Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts

New Apple TV Hardware With Siri, App Store And HomeKit Said To Be Planned For WWDC

(GNN) - Apple had Apple TV news at its most recent special event, but it wasn’t the new Apple TV hardware some expected.

That refresh is coming in June at WWDC, however, according to Buzzfeed’s John Paczkowski, and alongside it we’ll finally see an App Store for the set-top box, as well as an official SDK, Siri support,

increased onboard storage and HomeKit support for passing on Siri instructions to connected home devices.

The new hardware from Apple makes a lot of sense in terms of timing: A price drop of the existing Apple TV was announced at the most recent event, providing the basis for clearance of existing inventory in preparation for a new model. Apple also announced a key step in a move towards Apple TV acting as a true replacement for, rather than just a complement to, existing satellite and cable TV services, thanks to the launch of HBO Now, a $15/month HBO streaming service available independent of any existing subscriptions.

Apple is already planning to launch a new streaming video service  complete with access to live broadcast channels and with pricing undercutting many cable packages in the fall with a summer unveil, according to recent reports. And we’ve heard that a new streaming music service, built on Beats Music but sporting iTunes branding, will launch in June as well. In other words, all the ingredients are coming together for WWDC to act as a media-focused special event, in addition to its role as a developer conference.

An Apple TV SDK, which would debut as part of this new hardware refresh, and help populate a new App Store, is another good reason for it to break cover at WWDC, as is the support for HomeKit-enabled devices. Using this new Apple TV, owners would be able to issue voice commands via Siri to accessories participating in Apple’s HomeKit program, which has been announced but not yet properly launched in terms of consumer availability just yet. It’s another big development platform that Apple could highlight at WWDC.

I wouldn’t be surprised if new Apple TV hardware also incorporated some kind of Apple Watch hook, in the form of a remote app for additional voice/gesture control options, so keep an eye out for that as well. It’s beginning to sound like the Apple TV could be poised to make an even bigger splash than the wearable, however, given how potentially disruptive of existing media markets it could be with this slate of new features, streaming services and third-party app support.

Apple declined to comment on this report.

Callr Releases A Mobile App To Make Conference Calls Less Of A Hassle

(GNN) - Do you hate conference calls? Do you hate having a thing just appear on your calendar with some sort of dial-in information that you always forget and then you have to go to your calendar with phone in hand and dial some numbers and then wait for a digital voice to welcome you and ask for a code and then you have to dial some more numbers? And if at any point you get any of it wrong, you have to go back and try to get the numbers right again?


Well, a startup called Callr has solved at least some of those problems — namely the need to search for, find and dial those elusive conference call numbers yourself. And now it has an iOS app and an Android app that will make it even easier for you to manage calls you’re scheduled to make.

Callr works like this: You hook it into your calendar and it automatically ingests all the details for upcoming calls. Then, when it comes time for your meeting to start, Callr dials into your meeting for you, then calls your phone and instantly connects you.

Callr saves you at least a few minutes of fumbling with dial-in codes and whatnot, and also makes sure you dial in to your meeting on time. (Actually, it generally dials you in a minute before a meeting starts, just to make you look good.) If you happen to miss a call, or can’t pick up at the very moment a call starts, Callr allows you to just call it back and it will automatically connect you to your conference.

Anyway, it’s been one of my favorite new tools ever since I started using it a few months ago. And with its new mobile apps, Callr is making managing conference calls even easier.


The main advantage to the app is that it gets new users signed up faster, since it can simply connect with the phone’s calendar to ingest meetings. It also provides more granular tools around snoozing calls if you can’t pick up right at the time they happen. Finally, Callr on your smartphone will allow deep linking with meetings that are supposed to happen on Skype, allowing users to quickly get connected through the messaging platform’s mobile app.

While Callr has only been available for the last four months, it’s connected 14,000 calls for users, according to Callr founder Mike Endale. (It doesn’t count calls that aren’t connected.) And people are actually listening in on those calls. Endale says the average call lasts 17 minutes after users are connected.

Anyway, the Callr app. Try it. It’s awesome.

Would You Buy A Rugged Case Kit For The Apple Watch?

(GNN) - Of all the complications that will worry the outer rim of Apple Watch buyers’ minds, the question of whether they need to purchase a case to protectively encase their expensive wrist-wear is perhaps the most frivolous.

On the surface it sounds ludicrous.

Who keeps a watch inside a case when it’s attached to their person? And yet the Apple Watch is really a very small wrist computer, with a price-tag that ranges right up to the luxury end of the market. To $10,000, or even $17,000.

It’s also intended as a multipurpose device, with fitness tracking functionality rubbing up against notifications and comms, with some ostentatious bling thrown in (at least if you’re shelling out for 18-karat gold). So it’s supposed to track you when you sweat through a half marathon and then remain on your wrist during that fancy dinner. Same device, different aspects.

Add to that, given that keeping your smartphone in a protective case is well-established behavior, the notion of similarly encasing a smartwatch is only really a small step away.

And so enter device case-maker, Lunatik, with a plan to build and sell ruggedized cases for the Apple Watch. It’s been working on this accessory since Apple officially unveiled its smartwatch last fall, using a mechanism previously patented for encasing the iPod Nano when worn on the wrist. The metal case is being designed to protect without limiting access to the various controls and sensors on the watch.

The forthcoming Epik Apple Watch Kit is only in prototype form at this point (with the latest samples pictured pictured below) — the team is aiming for a shipping timeframe of three months after the Apple Watch itself comes to market at the end of April, so circa summer.

Lunatik founder Scott Wilson says the intention is to test the market for this Apple Watch accessory, via a crowdfunding campaign. So it’s ready to admit it might have misjudged the madness of the moment.

And quite possibly it has.
But if someone is crazy enough to spend $15,000 on a smartwatch, what’s another $99 to $149 on a ruggedized case-plus-strap combo which promises to keep a few scratches off your investment?

Wearable technology is most relevant in situations where a phone interaction is not accessible or ideal. Sport, fitness and extreme conditions are a few of these occasions,” argues Wilson. “They also require more physically enhanced and purpose-built design to endure these extreme conditions.”


The aluminum Epik face case will apparently include hydrophobic vents for “an added layer of dust and water ingress protection”. It will also come with a custom plastic band strap, so you can leave your fancy leather/linked Apple Watch band at home when you hit the trail.

Wilson also talks up the personalization angle as a selling point for third party Apple Watch cases — given that wearable tech can’t help but elbow into the fashion space. So this is also about offering choice to appeal to personal taste, identity and style.

Which is another way of saying that a naked Cupertino-made Apple Watch might not look brawny enough for some folk. And those guys might actually prefer to put a rugged rim on it.

Sparrow Flies Away, As Google Finally Pulls iOS And Mac Email Apps From Apple’s Stores

(GNN) - As Google sharpens the focus on its new Inbox email app, the company has quietly made another move on the email front: it appears to have pulled the Sparrow iOS and Mac apps from their respective Apple App Stores.

Google, as you may remember, acquired the French startup Sparrow, including its staff, its email management apps and its technology, back in 2012.

Google’s last cache of an active page for the $2.99 iOS app was made on February 12, while the $9.99 Mac app was last seen on February 13, and the free Mac app Sparrow Lite was also last seen February 12. Right now, if you really want it, you can still download Sparrow for Mac directly from Sparrow’s own web site.

Inbox — the “smart” email app that helps you manage your inbox — got a mainly positive review from us when it launched in October 2014. It has been in a closed, invite-only service since then, with occasional, strategic openings of the floodgates to let in more users quickly. In January, Google released some early stats about usage that noted 70% of early adopters were Android users, and how many people were using its other features like “Snooze” to read later, Highlights and Bundles.

Sparrow flying away for good shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise, but it has been a long time coming. At the time of Google’s acquisition in 2012, reportedly for under $25 million, Sparrow/Google more or less stopped big developments but kept the apps operational and pledged support for existing users.

“While we’ll be working on new things at Google, we will continue to make Sparrow available and provide support for our users,” co-founder and CEO Dom Leca wrote on the site’s homepage at the time of the acquisition. The sale to Google saw a lot of backlash and lament about the eventual fate of the apps.

At the time of the sale, Sparrow was one of the most popular iPhone utility apps. When it first launched on iOS, people praised it for offering a simple, easy-to-use, gesture-based email management service, managing to create what Apple itself, and Google, had completely failed to do for email on the iPhone. It managed to hold on to is high ranking for months after the sale to Google without any apparent effort, before eventually tumbling into neglected obscurity, ending as the 842nd most downloaded app, according to AppAnnie.

The last update to the iOS app was made in October 2013, to add iOS 7 compatibility; it never added iOS 8 support. Sparrow/Google also played around a bit with the price, changing it from $2.99 to $4.99 at one point. The Mac apps never got updated.)

Meanwhile, former Sparrow team members joined Google. Some, such as product designer Jean-Marc Denis, went specifically to work on Inbox. And many other competing email apps have been launched and updated in the meantime. Currently, Gmail and Yahoo Mail are in Apple’s overall ranking of most-popular free apps.

Now it appears that with Google’s bigger push to make Inbox is clear Gmail alternative, Google has done some of its infamous and regular spring cleaning. (Could it be that Google’s on a mini-spree: just last week, Google shut down Helpouts, a Hangouts-based service where you could pay to get people to help you with tasks over its video conferencing service.)

We have reached out to Google, and the Sparrow support email, to ask for further details and will update this post as we learn more.

Apple Patents A VR Headset For iPhone

(GNN) - Apple has been awarded a patent by the USPTO (via AppleInsider) for a head-mounted virtual reality set that uses an iPhone as the display and computing component.

The patent describes something similar to both Google Cardboard and Samsung’s Gear VR, but with an insert built specifically to accommodate an iPhone, and with an optional remote that could be used to control the VR experience without having to deal with headset- or phone-based inputs.

Apple’s original patent application dates back to 2008, meaning it has been considering the worth of such a project since long before either Gear VR or Cardboard was announced. The patent still works in a very similar manner, however, and includes provisions for using the iPhone screen as the screen for the VR as well as designs which would include docking electronics in the VR headset that could dictate a mode shift on the iPhone to switch to VR content display.

In the detailed description of the invention, Apple stipulates different accessories and hardware features that could be built into its headset, including spare batteries for more power, physical control inputs including buttons, switches and touch-enabled surfaces, a cooling system and even additional on-board memory for media storage.

While third-parties have been eager to try to create a Cardboard-like system for use with the iPhone, including the Zeiss VR One, the Pinc VR headset and variants on Cardboard created by third-party accessory makers like DODOcase, Apple building its own unit would likely exceed all of these in terms of stability and software support.

On the other hand, Apple hasn’t shown much interest in exploring VR tech thus far, and a profile of  Apple design chief Jony Ive from this past weekend revealed that the company considered eyewear but went for the wrist with the Apple Watch instead as its first foray into wearable tech. The patent indicates that Apple has considered VR and how it relates to its mobile devices, but that’s probably as far as things will progress, at least for the foreseeable future.

Apple’s R&D Department Conjures A Pop-Up iPhone Home Button Joystick

(AsiaTimes.ga) Apple has a new patent application that describes a pop-up home button which can work as an analog joystick. The patent, uncovered by Patently Apple, describes how the button goes from recessed standard mode to extended gameplay-readiness based on specific types of pressure input.

The patent acknowledges that touch screens may not be optimal for all gaming situations, and also stipulates that use of a hardware controller like the convertible home button will prevent a user’s fingers from obscuring visible screen area.

The patent includes drawings of an iPhone 6-style smartphone, which features the standard home button configuration.

But when a user puts enough force on the home button (more than just a standard click) it can extend to just a bit beyond the surface of the display, giving it leeway to move left, right, up and down and accept input on the x- and y- axis, as well as the z-axis (a downward press from above, the only directional input supported by the current home button design). Switching back is as simple as pressing down on the home button hard enough to lock it back into place.

Other patent details include the possibility of adding additional sensors to the home button mechanism, including a force sensor, an accelerometer, a gyroscope, a contact sensor, and optical sensor, a capacitive sensor, an ultrasonic sensor and more.

That could make it a very comprehensive input device, which can detect more than a standard analog stick you might find on, say, a PlayStation controller.

It’s a brilliant design if executed correctly, but I suspect there’s a lot standing in the way of this being introduced in any imminent products, if only because the Home button is also sacred territory these days because of the Touch ID sensor, and building both into a chassis so thin seems like a big mechanical challenge. Still, it’s good to know Apple is thinking about unique ways to better serve gamers, even if only in theory.

Google’s Copresence Looks Like A Cross-Platform AirDrop

GNN - Google has a new service in the works that could allow users of Android devices to share media with others nearby, even if those users are rocking iOS devices like iPhone and iPads instead of gadgets running Google’s mobile OS. The so-called Copresence feature, revealed by an Android Police source digging around in the latest Google Play Services APK, would allow devices to use location information or Bluetooth to authenticate based on proximity, without requiring contact list approval as does Android Beam.

The Copresence feature would then share information using either Wi-Fi or Wi-Fi direct to actually shunt info back and forth, and would enable the sharing of maps, music, photos, websites and more, and would likely sport a strong integration with its Hangouts chat application, based on the graphics uncovered in the Services APK. It would make a lot of sense to see this housed in the Hangouts app itself, too, but there’s also an API for Chrome that’s been revealed previously, and Google has a broad patent, so this, like the Cast function for Chromecast, could be something that we see made available to developers to include in their own software on an app-by-app basis.

Apple’s AirDrop on iOS allows for sharing between iOS devices that are near one another, across networks and with the option of sharing beyond your address book, but it doesn’t allow for sharing between ecosystems. The iOS 8 update and Yosemite mean that it can now shuttle things between mobile and desktop, but you still have to be an Apple device user to partake. Google’s Copresence feature would apparently go beyond that limitation, in the same way that its Chromecast abilities extend to the iOS ecosystem, while AirPlay remains an Apple-only affair.

According to Android Police, Google Copresence will debut sometime in “the coming weeks,” so hopefully we don’t have to wait long to get our hands on what looks like a very useful feature. With the release of Google’s next-gen mobile OS Android 5.0 Lollipop just around the corner, it sounds like a good time for Copresence to make its debut.

Y Combinator’s Doblet Plans To Be Everywhere Your Phone Charger Isn’t

#GNN Tech - We’ve all been there. You’ve been out all day and suddenly that low battery alert pops up on your phone.
If you’re lucky, the bar you’re at might have the right charger for your phone behind the counter. If you’re not, you’re walking or taking the bus instead of calling a car service.

But with Y Combinator-backed Doblet, you might be able to get a charge even when you don’t have an outlet. The startup is putting portable batteries that charge Android and iPhone 5 phones in bars, restaurants and coffee shops. Users have the option of paying either $3 for a single charge or $30 for an annual subscription to the service and unlimited charges.

To use Doblet, you download an app for iOS or Android that shows you where the nearest charging vendors are. Then you ask for a charger, and you’ll get the portable battery device. You then pay for the Doblet service on the app, and you’re free to move around with your Doblet and bring it back at a later time.

Gurson joked that Doblet was the realization of Stephen Colbert’s dream of ambient phone charging, a project he suggested when Elon Musk appeared on his show in July.

“I would have a subscription service to a charging system, and that anywhere I went in the United States, there would be a charge that would follow me around,” Colbert joked.

Musk said we’ll do it, but it seems Jeff Chang and Doktor Gurson have beaten him to it.

Doblet soft-launched at three locations this weekend, but by the end of September, the founders expect it to be available at about 50 San Francisco locations.

The co-founders tell me when the service first launches, they’ll even come get the Doblet from you if you’re at another location in San Francisco.

Chang and Gurson both took unique paths to Y Combinator. Chang skipped several years of school and graduated from New York University School of Medicine at just age 20. He previously worked as a radiologist and most recently received a master’s degree in artificial intelligence. Gurson describes himself as a “serial entrepreneur,” and previously worked in web hosting startups.

Gurson told me he first got the idea for Doblet when a man with a dying phone approached him in a bar and asked him if he had a charger. Gurson said only if you give me $2. The man laughed and walked away, but later that night Gurson saw him again and he said he ended up spending $15 on a new phone charger.

“He came up to me later and said he definitely should have given me $2,” Gurson said.

Even though I’m constantly killing my own phone battery, I was skeptical of the $30 annual subscription fee. That’s around the same cost as buying your own portable battery, and you can always just throw your phone charger in your bag for free.

But Chang and Gurson of Doblet say their technology sets itself apart because often people forget those additional devices or don’t remember to charge spare batteries or charging cases. In my personal experience, they’re right.

They also say it differs from existing services like the stands at airports or the lockers available at some retail stores that let you charge your phone because you can move around with a Doblet and use your phone while it’s charging, rather than being tied to a stand or leaving your phone in a locker to charge.

The location-based app that shows users where to find nearby vendors offering the service when their phones are dying could also drive new customers to bars and restaurants. Businesses additionally receive a cut of the profit Doblet makes when they have it available to their customers.

Hopefully the next time my battery starts to die, Doblet will be around.

IMAGE BY DOBLET (IMAGE HAS BEEN MODIFIED)

Which Apps Are Eating Your Battery? Normal Will Tell You. - #GNN Tech

Somewhere, somehow, maybe less than a year after I got the latest version of my iPhone, its battery would mysteriously deplete in about half a day.
I wasn’t really sure why. But now I can find out.

There’s a new app called ‘Normal’ out from a pair of Stanford Ph.Ds in computer science named Adam Oliner and Jacob Leverich, who are turning some postdoctoral research into a company called Kuro Labs.

Their first project, Normal, is a battery diagnosis service that tracks and compares your app usage to other iOS device owners to see if there are any specific actions you can take to save battery life. The 99 cent app compares your phone’s battery usage over time with other people who have similar combinations of apps.

Hence, the name ‘Normal’ — is your phone’s battery life normal compared to other devices that are the exact same model?

“Battery is a pain point and there are not good solutions,” Oliner said. “The device doesn’t tell you everything you need to know. Why is it using so much energy? Is that normal or not? That’s what we’re trying to adjust.”

When you go inside Normal, you’ll see active apps, inactive battery hogs and other apps. For each app, there is a ring chart that will show you how much battery life you’ll save if you close a specific app.

So for instance, if I shut Facebook’s mobile app off, Normal estimates that I’ll save 26 minutes and 47 seconds of battery life. Or if I close inactive apps running in the background like Instagram, I’ll save an hour and seven minutes.

Certain apps can be re-configured to use up less battery. Oliner says Pinterest, for example, is not normally a battery hog but there are a few configurations that make it more energy intensive. There’s a screen inside the app that will tell you if a specific app is behaving normally compared to other identical apps on other smartphones.

The app is based on a project Oliner led at UC Berkeley that eventually became an app called Carat. The concept seems almost identical. That older app would quietly take measurements from your device, combine that data it with other people’s anonymized usage metrics, and then send back tips on whether to update your OS or kill or restart apps.

Now that Oliner is finished with postdoc work, he decided to start a new bootstrapped company with Leverich called Kuro Labs that may spin out more similar concepts. He hinted at looking at laptops or tablets.

“The closest analogous company is something like Bugsense, which diagnoses crashes,” he said. “But we’re doing energy instead.”

#GNN - #Apple to store some user data in #China: Weighing the pros and cons

#Summary: Apple's move to store some of its Chinese users' data in the country has benefits — and drawbacks — for its customers.
Apple has started to store some of its Chinese users' data on servers in mainland China, becoming one of the very few technology giants to store information on Chinese soil.

It's a step away from its rivals, like Google and Microsoft, which tend to shy away from storing data in the country due to its policies on censorship and past accusations of state-sponsored hacking and spying.

Apple said it made the move in order to speed up its iCloud service to users in the country, and increase reliability across the board, according to the Reuters news agency.

China remains increasingly important to the company's bottom line, as it continues to drive the company's strong quarterly revenue. The iPhone and iPad maker's fiscal third-quarter results showed China accounted for about 16 percent of the company's global revenue, thanks to a bump in iPhone sales — its predominant profit driver — in the country.

But skeptics are already questioning whether or not the data-storing approach may harm its business, in light of the nation state's past (and ongoing) practices.

Here's what you need to know:

  1. The data will be held by China Telecom, the country's third-largest wireless carrier — though, the data will be encrypted. The carrier will not have access to the data, Apple said.
  2. Encryption keys for iCloud, which lets users store their music, photos, documents, and other data from their iPhone, iPad, or Mac, will be stored offshore by Apple.
  3. China Telecom is state-owned, but remains a strong partner for Apple. It was a key partner in getting the iPhone to market in the country, which at the time was stalling its iPhone profit growth.

Apple will remain the custodian of the encryption keys. But because Apple conducts business in China, it still has to abide by data requests by law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
Reports suggest that the move was twofold: to make iCloud faster and more reliable for its users, but also because the company was facing a crackdown by the Chinese authorities that may have seen it penalized for failing to store data within grabbing-reach of the state.

It follows Russia's recent steps to force companies to store Russian data on its soil, which would make it significantly easier for Moscow to conduct surveillance on its citizens.

Russia and China, two of the last remaining communist states, remain at arms length from the rest of the G7 and the United Nations due to these practices.

But it may not alleviate concerns that China may be able to grab data when it wants, for any given reason.

China's policies and practices on state surveillance, government censorship, and extraterritorial hacking have been widely criticized by Western nations. Google refuses to store data in China after it was hacked by Beijing in 2011, leading to the search giant pulling out of the country altogether.

Apple has in recent months become one of the pinnacles of user privacy, particularly in the wake of the Edward Snowden disclosures. Although Apple denied any knowledge of the PRISM surveillance system during a time in which its transparency levels were at an all-time low, many remain skeptical of how much access the US government has to Apple's networks.

In the wake of the disclosures, Apple issued its first transparency report with a "warrant canary," to show before-the-fact if a wide-ranging warrant for its customers' data had been received.

Apple also devises its messaging systems to be encrypted to the point where, according to reports, even the company cannot access the data — making it impossible to hand over that data to the US government and other nation states. Search warrants can still be served on the company. It's not clear if there are master encryption keys to allow Apple's general counsel or custodian of the records to hand over data in a law enforcement or national security emergency.

That said, trust in the wider Silicon Valley technology scene has been shaken by the scope of state surveillance.

For now, it seems like the fairest compromise. Though the data may be stored in China, it's said to be unreadable by its carrier partner — and therefore also unreadable by Beijing. With Apple storing the encryption keys, it may be the best-case scenario for everyone.

Mozilla shows off flexible RAM on $170 #Firefox OS Flame

#GNN - #Summary: #Mozilla is still shipping its reference #phone for developers that want to reach consumers on low-spec Firefox OS devices.
Most consumers probably want a smartphone with more RAM, but the highlight of Mozilla's newish Flame handset is that it lets developers dial it down when they want.

Building a mobile ecosystem in the shadow of iOS and Android seems an impossibly tough task, but Mozilla is pressing ahead with its effort to encourage developers to build HTML5 apps for low-cost devices chiefly aimed at emerging markets.

Since May, developers could pre-order the first official Firefox OS reference phone, Flame, which Mozilla started shipping in July when the preorder period expired. The company on Thursday decided to re-announce the fact it was shipping the Flame, coupled with a new blog outlining how developers could use it.

The $170 Flame is an unlocked dual-SIM 3G touch phone with 1GB of RAM, a 1.2GHZ dual-core processor, a 4.5-inch 854x480 pixel screen, and comes with a five-megapixel rear camera and two-megapixel secondary one.

As Chris Heilman, Mozilla's principal evangelist for HTML5, notes, Flame's 1GB RAM makes it good for daily use, but not exactly representative of commercially available Firefox devices. While Geeksphone's dual-boot Revolution shared similar specs to the Flame, it was aimed only at developers and, without carrier distribution, was technically not classified as a Firefox OS phone.

Devices carrying the Firefox OS brand are markedly different from the Flame, such as Alcatel's One Touch Fire, which has 256MB RAM or ZTE Open C with 512MB RAM.

Meanwhile, other ultra-cheap and presumably low-specced Firefox OS devices are due soon include one from Chinese maker Spreadtrum. They're aimed at emerging markets including India, Indonesia, and China.

So, the news from Mozilla yesterday is actually a set of new instructions explaining how developers can use ADB to wind back the Flame's 1GB RAM to test how their app would perform on a device with 256MB, for example.

Mozilla's attempt to break into the mobile market comes as Android OEMs increasingly aim to push down prices, while Microsoft is angling for a way to bring would-be Nokia 130 consumers over to its lower-end Lumia phones. (GNN)(ZDNET)(AIP)

Vine Competitor Groopie Lets #Vloggers Create #TV-Style #Shows Together

#GNN - #YouTube stars are more popular among today’s U.S. teens than Hollywood celebs, a recent study found. Hoping to capitalize on this trend, a new social video network called Groopie has just launched on iPhone, allowing the next generation of vloggers to record video shows with friends, which may include both scripted and unscripted content.

The L.A. and San Francisco-based startup was founded by Fuad Hawit, whose entrepreneurial drive was influenced by his father Andre, a longtime tech startup founder, who sold IDS Software Systems for $50 million in 2003, and later co-founded companies with his son, including gSoft, makers of an early Siri-like mobile assistant, and audio ad network Mixberry Media.

But Groopie is Fuad’s first solo effort, he says.

The idea for the app came to him in the pre-Vine days, he says, after watching reality TV and realizing the similarities between that style of programming and today’s social media. He envisioned a service that would let vloggers create video “episodes” together, which would be like independently produced reality TV shows.

An early prototype of the Groopie application allowed multiple users to record video from different locations (even flipping between front and back cameras seamlessly), then merge those videos into one. But unlike competitors who offer mobile video “stitching” apps, or apps like Vine which ask you to start and stop your video shoots in order to tell your story, Groopie works a bit differently, says Hawit.

How It Works: Not Stitching, But “Sync”

“Every other video editing tool is doing it like film-style, where they’re stitching multiple shots together,” he explains. “You have to be a director or script writer to be able to tell a story through multiple video shots…and the rest of those guys come from a desktop video ideology,” says Hawit.

Competitors are offering tools to do effects with video, or overlays, stitching tools, and more, he says.

“We kept it really simple…it’s not technically stitching. It’s real-time synchronization. You’re merging two real-time perspectives.”

That is, with Groopie, friends can shoot the episode at the same time, then merge their videos together with a built-in editing tool where you can select which camera angle and audio source you want to use for each shot in order to create one continuous video.

Despite the slight learning curve involved, the process is simple enough for Groupie to already have kids as users, as with the 2nd-grader Alex whose “The Little Alex Show” is already 21 episodes deep.The company has been running a private beta for the past 6 months, and has signed up 100 testers (Apple’s limit). These include a dozen or so YouTubers, and a couple of reality stars (from the shows “Shahs of Sunset” and “Bad Girls Club”). The current lineup of shows includes reality-style video programming as well as few more scripted shows.

Groopie users each get their own profile which lets them feature their shows, each of which can have an unlimited number of episodes. This setup lets viewers follow the individual shows they like, as opposed to a vlogger’s whole channel. Shows can be shared to Facebook and Twitter, but not published to YouTube, which is by design for this startup itching to become the “YouTube of mobile.”
 
 Hawit doesn’t really see Groopie as being disruptive to YouTube, however. But he could see it becoming more like Vine as another place for vlogger stars to grow their audiences.

These video creators already know each other, record Vines together and do shout-outs on YouTube, he says.

“They already work together…with Groopie, they can combine followers.

That’s going to be stronger than a broadcast channel,” he says. “You take users who have 1 million followers each and you put them together on a TV show – that’s going to be extremely powerful.”


Groopie is backed by $350,000 in funding, from unnamed Zynga, PayPal and Apple angel investors, and others.

The app itself still feels a little rough around the edges in terms of its design, and the content itself is nowhere near as polished as what you’d find on YouTube. But it’s still the early days.

Groopie is free here on iTunes.

Apple’s #iPhone Event Said To Be Happening Sept. 9

#GNN - #Apple is said to be preparing for a September 9 iPhone event this year, at which we’ll likely see the next generation iPhone devices, according to Re/Code’s John Paczkowski.
The date would be in keeping with past iPhone launches, and early reports suggest we’ll see the company reveal larger-screened iPhone devices on that day. Typically, Apple holds its event and then releases devices to the public a little over a week later after first launching pre-orders.

We’ve heard that Apple will be unveiling at least devices with 4.7-inch screens, and perhaps smartphones with even larger, 5.5-inch displays as well at this event, though it isn’t yet clear that both will launch at the same time. A range of other rumors surround the new devices, including evidence of all-metal designs for both models, as well as the possible introduction of new barometer, temperature and humidity sensors and support for near-field communications (NFC).

Apple will likely make iOS 8 available to consumers coincident with the iPhone 6 launch, so an update pushed live for users of existing devices should be available around that time, too. We’ll also learn whether Apple provides any hardware-specific features in iOS 8 designed exclusively for the next generation of iPhone, and whatever new capabilities it may pack within.

We’ve reached out to Apple for confirmation and will update if we receive any additional information.

Update: Bloomberg and WSJ are now also reporting the Sept. 9 date, making it virtually a lock at this point.

Trendy Chipotle burritos show how pricing power belongs to the hip

#GNN - Corporate America can learn a lot from a chicken burrito. As many companies struggle to boost prices without alienating consumers, they may want to study Mexican-food chain Chipotle, which has managed to do both.
Companies including Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc (CMG.N), Apple Inc (AAPL.O) and PepsiCo (PEP.N) have shown they're able to take advantage of quality, trendiness, and, in the case of Pepsi's snack foods, market dominance, to maintain high prices or even raise them faster than the inflation rate, now at about 2.1 percent in the U.S. Chipotle raised chicken-dish prices by 5 percent this year after leaving them untouched since 2011, and sales went up 29 percent last quarter.

The Denver-based Mexican food specialist "has done a great job cultivating a brand that commands pricing power," especially among millennials, who are mainly people in their 20s, said Morningstar analyst R.J. Hottovy. "They've developed a very loyal following."

As the U.S. economy remains sluggish - full-year growth may now struggle to reach 2 percent – other companies such as mass market automaker Hyundai Motor Co (005380.KS) have felt the squeeze, with earnings under pressure from deep discounting in the U.S.

Hershey Co (HSY.N) is raising candy bar and other product prices by an average of eight percent because of higher cocoa and dairy costs, even as it acknowledges the move will hurt its short-term sales. M&M maker Mars is following suit with a 7 percent increase.

Chipotle is prospering even as it raises prices on burritos that are already expensive – about twice as much as those sold by Taco Bell (YUM.N). Besides its naturally-raised meats and organic ingredients such as beans and avocados, the company occupies the center of fast-casual dining - the booming "sweet spot of the restaurant industry," according to Hottovy - in which customers order at a counter but eat quality products inside a hip space.

And Chipotle is still growing. The chain runs about 1,700 restaurants in the U.S., and analyst Stephen Anderson at Miller Tabak estimates that it could grow to 3,100, expanding in less populated areas beyond its urban strongholds.

Chipotle hadn't raised menu prices for three years, but the higher cost of ingredients compelled it to roll out up to a 6.5 percent average increase in the second quarter.

To be sure, the hike did not go unnoticed: some customers said goodbye to steak burritos because their price jumped on average 4 percentage points more than Chipotle's chicken-based dishes, the company said.

Other fast food chains haven't fared as well. Dunkin' Brands Group Inc (DNKN.O) cut its outlook for the year on Thursday, while quarterly profit fell more than expected at McDonald's Corp (MCD.N).

The world's largest hamburger seller and other fast food chains have become "hooked" on discounting, Anderson said. While they built their reputations by delivering quick bites, new menu additions have often slowed their service, frustrating customers.

"What [McDonald's needs] to do is further simplify the menu. It is too operationally complex, and I think that leaves a lot of potential for errors," Anderson said.

In the last year, McDonald's converted its dollar menu to a "$1-plus" selection in its roughly 14,000 U.S. restaurants, but Anderson says increased competition both from convenience stores and the likes of Chipotle hurt its sales.

Still, the tepid economy has mostly made consumers reluctant to spend on food, analysts say. In the absence of robust market growth, only the best and trendiest stand out, sometimes thanks to a more affluent customer cohort.

Chipotle patrons tend to earn more than McDonald's customers, said Dan Greenhaus, the chief strategist at BTIG, making them "more tolerant" of higher prices.

DIVERSE PRICE COMMANDERS
Another pricing powerhouse, Apple, has studiously cultivated its high-end aura for years, and its iPhones and iPads continue to command a higher price tag on average than its rivals. In 2013, the company briefly turned to discounting to fend off competition by Samsung Electronics Co (005930.KS), but analysts say Apple has so far stuck to its knitting in 2014 – save for recent price cuts on its MacBook Air and iPod Touch.

"Do they have a price premium [compared to the] competition? Absolutely," said Cross Research co-founder and analyst Shannon Cross. While she explained that Apple has refrained from hiking prices except when major currency movements occur, she said, "In the consumer electronics world, keeping pricing flat is impressive."

Apple has now exceeded Wall Street gross-margin projections for three straight quarters – topping forecasts for around 37 percent with near-40 percent gross margins in the June quarter, as reported Tuesday - which contributed to its fastest earnings-per-share growth in seven quarters.

PepsiCo recently succeeded in raising prices, too.

Second-quarter sales rose 5 percent in its snack business and 2 percent for beverages, both buoyed by price increases. New product launches and inflation in regions such as Latin America caused the hikes, the company said.

"For the balance of the year we feel comfortable that we can sustain pricing," PepsiCo chairman and CEO Indra Nooyi said Wednesday in a conference call.

At Coca-Cola Co (KO.N), on the other hand, juice drink sales slowed after it raised prices to account for higher ingredient costs, the company said. Coke has no presence in the snack business, a fragmented market that PepsiCo dominates, according to Owen Fitzpatrick, head of U.S. equities at Deutsche Bank Asset and Wealth Management.

"Snack foods are growing in terms of consumption, but when you look at carbonated soft drinks, people are moving away from them," Fitzpatrick said.

Pepsi's snack strides suggest another source of pricing power: market dominance. Airline consolidation and fewer flights have also allowed for a steady increase in prices in that industry, according to Fitzpatrick.

Yet competition is the reality that most face. While U.S. companies are hiring - the government said unemployment had reached a six-year low in June - many consumers still lack the confidence to spend unless a business truly gives them value.

"If the [business] concept is old and tired, people just stop going to them," Anderson said.

(GNN,Reuters,AIP)(Additional reporting by Edwin Chan in San Francisco and Anjali Athavaley in New York. Editing by John Pickering)

#FBI #investigates Ford #engineer after listening #devices found

#GNN - A former Ford Motor Co engineer is being investigated by the FBI after listening devices were found in meeting rooms at company offices, the automaker said on Friday.
"Ford and the FBI are working together on a joint investigation involving a former employee," Ford spokeswoman Susan Krusel said. "As this is an ongoing investigation, we are not able to provide additional details."

The Federal Bureau of Investigation served a search warrant at Ford offices on July 11, the company cooperated, and agents left with eight listening devices, an FBI spokesman said.

Documents filed with the U.S. District Court for Eastern Michigan showing what was seized by the FBI at Ford and at the engineer's residence show
that eight Sansa recording devices were taken from Ford offices.

Three weeks earlier, the FBI served a warrant on the residence of the engineer, Sharon Leach, in Wyandotte in suburban Detroit, court records show.

Seized from the residence, according to documents filed by the FBI with the district court, were four laptop computers and a desktop computer, along with three USB drives, financial records, some documents from Leach's employer and one T-Mobile Google telephone.

A third warrant was served to Google Inc, asking for records of Leach's email account including emails sent to and from her account as well as drafts of emails and deleted information associated with the email account but still available to Google, according to court documents.

Google supplied several items, including a video disk marked as a reply to the search warrant and a cover letter, according to court documents. Google sent the items by overnight delivery on Wednesday, court documents show.

However, the court documents did not show the contents of the disk or other information supplied by Google.

"Ford initiated an investigation of a now former employee and requested the assistance of the FBI," Ford spokeswoman Krusel said.

The Detroit News, which first reported the investigation early Friday, said Leach worked for Ford for 17 years and was a mechanical engineer.

No charges have been filed against Leach, 43, the paper said.

Calls to Leach's attorney, Marshall Tauber, were not returned on Friday.

Leach placed the devices under tables in meeting rooms to enable her to transcribe what was said for her own use and did not intend to share the recordings with anyone, the newspaper cited Tauber as saying.

The devices were not installed in rooms where the company's board of directors would meet, the report said.

(Reuters)(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; Editing by Bernadette Baum, Dan Grebler and James Dalgleish)