Vine update for iOS brings exposure and focus locking
Vine’s six-second videos may not allow much room for artistic expression, but the company is happy to provide a little more control. It just updated its iOS app to enable exposure and focus locking; you now just have to tap and hold on a subject to prevent any surprise changes in brightness or sharpness while you’re recording. There aren’t any corresponding updates to Vine for Android or Windows Phone, but we wouldn’t be surprised if those arrive in the near future.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile
Source: App Store
‘Confide’ is Like Snapchat for Text Messages [iOS Blog]
With the image-based Snapchat reaching huge levels of popularity with its ephemeral image and video messaging, new app Confide looks to offer the same type of secure, self-destructing messaging for text.
The app allows users to send messages to anyone with an email address — prompting those users to download the app — and conceals the contents of messages until they swipe to select it. It also alerts senders when screenshots are attempted and sends read receipt messages so senders know when their message is read.
The company is pitching Confide as an app for business executives and others to send messages to each other that they would prefer HR or legal departments not find out about.
Brod added that Confide is different from Snapchat and other disappear apps in that it connects potential users through their email addresses, not by searching their phone contacts. This means that if someone sends a message to a person who doesn’t have the app, they will receive an email that informs them there is a message from the first person waiting for them in the app.
To address the issue of screenshots, which can provide a way to preserve disappearing messages, Confide uses a “wand” feature that requires recipients to pass their fingers over the message to reveal additional words. The app also includes a notice feature, common among other disappear apps, that alerts the sender if the recipient took a screenshot of the message.

Confide for iPhone is a free download from the App Store. [Direct Link]![]()
iPhone ‘Halo’ Driving Corporate iPad/Mac Adoption, 25% of Cisco-Owned Laptops Are MacBooks
Apple is seeing increased success in selling its wares to large corporations thanks to the iPhone, reports The Wall Street Journal. A number of Apple products have acted as “halos” over the years, selling to first-time Apple owners and seeing that penetration lead to sales of more products.
The iPod helped drive Mac adoption with consumers, particularly amongst college students, but the iPhone is the most successful product in Apple’s history and has driven tremendous amounts of Mac and iPad sales. One-quarter of Cisco’s company-provided notebooks are Macs following that company’s decision to allow employees to choose which platform they preferred.

Many companies are deploying custom applications for iPhones and iPads, with the iPhone often being Apple’s first foothold in a business.
LG&E and KU Energy LLC, Kentucky’s biggest electric utility … approved the iPhone for employees in 2010. It then introduced iPads, and built apps such as one to help its helicopter patrollers survey 5,500 miles of high-voltage power lines. Using an iPad’s global-positioning system, patrollers can pinpoint the location of a problem and select from a menu of common issues, such as a damaged pole or an overgrown tree.
“For years, we looked for some way to automate this and we heard all sorts of fairy tales, but we could never find anything,” said Robby Trimble, LG&E and KU’s manager of transmission-line services.
Now, the utility’s engineers who run power plants use iPads to record how much electricity is generated. Warehouse managers use the tablet to scan bar codes and track the utility’s tools and materials.
Forrester says Apple accounts for 8 percent of global business and government spending on computers and tablets — that number does not include the iPhone — and could rise to 11 percent by 2015.
Apple executives frequently mention enterprise adoption and custom app development in earnings release conference calls with analysts, touting large corporate adoptions of iOS devices and how companies are using internally developed apps. The company also has large websites profiling how businesses are using both the iPhone and iPad.![]()
‘PAC-MAN’ Named App of the Week, Available for Free [iOS Blog]
Namco Bandai’s classic PAC-MAN app has been named Apple’s App of the Week, and as a result, it is available for free for the first time since its initial 2011 release.
PAC-MAN is based on the classic arcade game and the gameplay focuses on navigating Pac-Man to eat pellets and fruit while avoiding ghosts. Along with the original maze, the game offers eight other mazes that all feature ghost-free bonus modes.
Who can forget the countless hours and quarters spent avoiding pesky ghosts while chompin’ on pellets and gobbling up fruit for bonus points?
– Arcade perfect classic PAC-MAN
– 8 new mazes for all new challenges
– Two different control modes
– Three game difficulties
– Retina display support
During its years on the App Store, PAC-MAN has ranged in price from $0.99 to $6.99, but it has not been offered at no cost. The app, which can be downloaded from the App Store, will be free for the next week. [Direct Link]![]()
U.S. Mac Sales Grow 28.5% in Holiday Quarter, PC Market Suffers Worst Decline Ever
Apple saw its U.S. PC marketshare rise from 9.9 percent to 13.7 percent in the holiday quarter year-over-year, according to data just released from Gartner. The 28.5 percent rise shows a substantial increase in Mac sales, largely at the expense of HP and Toshiba.
Dell and Lenovo are the only other PC firms who saw significant rises in marketshare in the quarter.
In the U.S., PC shipments totaled 15.8 million units in the fourth quarter of 2013, a 7.5 percent decline from the fourth quarter of 2012 (see Table 2). Despite a 10.3 percent decline in shipments, HP continued to be the No. 1 vendor in the U.S., as it accounted for 26.5 percent of shipments.
“Holiday sales of technology products were strong in the U.S. market, but consumer spending during the holidays did not come back to PCs as tablets were one of the hottest holiday items,” said Ms. Kitagawa. “We think that the U.S. PC market has bottomed out. A variety of new form factors, such as hybrid notebooks, drew holiday shoppers’ attention, but the market size was very small at the time. Lowering the price point of thin and light products started encouraging the PC replacement and potentially some PC growth in 2014.”
Gartner’s Preliminary U.S. PC Vendor Unit Shipment Estimates for 4Q13 (Thousands of Units)
The U.S. PC market fared slightly worse than the global market, dropping 7.5 percent in unit sales, from 17.07 million units last year to 15.8 million units this year. Continuing a trend from the last several quarters, tablets have continued to eat into PC sales and though hybrid tablet-notebooks have appealed to some shoppers, the market size for those devices remains very small. As a result of the demand for tablets, the overall PC market saw its worst unit decline in history.
Apple’s U.S. Market Share Trend: 1Q06-4Q13 (Gartner)
It’s important to note that this data is preliminary — last year, Gartner revised its preliminary Apple numbers from 12.3% down to 9.9%, likely because last year the newly introduced iMac was in extremely short supply.
Apple’s US PC marketshare has seen consistent growth over the past seven years, rising from just under 5 percent to the current 13.7 percent.![]()
Live from the Engadget CES stage: Sling Media VP Michael Hawkey
CES is always a big show for big TVs, and this year’s is certainly no exception. Coming up next, we’ll be joined by Sling Media VP and General Manager Michael Hawkey to discuss the ways his company is bringing media to your set.
Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD
Engadget Mobile Podcast 198 – CES Edition – 1.8.14
Brad and his team of mobile-centric pals sit down for some deep talk about feelings and, of course, smartphones. Sony has launched its Xperia Z1 Compact, which scales down size but not specs, and its compatriot, the Z1S, which takes the standard Z1 into waterproof territory. Not to be outdone, Samsung delivers some new tweaks on the Galaxy series, with its Note Pro and 12.2-inch Tab Pro. It’s definitely a fun atmosphere on stage, but this is one party that T-Mobile’s John Legere failed to crash — although his hijinks did get a mention. Hop on down to the streaming links below for the full Mobile Podcast show!
Hosts: Brad Molen
Producer: Jon Turi
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ModiFace uses Kinect to give you a digital nose job
ModiFace has been giving women digital makeovers for a while now, with apps for iOS and Android, but now it wants them to start scrutinizing themselves in public, too. The company just announced something called the “Anti-Aging Beauty Mirror,” which is really just a Windows PC with a Kinect sensor mounted on top, allowing shoppers to try on makeup (and experiment with brow lifts) while they’re in-store. As with the existing app, you can try on eyeshadow, lipstick and blush, only this time, you’ll see the brand and color overlaid in the upper left-hand corner. (Maybe it’s the technology, or maybe it was just my choice of green eyeshadow, but I looked like a clown.) You can also experiment with plastic surgery “anti-aging” effects including nose reshaping and a cheek lift. There’s even a before and after view, reminding you your real jaw line is actually quite weak. It’ll roll out this spring, starting with the Sephora in Milan — not that this will deter women from trying on the real makeup and then high-tailing it out of the store. Let us have our fun, people.

Filed under: Wearables
Hands-on with Audi’s all-digital dash for the 2015 TT and likely home for its Smart Display tablet
Audi’s TT, considered by the German maker as its design icon, gets revamped for 2015 and its dash and all-digital cluster made a break from cover at CES. What’s immediately apparent when you hop into the curvy leather-wrapped interior setup at the booth is that the traditional center stack is completely absent. All the information that was once viewable by the entire cabin now seems reserved for the driver alone. It’s decidedly odd that the front passenger no longer has access to the display so we’d suggest that the mysterious Audi 10.2-inch Smart Display we saw earlier this week will feature prominently in the next TT, possibly as standard equipment.
The entire system is simple to use with the 12.3-inch TFT displaying bright colors and easy-to-read fonts. The display features two main modes, including a driving-centric mode where the tach and speedometer are in the foreground; when in navigation mode, they move out to the edges of the screen to offer as much real estate to the maps as possible. The digital dash navigation is done via either steering wheel-mounted controls or the redesigned rotary push-button control mounted on the center tunnel console. A really swish feature of the jog dial sees the top surface of the control act as a touch surface for entering text by scribbling with a finger when required. Now we just need to see the car to wrap around this interior and we’ll be all set, but until then, have a look of the video of the next TT’s infotainment equipment in action.
Jamie Rigg contributed to this report.
Filed under: Displays, Transportation
Live from the Engadget CES stage: WobbleWorks CEO Maxwell Bogue

It’s been quite the year for WobbleWorks. The robotics toy combo made a mint on its Kickstarter campaign for the 3Doodler, a $100 3D printing pen, and now the combo is marking CES with the announcement of retail availability through Brookstone.
Filed under: Peripherals













