldman Sachs Technology & Internet Conference

Editor’s Note: You can listen to an audio recording of Tim Cook’s remarks by clicking here.

For the fourth time, Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, will speak at the Goldman Sachs Technology and Internet Conference at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco. This year will be the first time Mr. Cook will do so as the CEO of the world’s largest company by market capitalization.

Apple is making a live audio webcast of Mr. Cook’s remarks available on its website. You can access the webpage by clicking here. His presentation is scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m. PST tomorrow, 2/14.

‘iTunes U’ Puts College In Your Pocket

iTunes U from Apple

The world of iTunes U is overwhelming. Almost to a fault. But it’s kind of hard to complain about an overabundance of available material and information, so I won’t.

What iTunes U does is give users access to online course offerings, video lectures, audio snippets, and lots of other college-y things from their computers, iPads and iPhones. And it’s really, really cool.

There’s so much content that it really is a bit difficult to navigate your way through the vast catalogs, but, as with most other academic research, once you find some things that interest you or that you’re looking for, it’s incredibly rewarding. Turns out learning things is fun, and having access to so many things to learn about on a mobile platform is really satisfying.

iTunes U has content from hundreds of institutions of higher learning from around the world, meaning there’s courses and lectures in dozens of languages. These institutions aren’t just junior colleges or online trade schools, there are classes from some pretty serious schools on here (Yale, Harvard, Oxford, UC Berkeley, University of Chicago).

The app, however, is not without its flaws. Part of the reason why the amount of content is overwhelming is that not all of it is actually online courses and lectures. There’s a huge amount of videos put out by college admissions offices looking to lure in prospective students, and some of the ‘classes’ and ‘lectures’ advertised are just five minute blurbs on a particular subject.

Aside from that though, there’s some seriously killer stuff in the catalog. I was able to watch an hour long sit-down talk with two of my favorite contemporary authors (Michael Ondaatje and Michael Chabon) at the UC Berkeley library talking about everything from Louis Armstrong to Busby Berkeley. It’s things like that that really make iTunes U an awesome app not just for college students or individuals looking to further their education, but for anybody that likes to learn more about the things they like.

Read our other app reviews by clicking here.

AppPicker rating: 4 / 5 Stars
App Store link: iTunes U 

The Textbook Revolution Has Begun With iBooks 2


Click here to watch on YouTube

There is no doubt Apple has revolutionized the world. From the way we communicate, listen to music, use the computer and play games. Now it is changing the way we learn with its latest update to iBooks which introduced iBooks 2. This next generation of iBooks gives users the ability to download textbooks, for a fraction of the cost publishers charge for the hard copies. Although the app is universal, iBooks 2 is only available for use on iPads.

When I was in school (keep in mind I only graduated two and a half yeas ago) I would go online, check websites to find the cheapest place I could buy my books, use them occasionally for class, then at the end of the semester try and sell them back to the school for about one tenth of the price I paid for it. Not only did I waste significant amounts of time, I wasted money and not to mention paper on a book that would become obsolete once the newer version came out.

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Apple’s Fiscal First Quarter 2012 Financial Results Highlights

Apple Store in Grand Central Terminal in New York

The Apple juggernaut today announced blockbuster sale figures continuing its domination of the mobile landscape in late 2011. The results covered 14 weeks ending December 31, 2011.

Here are the highlights from Apple’s financial results:

• Revenue: $46.33 billion (a record) vs. $26.74 billion in the year-ago quarter
• Net Profit: $13.06 billion (a record) vs. $6 billion in the year-ago quarter
• Gross Margin: 44.7% vs. 38.5% in the year-ago quarter

Here are the highlights of device sales:

• 37.04 million iPhones, 128% growth over year-ago quarter
• 15.45 million iPads, 111% growth over year-ago quarter
• 5.2 million Macs, 26% growth over year-ago quarter
• 15.4 million iPods, 21% decline versus year-ago quarter

Miscellaneous tidbits:

• 140 million iTunes downloads on 12/25/2011
• 600,000 downloads of iBooks Author since its release on January 19, 2012
• 3 million downloads of iTunes U since its release on January 19, 2012
• 315 million iOS devices sold since inception
• $700 million paid to app developers in fiscal first quarter 2012
• $97.6 billion in cash held as of 12/31/2011

Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO, had this to say in a press release:

“We’re thrilled with our outstanding results and record-breaking sales of iPhones, iPads and Macs. Apple’s momentum is incredibly strong, and we have some amazing new products in the pipeline.”

42% of the quarter’s revenue came from the U.S. Apple’s unaudited financial data summary is available here.

Apple’s Education Media Event Video Now Available

Apple just made available the video of today’s education media event held at the Guggenheim Museum in New York. Apple revealed a number of education focused initiatives including two new apps, an update to an existing one and the availability of interactive textbooks for iOS devices. Read our full story here.

You can watch the keynote address video on Apple’s website by clicking here.

Apple has also made available a seven minute video about the impact textbooks on iPad will have in the educational field:


Click here to watch on YouTube

Apple Launches Barrage Of Education Focused Apps, Upends Textbook Industry

Apple today held a special media event to unveil several initiatives aimed at upending the textbook industry and making educational content widely accessible via apps and iOS devices. After all was said and done, two new apps were introduced and one overhauled to bring textbooks into the mobile industry and with it a cooperative publishing community.

Here’s a recap of the major announcements from Apple today:

* iBooks Author app: This free Mac app (App Store link) gives users the ability to create multi-touch books for iPad. This app is not limited strictly for textbook creation. To the contrary, Apple envisions ordinary people using the iBooks Author app to create cookbooks, history books, picture books and more for iPad. More importantly, books created via iBooks Author can be submitted to the iBookstore for sale or free download.

This is what Apple had to say about iBooks Author in its press release:

“iBooks Author is also available today as a free download from the Mac App Store and lets anyone with a Mac create stunning iBooks textbooks, cookbooks, history books, picture books and more, and publish them to Apple’s iBookstore. Authors and publishers of any size can start creating with Apple-designed templates that feature a wide variety of page layouts. iBooks Author lets you add your own text and images by simply dragging and dropping, and with the Multi-Touch™ widgets you can easily add interactive photo galleries, movies, Keynote® presentations and 3D objects.”

* iTunes U app: This free universal (optimized for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad) app (App Store link) provides access to complete courses from participating universities. The app is integrating much of the content available through the former standalone iTunes U including over 500,000 free lectures, books, and other resources.

This is what Apple had to say about the iTunes U app in its press release:

“The all-new iTunes U app lets teachers create and manage courses including essential components such as lectures, assignments, books, quizzes and syllabuses and offer them to millions of iOS users around the world. The iTunes U app gives iOS users access to the world’s largest catalog of free educational content from top universities including Cambridge, Duke, Harvard, Oxford and Stanford, and starting today any K-12 school district can offer full courses through the iTunes U app.”

* iBooks 2.0: iBooks app (App Store link) has been updated to include the availability of textbooks filled with interactive features, diagrams, photos and videos. All textbooks will be available for purchase for $14.99 or less. Significantly, the three largest textbooks publishers support this initiative.

This is what Apple had to say about iBooks 2.0 in its press release:

“Leading education services companies including Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, McGraw-Hill and Pearson will deliver educational titles on the iBookstore with most priced at $14.99 or less, and with the new iBooks Author, a free authoring tool available today, anyone with a Mac® can create stunning iBooks textbooks.”

In my opinion, the most significant announcement is iBooks Author. iBooks Author will do for books what the App Store did for apps. All of a sudden, anybody with the iBooks Author app and an idea can publish a book and make it available for free or sale in the iBookStore. Moreover, the hurdles to create a book are lower than an app since creating an app requires technical skills. Creating a book, on the other hand, with the iBooks Author app requires only an idea and decent writing skills.

It will be very interesting to see how the inventory of books available in the iBookstore swells over the coming months. It will be significant.

App Store links:
iBooks Author
iTunes U
iBooks 2.0