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China Mobile Plan to Open App Store Expansion To Rival Apple

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China Mobile is planning to open its mobile app store to the whole of China next year, according to China Daily, in a move that will put it into direct competition with Apple, Android and other app stores in the country.

The expansion will see the operator — which, with more than 620 million subscribers, is the world’s largest — make its Mobile Market store available to all domestic mobile phones users in China, including those outside of its network. Additionally, it is introducing English language support to encourage new users outside of its usual reach within the country.
Mobile Market, which opened in August 2009, currently has 138 million registered users who have made more than 590 million downloads from the store as of last month, according to the China Daily article. The store includes applications for a range of different device but it stands out for its potential to rival Apple, as well as Android.
The move comes as China Mobile’s negotiations with Apple about carrying the iPhone hit a snag over the operator’s instance on a share of app revenues in the country.
While the move is a significant blow for Apple, which will now face fiercer competition for app downloads in the fast-growing Chinese market, it could provide a solution to the current impasse. Despite the issues, China Mobile revealed this week that it expects to be in a position to offer the iPhone in June 2012, after it has concluded testing of its 4G network.
Android could also feel the effects of increased competition with Mobile Market too. Although it is seeing increasing shipments in Asia, the Google-owned operating system has had difficulties in China, which included access issues to Android Market, its official app store, last month.
The vast majority of mobile application downloads in China come from unofficial app stores but there is no doubt that the increased reach of China Mobile’s app store is likely to bring more developers and applications to its platform, which could entice more users.
Although China Mobile doesn’t have a partnership with Apple, its 10 million iPhone owners have played a large part in helping Mobile Market grow into the world’s largest Chinese application store, with an impressive 138 million registered users and applications from more than 2.8 million developers.




source : http://thenextweb.com/asia/2011/11/17/china-mobile-plans-app-store-expansion-to-rival-apple-android/

How Steve Jobs & Apple Change World Music Industry

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During this decade of uncertainty and instability for the music industry, Apple has remained one of few companies that has managed to nail it. Apple has conquered nearly every musical endeavor that it attempted (the only exceptions being its social networking efforts with Ping and its decision to shutter Lala upon acquisition).
Over the past decade-plus, Apple has succeeded in redefining and reinventing certain aspects of the music industry. In particular, Steve Jobs helped create music products and services that impacted four particular areas.

1. Musical Consumption Patterns


It’s hard to imagine life without the iPod today. Although it wasn’t the first portable MP3 player released, the iPod extracted the best elements from its early competitors, and morphed them into a product that defined portable technology and changed the way listeners experience music.
People everywhere began to analyze the device’s impact on consumption patterns. For starters, the iPod meant that a listener could hear any song in his library at any time. This allowed users to create their own personal soundtracks, instead of being constrained by a particular time, place or media.
“I remember the first day I got an iPod,” The Postelles’ David Dargahi recalls. “I was on the crosstown bus in Manhattan during a snow storm and had a sudden urge to listen to some Bob Marley. Needless to stay it brightened up my mood and showed me the power of the iPod.”
In addition, iPods impacted the format of the musical experience. The user could now purchase individual songs and subsequently shuffle through a several-thousand song library. We could hear any given song at any given time with the click of a button. Therefore, records in their classic sense were deconstructed. No longer was the album a mandated listening requirement – playing the duration of a full-length release became an option, not a necessity. As a result, the iPod empowered the single track more than ever before, simultaneously diminishing the impact of the full-length album.

2. Accessibility of Recording and Production Tools


To put it simply, Apple leveled the playing field. The barrier between writing songs, recording and production lessened with the advent of affordable, easy-to-use software programs like Logic and GarageBand. The former became an industry standard for professional audio engineers, while the latter offered an entry into the recording and production world for amateurs. As these programs became available, the lines blurred between professional recording artists and bedroom musicians.
Dave Yang, singer and guitarist of the New York indie-rock group Extra Arms, is a testament to Apple’s impact on emerging musicians. “I’ve now recorded hundreds of songs on Apple computers, and GarageBand taught me basic recording engineering that got me started,” he explains. “Steve Jobs leveled the playing field for who could make music or art, and allowed me to get my voice out.”
Without Apple’s innovations, Warm Ghost’s Paul Duncan doubts his music would sound the same. “I’m not sure I would be making the same music if I hadn’t started using Macs to record,” he says. “It can be a cheap way to make a record, which has not just changed the artist’s relationship to music, but music’s relationship to the world and vice versa (for better or worse).”

3. Online Retail and Distribution Models


While many of Steve Jobs and Apple’s services revolutionized the music industry over the past decade, few have made as profound an impact as now eight-year-old iTunes.
In 2003, Apple launched iTunes and sold single MP3s for $0.99 each. From that point forward, Apple grew the platform into a widely successful and profitable effort, eventually becoming the number one music retailer in the United States.
iTunes stood out among the early online music retailers and has continued to serve as a model for all other Internet media distributors. By being the first online distributor to secure deals with all four major corporate record labels (Universal, Sony, Warner Music Group and EMI), iTunes effectively legitimized digital music sales following the proliferation of illegal sharing sites like Napster.
Since then, iTunes has continued to exist as one of the most stable entities in the far-from-certain territory of online music sales.

4. Live Electronic Performance Becomes Reliable


Before Apple, reliable processing for live electronics was a crapshoot. Granted, PCs have long been used to process effects, sample instrumentation and help electronic artists perform their music live. However, Apple computers like the PowerBook and MacBook became staples at shows, garnering a reputation for their reliability.
Brooklyn electronic musician J. Viewz heavily relies on Apple to craft his works. “Live, I use a MacBook Pro with Ableton,” he says. “In the studio on a Mac pro, Cubase & After Effects.” Viewz is one of countless musicians now dependent on Apple products to manufacture and refine his sound.




source : http://mashable.com/2011/10/11/apple-changed-music

Apple i-Phone 4S Price Specification

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Announced in the very same room as 2001's original iPod, Apple's new iPhone 4S runs on the new iOS 5 platform and is powered by the company's new dual-core A5 chip, that's said to be twice as fast as its predecessor. Mobile gamers will no doubt be pleased to hear that the included dual-core graphics are up to seven times faster than before. The new smartphone's battery life is claimed to offer either eight hours of 3G talk time, six hours of browsing, nine hours on Wi-Fi, ten hours of video playback, or 40 hours of music.
As the rumor-mill predicted, the 4S features a new 8 megapixel camera sensor (in actuality a 3264 x 2448 pixel resolution, backside illuminated CMOS sensor). There's a hybrid IR filter for more accurate colors and a five element f/2.4 aperture lens for 30 percent sharper images. The sensor also caters for full 1080p high definition video recording with image stabilization and noise reduction. Users can line up a shot using optional onscreen grid lines, and the new Photo app allows for simple in-device editing - such as crop, rotate, enhance and red-eye removal.


Access to the camera has been simplified - users just need to double-tap on the home screen to activate the new camera app, and use the volume up button as a shutter release. A new Apple-designed Image Signal Processor caters for face detection, improved white balance, and it sees the camera ready for its first shot in just 1.1 seconds (in only 0.5 seconds, the next one can be captured).

Improved call quality and voice control

Apple says that intelligent switching between the transmit and receive antennas results in much improved call quality, and users are no longer asked to choose between GSM or CDMA networks, as the 4S supports both. Theoretical data download capabilities have been doubled to up to 14.4 Mbps with HSDPA, with uplink remaining the same as the iPhone 4 at 5.8 Mbps. The 4S has also been treated to AirPlay Mirroring, which allows gamers to throw the device's image onto the big screen - wired or wireless.
As previously mentioned, perhaps most impressive of all the new features is an Intelligent Assistant named Siri, which uses sophisticated voice recognition technology to do your bidding. Press down the onscreen icon and speak to Siri via the phone's microphone, then everything from the local real-time weather to checking stocks and shares to setting appointments, alarms and reminders to searching online for information, is made available via vocal commands.
Apple has also included a beta version Dictation feature that currently supports U.S., UK and Australian flavors of English, along with French and German, with more languages to follow in the near future.

Pricing and availability

Pre-orders for the new iPhone 4S will start on October 7, with U.S., Canada, Australia, UK, France, Germany, and Japan getting first bite on October 14. Verizon, AT&T and Sprint have all been confirmed as U.S. carriers and both black and white versions will cost US$199 for the 16GB model, US$299 for the 32GB version and US$399 for the 64GB flavor (with a 2-year contract).
Another 22 countries (including Mexico, Singapore and most of the rest of Europe) will take delivery from October 28, and the 4S will be available in 70 countries by the year's end.

In other news...

The Apple team also highlighted a few of the 200 plus new features in the new iOS 5 platform - including an interruption-free, swipe down Notification Center, a new iMessage service for sending and receiving text messages, photos and videos between iOS device users, location-aware Reminders, the Newsstand feature with background downloading of latest subscribed issues, and wireless, PC-free updates. There's also an update to the Safari browser that brings tabbed browsing to the iPad and new reader functionality with device sync. iOS 5 will be available from October 12.
Apple is also launching its iCloud services on October 12, including Find My Friends, where you can view the locations of friends who've opted to share - useful for guiding lost guests to your new house. iTunes in the Cloud comes with iTunes Match, that scans your own music library, upgrades matched songs to 256kbps AAC file format, and places the matched files into iTunes - all for US$24.99 per year (available in the U.S. from the end of this month). iCloud comes with 5GB of online storage free for iOS/OS X Lion users, with more available at a price.


more on http://www.gizmag.com/apple-launches-iphone-4s/20046/