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Apple launches online store in Russia

Apple has launched its own online store in Russia. Previously all online sales of Apple products in that country had been done through third-party vendors. However, as MacRumors points out, Apple was reportedly unhappy with Russia's third-party distribution networks. Rumors of Apple launching its own online store in Russia surfaced last year. There are also rumors that Apple is planning to launch retail stores in the country, which would make sense as Russia is the ninth most populous country on the planet.

Apple Accidentally Reveals Updated iOS 7 Icons, Later Removes

Just around a week ago, Apple unveiled iOS 7 at WWDC 2013. Although, Apple unveiled a major design overhaul in iOS 7, the company was still working on the iOS 7 icons in order to provide a more better looks. A couple of days ago, Apple uploaded the redesign of some of the icons on its official iOS 7 page, but later it removed.

iOS 7 Icons

Customer satisfaction is Apple’s one of the biggest priority. After viewing the design of some of the icons or the overall look of the iO7 at WWDC 2013, many people were not impressed. So Apple emphasized itself to make better icons as well as the overall look of the iO7. Apple has extremely worked on the Weather, Passbook, and Reminders app icon whose looks are completely different from what was shown during WWDC.

But the interesting thing is Apple has removed the modified icons from its website. Such removal has created a lot of speculations. Some people are speculating that the icons uploaded might actually be from an older design, while others speculate that this could be an updated design.

As the website says “iOS 7 Coming this fall,” that means Apple has still time to work on redesigning the icons or the overall look of the iO7. All secrets will be revealed as soon as Apple releases iOS 7.

Elevatr helps you build a booming startup

People with an entrepreneurial streak should run with Elevatr on their phone so they don't miss those moments of inspiration. Elevatr is a free-form note-taking app with a business plan focus.
The app lets you create a note with fields for your business idea, the target market, product details, business model and execution. Each field has sub-fields that help you organize your ideas. For example, the section for defining your market includes fields for you to add details on the target market, the competition and your idea's competitive advantage.
Elevatr can store your ideas locally, or you can sign up for an account to store them in the cloud and share them with others. The app now is a single-user productivity tool, but the company has plans to add collaboration to the app. With its slick look and feel, Elevatr is definitely worth the storage space on your iPhone.
Elevatr is available for free from the iOS App Store.

The Apple iBooks Origin Story

steve_jobs_ibooks
How’s this for irony: Steve Jobs was initially opposed to entering the e-book market over which Apple is now sparring with the U.S. Department of Justice in a Manhattan federal court.
Testifying in the DOJ’s e-book price-fixing case Thursday, Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet software and services, said that when he first approached Jobs with the idea of a bookstore in the fall of 2009, the Apple co-founder dismissed it.
“He wasn’t interested,” Cue said. “Steve never felt that the Mac or the iPhone were ideal reading devices. In the case of the phone, the screen was smaller, and in the case of the Mac, you had this keyboard and device, and it didn’t feel like a book.”
But as Apple began ramping up for the launch of the iPad, Cue broached the idea again, and Jobs had a change of heart.
“… When I got my first chance to touch the iPad, I became completely convinced that this was a huge opportunity for us to build the best e-reader that the market had ever seen,” Cue said. “And so I went to Steve and told him why I thought [the iPad] was going to be a great device for ebooks. … and after some discussions he came back and said, you know, I think you’re right. I think this is great, and then he started coming up with ideas himself about what he wanted to do with it and how it would be even better as a reader and store.”
That was the “good part,” Cue explained, and it inspired Apple to approach publishers about selling their e-book titles. But there was a “bad part,” as well: Timing.
“This was in November,” said Cue. “We were launching the iPad in January. And so Steve said, ‘you can go do this, but you’ve got to get it done by January. … I want to be able to demo it onstage.’ And so that was the sort of challenge presented to me.”
And a challenge that Cue took upon himself to complete not just for Apple and the promise of a new revenue stream, but for Jobs, whose health was in decline at the time.
“Steve was near the end of his life when we were launching the iPad, and he was really proud of it,” Cue said. “He was working hard on it. I believed that iBooks was going to be a tremendous feature of the product. People were going to love it; our customers were just going to go wild about iPad and iBooks, and I wanted to be able to get that done in time for [the event] because it was really important to him. … I like getting my work done and I pride myself on being successful, but this had extra meaning to me.”

Here's Comcast's Version of Apple TV

We still don’t know what the “real” Apple TV will look like, but by now we’ve seen a lot of other people’s versions of Apple TV: Everyone from heavyweights like Microsoft to upstarts like Roku are pushing boxes and software that meld traditional TV with Web video.
And Comcast, the country’s biggest pay TV provider, says it will do the same thing, along with lots of other ideas you’ve seen elsewhere: Voice control, integration with third-party apps like Pandora, “social TV” features, etc.
Here’s Comcast CEO Brian Roberts previewing his company’s upcoming “X2″ platform yesterday at the cable industry’s annual convention. If you want to save time, you can skip the preamble and move ahead to the 3:48 mark. And if you’re in a real rush, you can skip the video entirely and skim the press release.

The one thing that X2 won’t do, of course, is give customers the ability to watch TV without paying for a TV subscription, or let them break the TV bundle into smaller chunks, so that people who don’t care about sports don’t need to pay for ESPN, etc.
But then again, none of the pay TV outsiders who want to wrest control of your living room from Comcast have done that, either — not even Google.
Improving the TV’s interface is an engineering problem that you can solve with time and talent; remaking the TV business is the truly difficult task.

What Does a Bing-Powered Siri Mean for Google?

Apple said on Tuesday that Bing would be the default search engine in the upcoming iOS 7.
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It’s the latest prying apart of Google services from default placement on Apple devices, following YouTube and Google Maps.

Here’s what going on: If you ask Siri a question that it cannot answer with its pre-programmed system, the virtual personal assistant tries Web search.
Currently, Siri defaults to the user’s preferred Safari search engine, which is set by default to Google but can be changed to Yahoo or Bing.
But with the debut of iOS 7, Siri search will default to Bing instead. Not only will it use Microsoft’s search index to answer all queries that it can’t quickly answer on its own, it will skip the “would you like me to search the Web” interim step entirely.
Caveat: You can force Siri to search Google by asking it to do so — “search Google for smartphones.” But that requires an explicit command, one that adds an additional layer of complexity to a voice interface that’s supposed to be intuitive.
So, with Siri’s next iteration, Google search has very clearly been pushed to the side. And that’s worth noting. Because while Siri might not be widely used to search the Web today, it likely will be soon. The speech recognition and natural language technology that underlies Siri is the future of search. Indeed, Google itself is on record saying as much.
If voice is the future of search, and Bing becomes Siri’s go-to search engine come fall, what does that mean for Google and its place in iOS? What happens when Google is no longer the middleman for all those search results it currently monetizes on iOS? There’s far too little information available currently to really say. But those are questions worth asking. Because come fall, the last place where Google services will remain the default on iOS will be in the search bar for mobile Safari.
Signalling the tensions underlying this simple switcheroo, Google and Apple representatives declined to comment on the matter, even to clarify what exactly was happening. Microsoft Bing VP Derrick Connell said in a blog post, “Making sure customers can have access to the power of Bing where and when they need it has been a big focus of the work we have done over the past few years, and we are excited to work with Apple to deliver it to Siri users this fall.”
Less than a month ago, a Windows 8 advertisement made fun of Siri with the slogan “Less talking, more doing.”

iBooks Finally Comes to Mac Users

Although Apple’s WWDC 2013 event was primarily focused on major announcements regarding the iOS 7 and OS X releases, the company also made other announcements which were very significant. For instance, Apple announced that it is finally bringing the popular iBooks reading app to the Mac machines.

iBooks for Mac

Apple released iBooks app some three years ago and since then, it has mustered significant popularity among iOS users. The app was initially released for iOS users only and Mac users have long been asking Apple to bring it over to Mac machines too.

Now, much to the delight of Mac users, Apple has finally decided to bring ‘iBooks’ to Mac users. The original ‘iBooks’ offers a whole lot of features such as notes, textbooks and highlights. And Apple has assured that when porting the app to Mac, all these features will remain intact.

For avid readers of e-books, the best thing about iBooks is that you can even purchases books straight from the app. Moreover, since the app is supported on iCloud, you can leave the book mid-way on one iOS device or Mac machine and then resume it from that very spot at another iOS device or Mac machine.

Apple Finally Unveils Its Music Streaming Service – iTunes Radio

We have been hearing rumors of a possible music streaming service from Apple for some time. First it was reported that Apple was gearing up for the service and later, we were told that the company was speeding up the signing of licensing deals. Confirming these speculations, Apple has unveiled iTunes Radio.
iTunes Radio
Just like we’ve been speculating, Apple has indeed planned on leveraging its iOS audience to make the new iTunes Radio a success. There are already a whole lot of internet music streaming services out there on the web and Apple needed a defining feature to stand apart.

And that defining feature is that Apple has directly built iTunes Radio into the music app of iOS 7. This essentially means that users can directly access the internet radio from within their apps, without the need to install an altogether different app for the service.

From the looks of it, Apple has been fairly successful in bringing an adequate number of music artists and production houses on board. The iTunes Radio offers hundreds of music stations of its own and the music offered over these stations is from some of the best artists and bands.

The best part, naturally, is that the app is free, although Apple will regularly push out ads on the app. However, you can get rid of the ads by subscribing to iTunes Match service, for which you will have to pay a paltry sum. For now, Apple is offering the new iTunes Radio only in US but plans on bringing it to other countries in the coming days.a

iOS 7 App Store Gets Automatic Updates, Location-Based Recommendations

Apple‘s apps marketplace, the App Store, is the top collection of best apps around the entire smartphone ecosystem. However, iOS users have been asking Apple for certain updates and features to be added to the Store. With the changes brought to iOS 7 that Apple just unveiled at WWDC 2013, the App Store has also been equipped with automatic updates and other features.

App Store

One of key problems that iOS users have been facing with their apps is that they needed to go check App Store every once in a while to ensure that their iOS apps are up to date. This often resulted in users missing out on key updates or installing them a little too late.

Apple has solved this problem by adding automatic app updates to the App Store. Through this feature, users will receive regular alerts whenever an app update is available and can even avail the option of automatically updating the app on a regular basis.

Another major feature that Apple has pushed to the App Store is that you can now get recommendations from the Store, based on your location. For instance, if you are out on the Caribbeans and the App Store has an app featuring information related to beaches, it may recommend you to install the app. Such recommendations can come in pretty handy because you would no longer need to search for relevant apps every time.

Apple has also added a Kids category to the store, letting you find the right kind of apps for your kids, based on his/her exact age. This section may have little appeal for now, but as more vendors bring their kids-specific apps to the Store, it may grow.

The Apple Store is down

The Apple store is down
Another WWDC, another liveblog and some downtime for the Apple Store, as it hopefully prepares for new things. The site's currently out of action for us -- we'll let you know if we spot anything new when it returns.

SimCity for Mac pushed back to August

SimCity for Mac pushed back to August
To put it mildly, the EA Maxis team has learned a few hard lessons about launching only when ready. The company is putting that theory into practice: it's delaying the launch of SimCity for Mac from June 11th to August. The OS X version just isn't "ready for primetime," the company says. As compensation, all Mac buyers will get access to the recent Launch Park bonus that they'd otherwise miss. And Windows users, you're still getting some TLC -- EA Maxis has detailed the impending Update 5 release, which both fixes some bugs while delivering big improvements to chat and trading. While SimCity still hasn't shaken its rocky reputation, it's clear that the developers are determined to (eventually) set things right.

New and notable apps for iOS and OS X - June 7, 2013 edition

It's always busy in the App Store with a never ending flood of new apps landing on iOS and OS X. Take a few minutes and check out our list of standout titles from the past few weeks!

New iOS Apps

  • HeartPhys [iPad; Category: Medical; $4.99] Learn physiology through interactive diagrams
  • Total Domination - Reborn [iOS Universal; Category: Games; Free] The best MMO strategy game is now available for iOS.
  • PGA Tour Caddie [iOS Universal; Category: Sports; Free]TOURCaddie is a comprehensive GPS-based, course management, scoring and golf instruction app.
  • CC: Stand-Up[iOS Universal; Category: Entertainment; Free]The CC:Stand-Up app is finally here, giving you free access to Comedy Central's massive library of stand-up from your favorite comedians.
  • Adobe Kuler [iPhone; Category: Photography & Video; Free]Adobe® Kuler lets you capture color inspiration anywhere you find it.
  • Mextures [iPhone; Category: Photography & Video; $0.99]Mextures is the best app for applying film grain, textures, light leaks and beautiful gradients to your images in seconds.
  • Musyc [iOS Universal; Category: Music; Free] Musyc is a fun and innovative music application where touch turns into music.
  • Stilly: One Button Gif Camera For Tumblr and Messages[iPhone; Category: Photography & Video; $1.99] Create animated photos with the push of a button for Messages (iMessage or SMS) and Tumblr.
  • WWDC [iOS Universal; Category: Reference; Free] Make the most of the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference with the WWDC app.
  • Felix for App.net iPad edition [iPad; Category: Social Networking; $4.99] One of the most popular App.net apps for iPhone is now available for the iPad.Crisp, elegant and feature-rich, Felix is the best way to chat with your friends - and meet new ones! - on ADN.
  • Dispatch: Action-Based Email [iPhone; Category: Business; $2.99] Dispatch makes it easy to act on mails even when you're on the move.
  • Camera Noir - B+W Photography [iPhone; Category: Photography & Video; $1.99] Take stunning black and white photographs with Camera Noir, a new app from Pacific Helm.
  • Quick Drafts for iPad - Notes, To-Do, Errands and Shopping List [iPad; Category: Productivity; $2.99] Capture and share your ideas with Quick Drafts for iPad. Easy, fast and reliable.
  • Vesper [iPhone; Category: Productivity; $4.99] Vesper is a simple and elegant tool for collecting notes, ideas, things to do - anything you want to remember.
  • VSCO Cam [iPhone; Category: Photography & Video; Free]Utilizing our innovative processing technology, VSCO Cam yields elegant results for your mobile photos.
  • Analog Camera [iPhone; Category: Photography & Video; $0.99] Analog Camera - the fastest and easiest way to take, process and share photos.
  • World War Z [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $4.99] Get dropped into the middle of the World War Z chaos.
  • Word Shift [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $2.99] Word Shift is a tile-swapping word game.
  • Sparkle 2 [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $2.99] Challenge the darkness with your swift orb matching skills, mighty magical enchantments and earthshaking powerups.
  • Bridgy Jones [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $0.99] Use your bridge building abilities to help Bridgy Jones and his mangy mutt Bonner drive their locomotive safely across ravines, chasms, rivers and gorges.
  • Scurvy Scallywags [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $0.99] A musical match-3 RPG brimming with pirates, ships, loot, and more gold than you can shake your rusty hook at.
  • 9th Dawn [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $2.99] We are proud to present 9th Dawn, a game that's a blend of modern and traditional design and gameplay and sports the largest open world experience available today in a mobile RPG.
  • Cubemen2 [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $1.99] Cubemen 2 is a fast paced, action packed, original 3D Strategy game where you use your little Cubemen units to defend and attack enemies in a range of awesome game modes.
  • Kingdom Rush Frontiers [iPhone; Category: Games; $2.99]Bigger and badder than ever before, Kingdom Rush: Frontiers is a whole new level of the furiously fast, enchantingly charming gameplay that made the original title an award-winning hit.
  • Kingdom Rush Frontiers HD [iPad; Category: Games; $4.99]Bigger and badder than ever before, Kingdom Rush: Frontiers is a whole new level of the furiously fast, enchantingly charming gameplay that made the original title an award-winning hit.
  • Defense Technica [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $0.99]Experience a new kind of Defense game with Defense Technica, featuring stunning 3D graphics and ground-breaking new features like path rotation, tower construction, tower upgrades, and card collection and combination.
  • Little Luca [iOS Universal; Category: Games; ;$0.99] Little Luca is a simple and addictively fun physics-based puzzle game with retro inspired graphics and an original 8-bit inspired soundtrack.
  • SlamBots [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $1.99] SLAM your way through swarms of evil robots in this action packed arena battle game.
  • Starship Battles [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $1.99] Take control of formidable warships to defend the galaxy against an infinite force of relentless aliens.
  • Chock A Block [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $0.99] Chock A Block is a sliding block, colour matching puzzle game with an added twist.
  • Incredible Jack [iOS Universal; Category: Games; $0.99] Set out on an incredible journey in this classic game full of old school platform action.
  • Ace Attorney: Phoenix Wright Trilogy HD [iOS Universal; Category: Games; Free] Defend the innocent and save the day.

New OS X Apps

  • InstaReel for Instagram [OS X; Category: Social Networking; $6.99] InstaReel is a beautifully crafted app that makes it easy to browse your Instagram photo feed, like/comment on images and discover amazing new content through its powerful search.
  • Airmail [OS X; Category: Productivity; $1.99] Introducing Airmail - the powerful mail client with a minimal design and intuitive interaction.
  • CamioCam [OS X; Category: Utilities; Free] Turn your Mac into a free security camera that alerts you anywhere.
  • DocWallet [OS X; Category: Productivity; Free] DocWallet is your personal document lock box on the Mac, iPad and PC.
  • Pixel Mate [OS X; Category: Graphics & Design; $4.99] Pixel mate is a strong and functional pixel editor.It offers you a highly accurate representation of how a design will show on the Web and the computer.
  • Vitamin-R 2 [OS X; Category: Business; $29.99] Vitamin-R creates optimal conditions for your brain by structuring your work into short bursts of distraction-free, highly-focused activity alternating with opportunities for renewal, reflection and intuition.
  • PutOn [OS X; Category: Utilities; Free] PutOn is a file transfer app such as photos, texts, or contacts between iPhone and Mac.

New report claims Apple’s ‘iPhone mini’ could launch next month

iPhone Mini Release Date
In another unlikely report from Taiwan, Topeka Capital Markets analyst claims that Apple’s new entry-level “iPhone mini” may launch as soon next month. The analyst has been meeting with contacts in the Far East over the past five days, and he says that the cheaper iPhone may launch in July with a new design featuring a “subtle tapered” plastic shell available in five colors. Leaked photos that supposedly show the casing from the upcoming cheaper iPhone fit White’s description.
“Regarding Apple, we uncovered more data points around the ‘iPhone mini’ (i.e., lower priced iPhone) that suggest a launch is imminent and possibly in July,” the analyst wrote in a note to clients on Friday. “We spotted an ‘iPhone mini’ accessory at today’s show. Essentially, the ‘iPhone mini’ body is slightly thicker than the iPhone 5 and the four corners have a more tapered rounding, the edges are less defined but the length is identical (including a four-inch display). Also, as we indicated earlier this week, the ‘iPhone mini’ is expected to come in five colors (i.e., white, black, pink, blue and yellow) and the back will be made of plastic.”
He expects the new cheaper iPhone to cost between $350 and $400 before taxes and subsidies.
White has had some big hits in the past — he was one of the first to share details about Apple’s iPad mini ahead of its launch last year, for example, and he was the first person in the world to suggest that Apple’s iPhone 5S will ship with new color options, which looks like it may pan out— but more recent dispatches have been curious at best. Among them was the recent claim that Apple will soon launch an HDTV controlled by an “iRing.”

Apple’s iRadio service reportedly ready for launch as last label inks deal

Apple Sony iRadio Agreement
A new report claims that Apple has signed a licensing deal for its upcoming iRadio service with the last major label that was holding out — according to AllThingsD, the company has come to terms with Sony. Apple is now said to have agreements in place with the three major music labels, Universal Music, Warner Music and Sony, and is expected to unveil the new service at its Worldwide Developer Conference on Monday. An earlier report suggested that Apple was also close to signing a licensing agreement with BMG Rights Management, the fourth largest music publisher. Apple’s iRadio service is rumored to be a hybrid Web and radio service with features similar to those offered by Pandora and Spotify, and it may also include an iAd tie-in. WWDC is scheduled to kick off at 1:00 p.m. EDT.

New Dropbox for Mac Beta Incorporates iPhoto, Screenshot Sharing

New Dropbox for Mac Beta Incorporates iPhoto, Screenshot Sharing
Today Dropbox released a new beta version of its desktop app for both Mac and Windows with a couple of small but really useful features for their many cloud-oriented users.

First up is iPhoto import integration (for Mac users only, obviously). Every time you import photos via iPhoto version 7.0 or later, Dropbox will automatically upload those photos to a folder of your choice for quick and easy backup and sharing.

There are two other small features. Move to Dropbox will let you right-click on any file and move the selected file, you guessed it, into your Dropbox with just one click. Lastly, Screenshot to Dropbox will place any screenshot you take right in the Dropbox and automatically copy it to your clipboard.

Oh, and Dropbox is claiming "much faster upload/download speeds for large files." These are tiny additions but ones that will be much appreciated for the small but glorious improvements to productivity for the everyday user. Download the beta here! [Cult of Mac]

Apple’s Almost Certainly Got New MacBook Airs at WWDC

Report: Apple’s Almost Certainly Got New MacBook Airs at WWDC
Compounding previous reports of global stock shortages of Apple’s slim-line MacBook Airs, plus the rumoured product numbers we saw the other day, now some leaked pricing supposedly points directly to a new MacBook Airs.

9to5Mac reports that it managed to get a sneaky peek at the pricing for the previously leaked SKUs, which confirms that they are indeed for four new MacBook Airs in a pair of spec levels for the two screen sizes, 11 and 13-inch.

The site also has it that the new MacBook Airs will come packing the new, faster Wi-Fi spec, 802.11ac, with supposedly some new Airport and Time Capsules on their way to support the next-generation wireless standard too.

Who knows whether all this is true or not — treat with scepticism for now — but it certainly looks probable. At least probable enough to warrant delaying a purchase of any new ultrabooks until after Apple’s keynote at WWDC on Monday evening next week. [9to5Mac]

iPhones can apparently be hacked with malicious charger


New exploit attacks iPhone via 30-pin charging cable - Jason O'Grady

Researchers from Georgia Tech have uncovered a way to hack into an iPhone or iPad in less than a minute using a "malicious charger." The group plans to present its findings at the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas on July 27, 2013. 
Billy Lau, Yeongjin Jang and Chengyu Song are presenting a session is called "Mactans: Injecting Malware Into iOS Devices Via Malicious Chargers" at the popular security conference next month. The name "Mactans" comes from Latrodectus Mactans, the  highly venomous (and deadly) black widow spider.
According to the synopsis on the Black Hat website, the Mactans session will describe how USB capabilities can be leveraged to bypass Apple's defense mechanisms built into the iPhone.
To demonstrate practical application of these vulnerabilities, we built a proof of concept malicious charger, called Mactans, using a BeagleBoard. This hardware was selected to demonstrate the ease with which innocent-looking, malicious USB chargers can be constructed. 
BeagleBoard is a low-power open-source hardware single-board computer produced by Texas Instruments in association with Digi-Key.
Perhaps the most amazing aspect of the exploit is that it doesn't require the device to be jailbroken and it can be performed in under a minute according to the team. It also doesn't require a physical access to the device, except for the charger that is. While it would be unusual for dock cables to be left out in public (the things cost almost $20 each), a restaurant or coffee shop could leave some charging cables out for patrons to use (although I've only seen this a couple of times).
I suppose a malicious individual could carry a hacked cable and wait for people to ask to borrow it, but this is a long shot at best. And besides, a dock cable connected to a BeagleBoard would look suspicious to anyone borrowing a cable from a stranger. Details on the hack are slim ahead of the conference but the researchers suggest that someone with more resources could be much more malicious:
While Mactans was built with [a] limited amount of time and a small budget, we also briefly consider what more motivated, well-funded adversaries could accomplish.
Besides setting up a fake "charging station" in a public place, one use case could be a dock cable connected to a "battery" with a BeagleBoard hidden inside. I guess the moral of the story is not to be promiscuous with your iPhone and iPad charging, at least until the details of the hack are released next month. 

It’s Always Sunny in iOS

iOS 7 Preview
A warm front swept through the Mid-Atlantic region late last week and drove the temperature up into the nineties. It was humid and uncomfortable in New York City, but in iOS it was 73° and sunny. In the dead of winter as snow blankets the Northeast, and during sweltering summers while heat waves test our patience and our power grids, it’s always 73° and sunny in iOS. The perpetually perfect weather displayed on the iPhone’s Weather app icon is actually a profoundly apropos representation of the state of iOS itself. As other mobile platforms have continued to evolve over the past few years, iOS has in many ways remained static. And so an important question is raised as we prepare for WWDC next week: When will Apple’s smartphone finally start getting smarter again?
I’m worried about iOS 7. According to claims from several well-sourced reporters, iOS 7 is going to feature a pretty significant visual redesign that is flatter and more minimal. Apple more or less confirmed as much earlier this week. If this is in fact the case, it’s fantastic news — not because there’s anything wrong with the current user interface per se, but because after six years it’s time for something fresh. Apple is apparently working so hard on this redesign that it has pulled engineers off of OS X to help the iOS team finish on time.
As great as the new face of Apple’s mobile platform sounds, I sincerely hope Apple is also putting significant time and effort into developing some impressive and useful new features that will debut in iOS 7, because if we stop to think about it, it has been quite some time since Apple’s mobile platform really got any smarter.
I have been an iPhone owner since Apple’s first smartphone launched in 2007. I always carry multiple smartphones with me — an occupational hazard — but for nearly six years now, one of the phones in my pocket has been an iPhone.
Apple’s first iPhone was a breath of fresh air. The hardware had a premium feel that made other popular smartphones seem like cheap toys, and the software was simple and refreshing. The iPhone was missing many features that had been staples on other smartphones for years, but it was easy to see that this was the start of something big.
The iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS took a step backwards in terms of hardware quality but they added faster data connectivity and, even more importantly, the iPhone 3G launched alongside the App Store. Smartphone apps were nothing new, of course, but buying them typically meant dealing with awful third-party mobile software vendors and clunky desktop synchronization programs. With the iOS App Store, however, users were able to  extend the functionality of their devices quickly and easily from a central location on the device itself.
Then came the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S, which did away with plastic in favor of glass and metal. The 4 also introduced Apple’s new “Retina” display and the 4S brought the company’s intelligent virtual assistant “Siri” to market. The former sent rivals scrambling to compete in the new mobile display resolution race, while the latter ushered in a new era of smart, voice-friendly mobile services such as Google Now.
Finally, Apple’s iPhone 5 launched last year with a bigger display, an all-new aluminum design and other enhancements. It is widely regarded as the most impressive iPhone to date and is also Apple’s fastest-selling smartphone ever.
The iPhone has gotten better with each iteration, there is no question. Hardware has improved, software has improved, components have improved, the user experience has improved and performance has improved. But as impressive as Apple’s smartphones have been and continue to be, one thing the iPhone hasn’t done in recent history is get any smarter.
Let’s take a step back for a moment.
No company in the world has played a bigger role than Apple in shaping the smartphone industry over the past decade. The iPhone turned the industry on its head and is directly responsible for the deaths of Windows Mobile and Symbian, and it sent BlackBerry scrambling to build a new platform. IOS simplified smartphones and made them accessible to everyone; it also made the team behind Android completely rethink the awful BlackBerry-like platform they were building, forcing a metamorphosis that birthed the fantastic mobile operating system we now enjoy today. The App Store revolutionized mobile software distribution and turned a small niche market into a multibillion dollar industry practically overnight. The iPhone 4 rose the bar for smartphone hardware and prompted rivals like HTC, LG and Nokia to explore better designs and sturdier materials.
In the past couple of years however, an interesting trend has developed. While the iPhone has indeed regularly gotten more capable, sleeker, stronger, slimmer, sturdier and speedier, it hasn’t really gotten much smarter.
Here are the key new features Apple has brought to the iPhone over the past few years:
In iOS 6, Apple introduced a number of new functions but none of them really stood out as game-changers. Highlights included deeper Facebook integration; Passbook, which rolled the best features of several third-party digital wallet solutions into one Apple-branded offering; the addition of a panorama mode in the Camera app; a tragic new Apple Maps app; a new sharing menu; a redesigned Music app as well as reskinned iTunes and App Store apps; a new reject-with-SMS option for call screening; and various other tweaks.
Back in 2011, Apple’s iOS 5 update was mostly a game of catch-up. Key additions included the introduction of Notification Center and a revamped on-screen notification system; iMessage, which was Apple’s response to BlackBerry Messenger, WhatsApp and similar offerings; deep Twitter integration; Newsstand for newspapers and magazines; a feature-starved Reminders app for time and location-based reminders; PC-free device setup and wireless iTunes sync; iCloud, Apple’s cloud-based backup and sync service; over-the-air (OTA) software updates; and of course, Siri.
Perhaps the introduction of multitasking features for third-party apps in iOS 4 was the last time Apple’s iPhone truly got significantly “smarter.” Smartphone multitasking was hardly a new concept in 2010, of course — multitasking is among the core features that have always made smartphones appealing — but Apple’s implementation was different. Rather than allow third-party developers carte blanche access to any and all battery-draining functions they could dream up, Apple gave them access to several APIs that would allow apps to perform only a handful of Apple-managed processes in the background. Remember when you couldn’t stream Pandora while browsing the Web or reading emails? Well those days were over thanks to Apple’s new APIs. They opened several new doors for developers, but they also ensured that the impact on battery life would be minimal.
This feature really did make the iPhone smarter.
Since then, there has been plenty of great functionality added to iOS that has improved the user experience. Siri is great when it works, though I personally believe bigger things are in store for Apple’s personal assistant. Do Not Disturb was a much-needed feature, though Apple’s implementation lacks even the most basic common-sense functionality — why aren’t there separate schedules for weekdays and weekend days, for example? Apple’s iMessage is also a nice addition to iOS but beyond syncing between devices (which is anything but consistent), this service barely matches basic SMS functionality, which was developed in the 1980s. Why can’t I leave group chats? Why can’t I block phone numbers and email addresses?
Meanwhile, rival software and platforms have really started to turn up the heat.
Since 2010, Apple’s rivals have added a number of features that made their smartphones smarter. Google’s intelligent personal assistant Google Now is a recent addition to Android that could be one of the smartest mobile products introduced in the past decade, but there are plenty of other examples. Here are two quick ones:
In 2011, Motorola debuted its Smart Actions application and it has continued to refine it ever since. This is easily one of my favorite modern smartphone features. Smart Actions builds upon the concepts laid out in dozens of third-party profile manager apps from the days of Symbian and Windows Mobile, but it is far more comprehensive and much better designed than any of those old solutions.
In a nutshell, the Smart Actions app allows users to configure their phones so that features are triggered automatically by location, time or a number of other factors. So, for example, the phone might automatically turn up its display brightness and switch from vibrate-only mode to ring mode when I connect my charger. When I go to sleep at night, Smart Actions might silence all alerts, disable background data and auto-respond to all SMS messages to let senders know that I’m not available. There is also a motion-sensing feature, however, so if I have sleep mode set to activate at 11:30 p.m. but I’m still out and about, Smart Actions will detect that the phone is being used and it will wait to enable sleep mode.
Another fantastically smart addition to an Apple rival’s smartphone is the HTC TV app on the HTC One. This app has seriously changed the way I watch television.
Gone are the days of flipping through guides and channel surfing. Instead, HTC and Peel have jointly created an app that shows you what’s on TV using thumbnail images and the interface automatically prioritizes shows and movies you like. Then, since the One has a built-in infrared blaster, simply tap the show you want and the One will change the channel on your TV, cable box, satellite box or TiVo — and it will work in every room on your house without having to flip through different remote profiles, since the app will send out the appropriate channel codes for each different room in your house with one tap.
There are plenty of other examples but the point has been made. Several companies out there are really pushing the envelope with their smartphone features. In recent years, however, Apple hasn’t been one of them.
Running through the list of common complaints from iOS devices users, it’s easy to see that there are many key areas where Apple has the potential to make the iPhone smarter. Developing a new power-sipping solution in lieu of full-blown widgets that might let the iPhone display zero-touch information is one example. Adding new ways to enhance communication and data-sharing between apps is another one, and it could have the same type of huge impact on Apple’s user experience that opening up background APIs to third-party developers did back in 2010. Apple’s notification system is still seriously lacking, as I have noted in the past, and there are dozens of other opportunities for Apple to improve and innovate. There are also obviously plenty of great new areas Apple could explore that users haven’t even thought of yet.
The term “smartphone” has been around for quite some time, but there always seems to be one company with products that are more deserving of that descriptor than the rest. One company that rises above the crowd and drives innovation. One company that puts the “smart” in smartphone. Motorola has been there, Nokia has been there, BlackBerry has been there, and starting in 2007, Apple was there.
Apple is still a leader in the smartphone space, of course. No company makes more money selling smartphones than Apple. For the past few years though, Apple has not been the clear leader that it once was in terms of smartphone innovation.
I can’t wait to see the new flatter design Apple debuts in iOS 7. Design is probably still Apple’s strongest suit after all these years. But more than a fresh new look, I want to see some big improvements in the iPhone’s problem areas. I want to see some exciting new features. I want to see some real innovation.
I want to see Apple’s smartphone start getting smarter again.

Apple Starts to Set The Stage for WWDC

Almost a full week before its annual developer’s conference is set to begin, Apple has already started to move into San Francisco’s Moscone Center.
Half of a giant Apple adorned the side of the Moscone Center Tuesday evening, abandoned mid-construction. With no crew in sight, we suspect the other half will join it Wednesday morning.
Inside crews have already covered the back wall of the lobby with a giant multi-colored WWDC banner.
Many other rolled up signs and banners currently litter the lobby.

WWDC is set to kick off early next Monday morning. The annual conference focuses primarily on Apple’s mobile and desktop software: iOS and OSX. Apple has already acknowledged plans to announce new versions of both at this year’s event.
Tickets to this year’s conference sold out in under 2 minutes.
While definitely a software-focused event, WWDC has also been the stage for many notable product announcements. Last year, for instance, the company announced its first MacBook’s with Retina displays.
Apple is rumored to be potentially refreshing that line of computers during WWDC this year.
What do you hope to see from Apple at this year’s WWDC? Let us know your thoughts and predictions in the comments.