Apple with new vision for iPad: Textbook Market


Apple is getting warmed up early this year. The American tech giant has made an announcement of bringing textbooks to the iPads. Bet on me, this is certainly going to change the iPad textbook experience and perspectives of many for iPad may change.


Textbooks coming to iPad certainly means that the readers will now have advantage of multimedia capabilities of iPad. As per the reports, the new iPads price has been set to be around $499. But let's not forget about all those electronic textbooks Amazon is offering for low priced devices like Kindle Fire or Nook Color.
So, if Apple were to have iBooks app that could run on less expensive devices then there would have been more chances of succeeding. But it depends all on parents, what they are going up for their kids. If they would really prefer their children's bag packed up with an iPad over bulky books.
 

Camera-less iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S land Singapore, pleasing for professionals


Singapore carrier M1 has issues a cause to cheer for the professionals of Singapore. Professionals at Singapore can now go iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S handy. They don't need to worry about camera on their mobile phones which is strictly prohibited in some professions. After some exercises of several carriers, non-camera iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S is officially available in Singapore. With Singapore requiring all male citizens and many permanent residents to serve up to two years in the military, there is a significant market for camera-less phones in the country. So, this may be something pleasing for customers at Singapore from the side of Apple.
Singapore carrier M1 is the one going live with first type of camera less iPhone and 4S models on its website that have been officially made available. As previously reported, the devices are standard iPhone 4 and 4S models which have seen both front and rear cameras removed by the carrier. The camera-free versions carry a S$49 premium over their standard counterparts, covering the camera removal process. The camera removal process also voids Apple's warranty on the device, and M1 is offering users the ability to purchase a separate one-year warranty through a third-party vendor.


 

What you think about Facebook timeline?


Facebook yesterday officially relaunched Timeline with Timeline Apps. Timeline is an opt-in feature on Facebook that replaces a user's wall and profile with a graphical and chronological timeline of events of his or her life on Facebook, as well as other life events that they choose to add. The new app-Timeline integration, in a nutshell, posts activity from other Web sites and services that you use to your Facebook Timeline.
For example, enable the image scrapbooking sitePinterest to connect to your Facebook Timeline, and Pinterest will automatically post activity on your Timeline anytime you "pin" or save a new image to your account.
All the activity from each app gets grouped into its own box on your Timeline, rather than clobbering your stream with each individual action you take on a third-party site.
Is this new integration a good thing? That depends on how you use Facebook.
 

Apple brings textbooks to iPad


At New York's Guggenheim Museum, Apple's senior vice president for worldwide marketing Phil Schiller unveiled iBook's 2, an interactive, full-screen digital textbooks experience that makes liberal use of video and animations and the swiping and pinching gestures familiar to anyone who has an iPad. Students can purchase the new digital textbooks starting today right from Apple's iBookstore.
Apple also announced iBooks Author, a free tool for Macintosh computers with custom templates to help authors create and publish their own digital textbooks. Schiller says teachers could even take advantage of iBooks Author to create lesson plans.
And Apple is also broadening its a new iTunes U program with a new app that lets professors create full online courses. And the company is also letting K-12 institutions participate.
"Education is deep in our DNA and has been from the very beginning," Schiller says, pointing to how the U.S.has sagged in education -- ranking 17th, 23rd 31st around the world in reading, science and math, respectively.
The company's hope is that students will find the new textbooks engaging. Students studying high school biology, for example, can view 3-D animated models of structures within a cell. They can tap a word or a glossary definition, pinch to return to the table of contents, and drag their finger to highlight a passage. And the books can automatically turn student notes into study cards.
Though Apple is targeting the new textbooks at any age or grade level, the early emphasis is on high-school textbooks. Books will be priced at $14.99 or less. Early publishing partners include Pearson, McGraw-Hill and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, whom collectively control 90% of the market, with some of the titles available immediately. Apple is also working with DK Publishing on titles that cover dinosaurs, insects, mammals and the ABCs.
"Life on Earth" from noted biologist E.O. Wilson is also being made available; the first two chapters are free. Additional chapters will be available at "very aggressive prices," Schiller says.
Still, there are questions about how quickly this will all be adopted. During his presentation, Schiller did not mention how many books will be available. Also, few students have iPads, which start at $499.
Also, as NPD analyst Ross Rubin tweeted, "Much as with other printed content, textbook publishers will have to justify investment to add all this multimedia in Apple textbooks."
 
 
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