Advertisement
Home
Sunday, 14 March 2010
Login/Logout
New Mac Space Members
Highslide JS Highslide JS

 Welcome to THE MAC SPACE  Please login or sign up !
The Mac Space is an online social networking community for Apple technology users who love their Macs, iPods, iPhones, and related third-party products.

The Mac Space allows members to create their own personal profiles, interact with other members, create personal blogs, read informative product reviews, and more.

Whether you're new to the Mac platform or an experienced user, we are building a strong Mac online community that is free to join .

 

$399 Mac Clone Available
Written by Tony Korologos   
Tuesday, 15 April 2008

An unauthorized mac clone is now for sale by Psystar @ http://www.psystar.com/.

Apple's licensing agreement in OXS does state that you agreen not to install OSX on a non Apple machine.

Interesting.  I imagine Apple will sue them into the next galaxy soon...
 
Apple should bring back some old technology
Written by Tony Korologos   
Sunday, 30 March 2008

I just moved.  Moving sucks, no doubt.  Good things about moving though, are that you can get rid of old junk you don’t need and also find things you thought you’d lost.   I found my Apple Newton 120!

The Newton was completely ahead of its time. What a cool machine, with its big display, text recognition, infrared beaming of data (early 90’s mind you) and well laid out applications.

There are a few things the Newton did in the early 90’s that today’s iPhones and other smart devices still can’t do.  I’d love to see a stylus on the iPhone and have Apple resurrect their text recognition software.  That way you can actually “write” on the screen and have the words and letters converted.  Palm has something like this called Graffiti, but you write in a single space at the bottom of the screen and you have to use strange shapes for many letters.  With the Newton’s system, it “learned” how you wrote, even cursive.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 April 2008 )
 
Reasons iPhone apps may not be as abundant as one might think
Written by Tony Korologos   
Monday, 10 March 2008

The iPhone SDK (what you need to develop) is now available.   You'd think there'll be a flood of apps on the horizon for the iPhone.  But a few "Microsoftesque" problems may prevent many small or individual developers from releasing iPhone apps. 

$99 Fee

iPhone developers who want to test their programs on their iPhone and sell them on the App Store must pay a fee of $99 to enroll in the iPhone Developer program.

Only at the App Store

Apple will only be allowing purchase or download of iPhone apps from their App Store.  Downloading from other web sources will not be allowed.

30%  for Apple

Now that the only place you can download iPhone apps will be the App Store, Apple has a full monopoly on the sales (just what it's always wanted in every market it has entered).  With that monopoly they'll be requiring a hefty 30% cut on sales.  So if you sell your iPhone app for $100, Apple gets $30.

Last Updated ( Monday, 10 March 2008 )
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next > End >>

Results 21 - 24 of 30
Profile Search
Latest Articles
Latest TMS Blogs
The Mac Space Blog
Random Member Photos
 
Latest Forum Posts
$999 MacBook the best for ...
New iPhone3G owner!
Re:I will jump on the iPho...
Re:I will jump on the iPho...
I will jump on the iPhone ...
This site is best viewed with Safari or Firefox.  Quite franky, we don't care if it works in IE.
 
about | contact | help | terms of use | privacy | advertise
Design by Tony Korologos | Powered by TKServer