Apple patents design for ultra-thin keyboard by Chris Rawson

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Posted on 25th March 2012 by Krishna Gupta in Apple

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The touchscreen keyboards on Apple’s iOS devices are great space savers, as they’re never around when you don’t need them. For all the great leaps forward Apple has made with Multi-Touch technology over the past five years in both its iOS devices and Mac touchpads, its physical keyboards still use some well-established and comparatively old technology. Apple has apparently turned its eye on the traditional mechanical keyboard and tried to figure out ways to shrink that down, too.

AppleInsider discovered a patent filed in August of 2010 that shows Apple is brewing up ideas to shrink its physical keyboards even farther than it has already. Current keyboards rely on a somewhat elaborate system consisting of a “scissor” mechanism that keeps keys suspended over a rubber dome switch, which when pressed, completes a path on the underlying keyboard circuitry, sending that key’s signal to the computer’s logic board. Apple has been thinking of ways to improve that system.

All keyboard design is fundamentally about a spring-loaded pressure switch completing an electrical circuit. When pressure is applied — usually via an intentional keypress, sometimes by a wandering cat — the switch completes a circuit and sends an input signal. When pressure lets off, the circuit breaks. Older keyboards relied on actual spring mechanisms, which is why those older keyboards were quite large, heavy, and loud (clackety clackety CLACK).

Some companies briefly experimented with membrane-style keyboards, but in a way those are almost worse than touchscreen keyboards; they have the same suboptimal level of tactile feedback to the user, but they also generally require more pressure to operate than a capacitive touch-style keyboard.

Apple’s proposed new keyboard design replaces the currently prevalent “scissor” style mechanical lever with a setup that reminds me of a device that pre-dates even the original typewriter: a telegraph machine. Like one of the old-style telegraph generators, the assembly consists of a key at the end of a long lever which, when pressed, completes a circuit and sends a signal. The support lever in Apple’s proposed design would be made of a flexible material with good tensile feedback to the user.

Design for an electric Morse key, patented in 1837

The upshot of this design? Traditional spring-loaded keyboards required a key travel of between 4 and 5 millimeters, with the “scissor” style setup in current notebook and portable keyboards requiring a smaller travel length of 1.5 to 2 millimeters. Apple’s patent allows for a keyboard that needs only 0.2 millimeters of key travel.

This obviously has implications for the design of Apple’s notebooks. So far the keyboard itself hasn’t been an especially important constraint on the overall thickness of Apple’s notebooks — battery design and the need to keep motherboards from spontaneously combusting has been more of a factor — but it’s not hard to envision a point where that 1.3 to 1.8 millimeters of potential space savings does indeed come in handy for an even thinner version of the MacBook Air.

Tribute to Steve Jobs – we miss you.

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Posted on 7th October 2011 by Krishna Gupta in Apple

No one wants to die. Even people who want to go to heaven don’t want to die to get there. And yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life’s change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new. Right now the new is you, but someday not too long from now, you will gradually become the old and be cleared away. Sorry to be so dramatic, but it is quite true.

Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.

– A quote taken from a speech made by Steve Jobs in 2005 at Standford University

Steve Jobs & the Apple – Infograhics

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Posted on 28th August 2011 by Krishna Gupta in Apple

SteveJobs_infographic

How to prepare your Mac for OS X Lion By Josh Sunshine

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Posted on 14th July 2011 by Krishna Gupta in Apple

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With the next major release of Mac OS X, 10.7 Lion, on the way, it’s a good idea to start preparing your Mac for the transition soon. Here are some steps to make sure your Mac is ready for Lion.
Step 1: Get up-to-date

Make sure everything on your Mac is up-to-date before upgrading to Lion. First of all, make sure you’re running the latest version of OS X, which is Snow Leopard 10.6.8, using Software Update. Software Update will not only check for updates to OS X, but also firmware updates or new versions of Apple applications such as iTunes or iLife. You can find Software Update under the Apple logo in the menu bar. You should also check that your applications are all up to date, but for that you’ll need to check in the apps themselves, since Software Update only works for Apple products.

Also note that you can only install Lion if you have Snow Leopard installed; you can’t go straight from Leopard to Lion.
Step 2: Backup

You’re about to replace the entire operating system on your computer with a new one, so it’s a good idea to make a backup, just in case something goes wrong. The best thing to do is to create an exact copy of your Mac’s hard drive using a tool such as SuperDuper!. SuperDuper! can either perform a regular backup, or create a bootable clone of your hard drive, meaning that if something does go screwy, you can boot from the external drive you made the backup on. From there, you’d be able to try to sort out the problems with the Lion install.

If you don’t want to, or can’t, make a full copy of the entire hard drive, then backup your most important files and folders. Your Home folder is a good place to start, since it probably contains a lot of files that are irreplaceable, like photos and home movies. The Home folder is the folder named with your username, and is found in /Users on your hard drive, or under Desktop in the Places menu in your Finder sidebar.

You can either use Time Machine or SuperDuper! to do this backup, or simply just drag and drop a copy of the folder onto another hard drive. You might want to look around in the Finder to check for other important folders which aren’t in the Home folder, as well.
Step 3: Remove incompatible apps

Lion is going to be the first version of OS X which doesn’t support PowerPC applications. That means any application without an Intel-specific version won’t work on Lion, and is best uninstalled.

In order to find which of your applications are PowerPC only, you can use System Profiler. Hold down the Option key, then click the Apple menu. The top item in the list should be System Profiler. Click that, and System Profiler will open. In the sidebar, find Applications under the Software heading. After a few seconds, a list of every application installed on your Mac will appear on the right. Now go through the list and for each application, look at the Kind in the bottom pane. Applications which say either Intel or Universal are fine; they’ll work on Lion. You’re looking for anything which says PowerPC.

If you find any PowerPC applications, you’ll want to uninstall them before you install Lion. You can also check your other apps as well to make sure they will work with Lion; some applications are bound to have issues, even if they aren’t PowerPC applications. A great way to check is using RoaringApps, a website which is gathering data about which apps are compatible with OS X 10.7.
Step 4: Make space on your hard drive

A typical install of OS X usually takes somewhere between 6 GB and 10 GB of hard drive space. You’ll need to make sure you have at least that amount, and preferably more, free on your hard drive in order to install Lion. To quickly check how much space is available on your drive, open a Finder window to any folder on the drive. The amount of free space available will be shown a the bottom of the window.

If you find that you don’t have enough space left, you can use a tool such as OmniDiskSweeper to find the biggest files and folders on your hard drive. Once it’s been through your hard drive, you’ll see a list of everything, sorted by size. Anything that has a large file size and you no longer need, delete in order to make room for Lion. Remember, the more space you have available when it comes to upgrading, the better.
Step 5: Install Lion

Once you’re sure that everything is as ready as it possibly could be, your Mac is now prepared for the upgrade to Lion, which should arrive sometime within the next couple of weeks. Are there any vital extra steps I missed? Shout out in the comments.

Steve Jobs, India & Apple Products – Silicon India

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Posted on 27th March 2011 by Krishna Gupta in Apple

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Bangalore: This is the question which annoys many tech savvy Indians today. Why Apple products doesnt reach India even after the next release of the product is coming near? Take the case of iPhone 4. Even as the Americans are waiting for the White iphone 4 and the next version of the same, Apple hasnt announced any plans of the official launch of iPhone4 in India. Ipad 1 too came to India much later.

Tech-savvy Indians have been keeping their fingers crossed hoping that Apple would put an end to its shoddy treatment of the Indian market and India would soon be figured in the list of launch countries for Apple products. But the Cupertino technology giant still chooses to ignore their existence.
It took almost three hundred and sixty-six days for Apple iPad to reach India after its CEO Steve Jobs announced the genre-defining tablet in the U.S. Apple has again chosen to ignore the tech-savvy Indians by not including India in its list of launch countries for iPad 2. The anger of Indian consumers who want to own their iPad legally had been disregarded. The first Wi-Fi-only iPad was launched in the U.S. on April 3, 2010 and the Wi- Fi plus 3G version was released four weeks later on April 30. With its second phase on May 28, UK, Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Canada, Japan and Switzerland received their iPads. It was launched in China in September 2010. Finally as iPad made its official debut in India on January 28, 2011, the company maintains its marketing strategy,making it obvious that the Indian market is not large enough to merit a simultaneous launch with other big markets. In the U.S, Apple offered a $100 refund to those who purchased an iPad in February while in India, though the company slashed the price of the device, the discount offer was not available.
Similarly, there is still no sign of an official entry of iPhone 4 in India. The much anticipated iPhone 4 was unleashed to the world on June 24, 2010 and was initially available in 17 countries in the Americas, Europe and some in Asia. India’s leading telecom operators Airtel and Vodafone had announced that they will bring the smartphone to India during September-October 2010 but no official announcements have come yet. Many industry experts feel that Apple is undervaluing the Indian consumers at its own peril. Android-based smartphones are making their big entry into the Indian market and will consume a lion’s share of the growing.
However, much to the relief of the Indian gizmo lovers, latest reports suggest that Apple is finalizing on a launch date of Ipad 2 in India. It’s learned that Apple partners have expressed their discontent over the delayed launch of iPad 1 and have requested the company to share the date of the launch in advance during the Apple partners meeting held in New Delhi.
Nonetheless, given the large number of mobile developers building apps for iPhone from India and the large, ever-growing number of tech-savvy Indian population, one wonders why India does not get the prominence in the global launch and it apparently generates a natural question – Is India a mere dumping ground of late stage and old products for Steve Jobs?
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