<![CDATA[Gizmodo: apple liveblog]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: apple liveblog]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/appleliveblog http://gizmodo.com/tag/appleliveblog <![CDATA[Apple MacBook Event Coverage Starts Now]]> We're here at Cupertino to bring you the full blow-by-blow of today's Apple MacBook Event. Keep up with our liveblog at live.gizmodo.com. It'll automatically refresh for you, but if the system just isn't fast enough then F5 to your heart's content. After all, you never know when John Mayer could show up. Oh, and there will probably be new MacBooks or something...if you're in to that sort of thing. If you want to keep track of it all, and feel like a senior citizen have fun doing it, play our MacBook 2008 Bingo to win free pizza and let the good times roll! [Live.Gizmodo.com]

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<![CDATA[Apple MacBook Event Coverage]]> The October 14 Apple MacBook event liveblog archive.

Jason Chen:
Apple's MacBook event starts Tuesday Oct. 14 at 10:00 AM Pacific. Check back early Tuesday for coverage!
10:03 pm ON Oct 10 2008

Jason Chen:
Don’t forget to check out our MacBook Event Bingo, where you can have fun AND win a free pizza.
1:10 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Everyone print out their bingo cards?
7:15 am ON Oct 14 2008

Mark Wilson:
Remember everyone, printing that bingo card in full color is free on your office printer. We checked with your boss and it’s cool. Promise.
8:19 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
It’s chilly, yet sunny at the same time.
8:35 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Bingo players ready? First bingo square: Jason in the W.C. with diarrhea.
Mark Wilson:


8:42 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Everyone got their predictions? Comments go here. We need your top 3. We're thinking MacBook, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Super Pro, a 27-inch laptop that weighs in at a svelte 51 pounds.
8:51 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
My only wish for this event is for my car to not get stolen. Times are tough, and Apple employees are desperate. I may have seen two fighting over a dumpster on the way in.

Mark Wilson:

Three dudes, yes. But all have hair. No bingo!!
8:54 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Spotted: first bald guy of the morning. Surprisingly enough, this is the ONLY bald guy we’ve seen all day. What the F Steve? Did you mandate hair plugs for everyone to reduce the light reflection off the audience?
8:59 am ON Oct 14 2008

Mark Wilson:

Official weaponry of Apple SWAT. You feeling lucky, punk?
9:01 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
The feeling in the crowd here is between muted excitement and pumped apathy. It’s a much smaller crowd.
9:04 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
We’ve just been upgraded from lining up outside in the sun to lining up inside in the lobby. Also, bathrooms are now open.

Jason Chen:
I wonder how Phil Schiller prepares for these things. My thinking is he drives over to Jobs’ house, honks his the crap out of his horn, pees on Jobs’ Mercedes, punches the dog in the face, steals the PennySaver, throws a (real) brick through the window and takes off his shirt, setting fire to it as he peels off into the distance.
9:10 am ON Oct 14 2008

Mark Wilson:
Note: Apple keeps the food outside while we wait inside. Jobs despises pastry crumbs.

Jason Chen:
44 minutes left.
9:18 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
The employees are running around, super excited and somewhat nervous. They have the home court advantage–wonder what they’re worried about.

Mark Wilson:
Headcount: about 65 people. Most have hair.

Jason Chen:
30 minutes left. Anyone check Apple stock lately?
9:26 am ON Oct 14 2008

Mark Wilson:
For a moment I thought a guy was holding a can of Bud Light. Ends up it was just a Diet Pepsi. Kind of a letdown.

Jason Chen:
The wardrobe for these events range from black polos to business casual to porn star dbag to hipster to I’m-about-to-retire wrinkled jacket.

Jason Chen:
Spotted: Phil Schiller. Surprisingly enough, he’s NOT punching a dog in the face here. He may be punching ME in the face if he ever reads these updates.
9:31 am ON Oct 14 2008

Mark Wilson:
Apparently MacBooks have a lot in common with my freshman year of college. Ok, senior.

Jason Chen:
You guys probably don’t know this, but Wilson Rothman of Gizmodo fame was once the nation’s number one consumer of Coors Light. Next time you have one, dedicate it to him with a “this Coors is for you”.

Jason Chen:
Why isn’t he the number one Coors fan anymore, you ask? His esophagus exploded.
9:36 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Excitement level seems to be rising. People are getting antsy. Tech writers, on the whole, aren’t used to standing for more than six minutes at a time. On the scale of strength, we’re somewhere inbetween arthritic grandma, coma victim and dying jellyfish.

Jason Chen:
Everyone’s getting seated, we’re inside.
9:55 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
They’re playing classical music, NOT Coldplay. Unless this is a track off their new album I haven’t heard. “Lute and Plunder,” perhaps.
Mark Wilson:


9:57 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
It’s starting! Steve Jobs is coming out on stage, and says they’ve got some exciting stories about notebooks and how they were made.

Jason Chen:
Tim Cook, Chief Operating Officer, is coming on stage to talk to us about the “stage of the Mac.” Steve Jobs is sitting down.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Cook: Apple has “better computers” and “better software”, saying “Leopard is far ahead of Vista.” The general gist of this part is telling everyone about the entire package of the “Mac”.
10:02 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Cook says they fixed the fact that people thought Macs wouldn’t fit into a Windows environment by shipping Boot Camp, as well as working with Parallels and VMWare for third-party virtualization.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
“Another thing we didn’t do, Vista”. “Vista hasn’t lived up to everything Microsoft has hoped it would. It’s also opened doors for a lot of people to switch to the Mac. It’s given us an opportunity, and Apple has been the beneficiary of those.”

Jason Chen:
“The Mac vs. PC ads have struck a chord with many PC users.”

Jason Chen:
They’re showing a Mac vs. PC ad, the one with Hodgman playing a king. Cook: “Isn’t it great?”

Jason Chen:
Cook is showing two international Apple stores, Sydney and China.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
The Mac has outgrown the market for the last 14 of 15 quarters. Two points that accelerated sales are Vista and Leopard intro.
10:07 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
The Mac now represents 17.6% of unit sales in the US. If you look at “revenue share”, because Apple “focuses on fully featured systems”, they actually have 31.3%.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Apple has 39% unit share for notebooks in education, surpassing Dell.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
In one unnamed university, Apple has 47% marketshare. Now Cook is showing the photo of that college lecture with a bunch of Macs.

Jason Chen:
Steve Jobs comes back on stage.

Mark Wilson:

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
First, Steve Jobs is going to talk about a new way to build notebooks. Or Rather, Jony Ive is going to talk about it.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
First, Ive is going to talk about how they CURRENTLY build their MacBook Pro. One of the challenges of building a MacBook Pro is making it strong and rigid.
10:12 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
The Aluminum structure that you SEE contributes only a small part of the “structure”. The main structure is actually from the internal frame, which holds up the system (and “creates a strong system, a robust system”).

Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
Above the frame, there are support plates that are welded to the structure underneath the top plate. All these things work together to give the laptop rigidity. (Ive is saying this in his charming British accent, btw.)

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
“For years, we’ve been looking for a better way in building a notebook. We had a really significant breakthrough that culiminated in the manufacture of [the MacBook Air].”

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Instead of starting with a thin piece of aluminum and adding more pieces to the structure, they’re now going to start from one piece of aluminum and remove pieces. This makes the structure stronger and more rigid.

Jason Chen:
To make the MacBook Air’s wrist rest, they start with one piece, then go through many stages (punch holes, etc).

Jason Chen:
In the manufacturing stage, they start with a 2.5 pound piece of aluminum. The end structure is only 0.5 pounds (for the MacBook Air).
10:17 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
This method of course, extends past the MacBook Air, for some new notebooks. Ive leaves the stage, and Jobs comes up.
Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
Jobs: Nvidia came to talk to them a few months ago about a product that would include the chipset and the graphics processor.

Jason Chen:
Nvidia GeForce 9400M is the name of the product.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
This combimes both the Chipset + the GPU, 70% of the die is the GPU. It has 16 parallel graphics cores, pushes 54 Gigaflops and runs up to 5 times faster than Intel Integrated graphics.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
In real world performance, you get anywhere from 3x to 8x performance increase. Compared to the Nvidia 8600M GT in the MacBook Pro, this new one is at 55% of the performance instead of 11%, compared to the old Intel.
Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Jobs: We’ve got a new trackpad for notebooks. A large, multi-touch GLASS trackpad.

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
It’s a 39% larger tracking area, has multi-touch gestures, and has a glass for “silky-smooth travel”.


Jason Chen:
The entire trackpad is the button. You can also get multi-buttons via software.


Jason Chen:
There are also now four-finger gestures.


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Jobs is now going through some of the gestures. Two finger gesture = pinch and rotate for zooming and panning. Three finger gestures = swiping between photos. Four fingers = expose and app switching.
10:22 am ON Oct 14 2008


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
“So let’s take these technologies and more and make some notebooks. Today, we’re introducing the new MacBook Pro.”

Mark Wilson:


Jason Chen:
The new MacBook Pro has full glass, an instant-on LED display, all the connectors on one side, and “it’s just gorgeous.”
It’s got a precision aluminum unibody enclosure, next-gen graphics, mini display port connector.


Mark Wilson:

Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
First, the unibody enclosure is made from one piece of aluminum. Jobs is actually passing around the body down every row to give people a sense of what it looks like up close. Pics coming in a sec.


Jason Chen:
We’ve just held it, and we tried fairly hard to bend it. It was definitely rigid and didn’t bend at all, at least on the places we pushed at.


Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
Lights back down, Steve is talking again.
10:27 am ON Oct 14 2008


Jason Chen:
New graphics: NVIDIA GeForce 9400M in the MacBook Pro. There’s also a 9600M GT, which is the “state of the art mobile graphics”, with 32 parallel graphics cores, 120 Gigaflops and 512MB video memory. They’re including BOTH of these in the MacBook Pro.


Jason Chen:
You can use either the integrated graphics, 9400M, or switch over to the 9600M GT if you want “Turbo mode”.


Jason Chen:
Under the 9400, you get 5 hours of battery life vs. 4 hours on the 9600 GT.


Jason Chen:
The connectors are, in order from the left, Magsafe, Gigabit Ethernet, Firewire 800, two USB ports, a Mini Display Port, Audio In/Out (analog and optical digital), ExpressCard 34, and a battery indicator.


Jason Chen:
The Mini DisplayPort is downsized from the full sized DVI connector. The Mini DisplayPort can drive everything the big DVI can (30-inch displays).


Jason Chen:
Both the battery and the hard drive will be easily accessible from the back.
0.95 inches. Thinnest ever.
10:32 am ON Oct 14 2008


Jason Chen:
It’s going to come in two models. $1999, 15.4-inch LED backlit display. 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo with 3MB L2 Cache, 2GB 1066MHz DDR3 Memory, the two GeForces, 250GB hard drive and SuperDrive.
Second config is $2499. 2.53GHz, 6MB L2 Cache, 4GB memory, 512MB video memory and bigger hard drive.


Jason Chen:
These MacBook Pros are shipping today.
Jason Chen:
Just as important as what they put in is what they left out, for environmentally concerned users. This MBP has 37% smaller packaging and earned the EPEAT Gold rating.


Mark Wilson:




Jason Chen:
Next up is the MacBook Air. They’re putting the 9400M into the MBA. 4x faster graphics. They’re upgrading the 120GB HDD (up from 80GB), or a 128GB SSD. Also has a Mini Display port.


Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
Steve Jobs just let it slip that there’s going to be a new display coming!


Jason Chen:
The new MacBook Airs will be available in early November.


Jason Chen:
Also being revealed today is a 24-inch LED-backlit cinema display.


Jason Chen:
Three connectors on this new 24-inch Display: MagSafe connector, USB connector and Mini Display Port.


Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
The 24-inch display has 1920 x 1200 pixel resolution, a Built-in iSight and mic, stereo speakers and a three port USB hub.
10:37 am ON Oct 14 2008
Jason Chen:
It will be $899 in November.
Jason Chen:
One more thing…and it’s the MacBook.
Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
The MacBook is the best selling Mac, ever.


Jason Chen:
“They are one of the best products in the industry.” The entry price is $1099, but they’re reducing the entry price to $999.


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Things people want from the Macbook: Metal enclosure, faster graphics and LED backlit display.


Mark Wilson:

Mark Wilson:


Jason Chen:
Introducing a new generation on top of the white plastic MacBook. Corner to corner glass on the display, same aluminum unibody enclosure like the MacBook Pro, LED backlit display, next-gen graphics, multitouch trackpad, Mini Display Port connector and environmental features.

Jason Chen:
Five times the graphics performance with the NVIDIA 9400M chipset.


Jason Chen:
The glass trackpad also has the same four-finger gestures as on the MacBook Pro.


Mark Wilson:
p>

Jason Chen:
It also gets five hours of battery life.


Jason Chen:
The MacBook also meets EPEAT Gold, and has 42% smaller packaging size.


Mark Wilson:

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
These new features on the MacBook, you can get today at $1299 (lower than the $1999 for the MacBook Pro). There are going to be two models. 13.3-inch LED backlit display, 2.0 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 3MB L2 Cache, 2GB 1066MHz DDR3 memory, 9400M GeForce, 160GB hard drive and SuperDrive.
10:42 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Second model, $1599, adds 2.4GHz processor, 250GB hard drive and a backlit keyboard.


Mark Wilson:


Jason Chen:
To be clear, these two models are going to be on top of the white plastic MacBook which comes at $999.


Jason Chen:
The MacBooks ship today to hit stores tomorrow.


Mark Wilson:

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Jobs is showing a video now (Coldplay in the background!)


Jason Chen:
Fill in that bingo square!


Jason Chen:
Jon Ive is talking about how great the new MacBook and MacBook Pros are.


Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
Ive is a handsome, handsome man. Ahem, sorry. Yes, he’s talking about the unibody aluminum construction, which is thinner, lighter and more robust.


Jason Chen:
They’re showing gigantic sheets of aluminum that they carve the body from. It starts with a solid “block” of aluminum, and outputs long strips which then get cut and carved into the MacBooks.


Mark Wilson:


Jason Chen:
“In many ways I think it’s more beautiful internally than it is externally” - Ive
10:47 am ON Oct 14 2008


Mark Wilson:



Jason Chen:
The glass display goes up “right to the edge of the product.” Advantages of the LED backlight is that it’s on instantly, it’s 30% more efficient and the colors are brighter (higher intensity).


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
They’re showing a Need For Speed game running on a MacBook.

Mark Wilson:

Mark Wilson:


Jason Chen:
Now they’re talking about how the choices they made are the best in the industry from an environmental perspective.


Jason Chen:
A U2 song is being played (that’s not a bingo square, but, you know, just FYI).


Jason Chen:
Relevant side story: Jon Ive once touched me on the shoulder.
10:52 am ON Oct 14 2008

Jason Chen:
Now, Steve Jobs is holding a Q&A session along with Phil Schiller.


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
110/70 is Steve’s blood pressure. This is all Steve is going to talk about Steve’s health today.


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Apple is the first people to take the 9400M to market, and might be the only one for a while (”We’re going to be using a lot of their chips”).


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Q: Why isn’t HDMI or Blu-ray in there? And Display Port is?
A: HDMI can’t drive our 30-inch display, so we put in Display Port.


Jason Chen:
Jobs: “Blu-ray is a bag of hurt. I don’t mean from the consumer point of view. It’s great to watch movies, but the licensing is so complex. We’re waiting until things settle down, and waiting until Blu-ray takes off before we burden our customers with the cost of licensing.”


Jason Chen:
Q: What’s the status of the 17-inch MacBook Pro.
A: It’s also being refreshed.
10:57 am ON Oct 14 2008

Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Q: Is the MacBook upgrade going to steal some demand from the MacBook Pro?
A: Pros buy MacBook Pros. So we’re going to see a refresh demand in both spaces.


Jason Chen:
Both the MacBook Pro and MacBook are .95 inches, and weight is 5.5 and 4.5 lbs, respecitvely


Jason Chen:
Q: Are you going to have matte screens or just go with glossy glass ones? How about with reflection problems?
A: Just glass, and we’re going to compensate for the reflection from pushing more light through the back. And, since these are notebooks, you can position it any way you want.


Mark Wilson:

Jason Chen:
Q: Did Apple design the motherboard in house?
A: Yes.
11:02 am ON Oct 14 2008


Jason Chen:
Q: How about touchscreens in laptops?
A: So far it hasn’t been a lot of sense to US, but we may see it in the future (we’ve experimented with it before).


Jason Chen:
That’s all! Thanks for reading. Hands on impressions to come in a sec. Check the front page of Gizmodo for more.


Mark Wilson:
Read our hands on impressions of…

The new MacBook
The new MacBook Pro
The new Cinema Display

1:41 pm ON Oct 14 2008

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<![CDATA[Apple "Let's Rock" Liveblog Archive]]> We've archived the entire Apple "Let's Rock" Liveblog over here, in case you want to re-live all the Steve Jobs/iPod nano memories. All the images made it over intact, including ones of Jack "I'm not John Mayer" Johnson. [Liveblog]

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<![CDATA[Apple Let's Rock Liveblog]]> Jason Chen:
You guys all see the last minute rumors? 7:05 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:
Good morning. Chen and I had a sleep over. We're eating shakes and Hong Kong milk tea. Just thought I'd tell you that. Wait, is this my Twitter window? 7:13 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:
testes testes 1,2,3

Jason Chen:
The line is surprisingly short for T-minus 2 hours or so to an Apple event. Smaller arena = smaller audience = not as many people. Still see the same old faces though.

B. Lam:
Testing testing la la la. 8:20 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
It's cold and dreary, even for SF standards. It's as if Zeus already knows that the announcements are going to be disappointing. Suck it Zeus. 8:35 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Oh and please post your comments here. Go go!

Jason Chen:


Jason Chen:
We are such dorks. 8:42 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
We're inside the cordoned-off area, where we're again lining up to go inside. 70 minutes left. I'm hungry. 8:49 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Oh yeah and thanks to Brian for letting me sleep and drool on his couch last night. Much better than trying to drive in here from Fremont at 6 AM.

Jason Chen:
Oh, and post your obligatory &#8220;what do you expect to see today&#8221; over in the comments. 8:54 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
9:04 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Is it me, or are the people in line slightly better looking than usual? Here's to you, guy who looks like that guy on Season 4 of Buffy, who Buffy dated and then killed (?) or was cut from the show. 9:09 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Note to Jesus: stop sending me stories of your European conquests when I am trying to type here.

Jason Chen:
Seriously though, where is John Mayer? Is John Mayer here? I really want to see John Mayer here. I'm going to be inconsolable if he doesn't show. 9:17 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
I wonder how Steve Jobs prepares for these things. Rehearsing? Making an underling rehearse for him? Staying up all night watching random collegehumor videos? Ironing his jeans? Ironing his underwear? Ironing his skin? Eating three bags of Doritos? Trying on pants suits? Shadow boxing? Re-installing Office 2008? Renewing his subscription to Field & Stream? Baking a cake? Baking an erotic cake? Shooting silver nano-particles into his bloodstream? Yelling at his neighbors? Driving to 7-11 in a riding lawnmower? Punching a dog in the face? Punching a baby in the face? Punching a baby dog in the face? 9:26 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:


Jason Chen:
From right to left, guys who are decreasingly happy that their picture is being taken by a little Chinese guy. 9:31 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Has anybody else noticed that Fake Steve Jobs looks JUST LIKE Adam Frucci + 30 years? 9:32 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Guy in foreground: Mark McClusky from Wired. Guy in background: unidentified guy practicing his O-face for the event.

Jason Chen:
Right: Adrian Covert concentrating intently on something or other. Left: Me, losing my hair in real time.

Jason Chen:
I think it's time. Back in a bit.

Jason Chen:
False alarm. Everyone is just clumping at the entrance. Some jerks next to me are making fun of Palm OS. 9:38 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
We're inside. Prime location. Right in the middle.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
The music is definitely more &#8220;rock&#8221; than last time. No one's throwing up the horns yet, as far as I know. 9:49 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:
Nikon rig is a GO. Rolling stones are playing, Hendrix was playing &#8212; start up music's a lot more&#8230;rock-y.

B. Lam:
Without fail, every apple liveblog triggers a urinary response of great urgency to those who attend. So I hear.

Jason Chen:
If someone handed me a plastic guitar, I could totally four-and-a-half star this song in Rock Band. 9:54 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:

Liveblog nerds at the ready.

Jason Chen:
If Jesus Diaz Blanco were here, all the females in attendance wouldn't just be immediately impregnated, they would be immediately in their second trimester. That's how fertile this man is. I, on the other hand, have just made all of them sterile. Sorry ladies.

Jason Chen:
Two black iMacs are on stage, as they often are. Looks like there's going to be a software portion of this show. Some lady is filming me with a huge ass camera. Hey lady, I see you.

Jason Chen:
Lights are dimming! SAX SOLO ALMOST DONE!

Jason Chen:
Steve Jobs is strolling out on stage; skinny, but energetic. 10:00 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Music is going to be the main topic today. First up is iTunes.

Jason Chen:
The store has 8.5 million songs, 125k podcasts, 30k episodes of TV shows, 2.6k Hollywood movies and 3k applications for iPhone and iPod touch. The crowd claps, inexplicably. Do these people have stock?

Jason Chen:
iTunes is now the #1 music distributor in any format, ahead of Wal-Mart and Best Buy.

B. Lam:


B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
Today they're adding HD TV Shows. $2.99 for HD shows, $1.99 for regular SD shows. You can watch them on Apple TV and your computer.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
NBC is coming back to iTunes! Monk, The Office, Battlestar Galactica, 30 Rock, Heroes and some more.

Jason Chen:
All these shows will be in high def as well as standard def.

Jason Chen:
Also coming today: iTunes 8!

Jason Chen:
What's new? Accessibility (voice over), New Browsing, Genius (like the rumors said). 10:05 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
in iTunes 8, you can now browse albums by albums cover, and toggle Albums, Artists, Genres and Composers in the tabs at the top. Ex: for any artist, you can scan through all their albums if you scrub over their icon, just like in iPhoto.

B. Lam:



Jason Chen:
Genius: &#8220;Automatically make playlists from songs in your library that go great together - with just one click.&#8221; Essentially the rumor that we had before, with iTunes automatically making a playlist based on what music you already listen to.

Jason Chen:
The Genius sidebar also makes recommendations from the iTunes store, which shows you songs from the store (some from other artists) that &#8220;go great&#8221; with your current songs.

B. Lam:



Jason Chen:
Genius information gets sent up to the cloud, to iTunes, to feed them your musical tastes. It's sent anonymously, plus it's opt-in. Nobody will link you with your crappy taste in music.

B. Lam:



Jason Chen:
The combined info of you and other iTunes users will combine and be analyzed by Apple, and generate results to tailor your music library every week.

Jason Chen:
Now a demo of browsing. Jobs is choosing an Aretha song—Respect, natch—and then going over to browsing albums by Genres and Composer. This also works for movies and TV shows. 10:10 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
JOHN MAYER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!`1`1`

Jason Chen:
OMFG JOHN MAYER!!!!!! HE IS PLAYING JOHN MAYER GRAVITY OMG ALJA;SLDKFJALS;DJFKLAS;JDFKL;ASDFJKL;SADFJ

B. Lam:

Journalists groan at the mention of JM.

Jason Chen:
Sorry. Ahem. Jobs was demonstrating the Genius feature. Pick a song, make a Genius playlist out of it, then look at all the songs that are just like it in that playlist. It's Pandora, essentially.

Jason Chen:
I think Jobs played that John Mayer just for us.

Jason Chen:
iTunes 8 is available today at Apple.com.

Jason Chen:
Now we're moving on to the iPod. In July, the iPod has a 73.4% marketshare in the US.

Jason Chen:
Sandisk has 8.6%, Microsoft has 2.6%, and &#8220;Other&#8221; is 15.4%. Not too bad, Microsoft.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
Steve Jobs talks about third-party manufacturers &#8220;announcing products before we even want them to.&#8221; &#8220;It's not funny.&#8221; 10:15 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
iPod Classic: currently, it's being offered in thin and thick: 80GB and 160GB. The 80GB is being upgraded to 120GB, and the 160GB is being discontinued. Same as the Zune.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
The 120GB can fit 30,000 songs. Moving on!

Jason Chen:
The iPod nano is next. They're going through the generations of iPod nano, saying that the 2nd gen (tall and silver) was much beloved. But the third had video.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
The new nano: it's exactly what we've seen. Skinny, rounded, and a lot like the 2nd gen Nanos. Portrait aspect ratio plus the exact same resolution display. It's oval, and just as tall as the iPod Nano 2G.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
The display takes up almost exactly half the front. Jobs is holding it up to the camera for a closeup. He's got a nice looking wedding ring too.

Jason Chen:
The front is curved glass, it's the &#8220;thinnest iPod ever&#8221;, has an enhanced user interface plus an Accelerometer. The body is curved aluminum. You can create Genius playlists directly on the nano.

B. Lam:




Jason Chen:
The new UI has longer menus, icons next to songs and full sized album art. Photos and video can be displayed in landscape mode. If you push and hold the center button, you get a pop-up menu with Genius, add to on-the-go, browse album and browse artist. Similar to the scheme you have in the iPod Touch/iPhone now.

Jason Chen:
The iPod nano even has a voice recording feature when it detects a microphone attached.

B. Lam:


10:20 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
While the music is playing, he can rotate the nano sideways to get coverflow mode (like the Touch and iPhone). Apple definitely took a lot of design elements from the two touchscreen devices to make this.

Jason Chen:
New feature! Shake to shuffle. Shake your iPod and it starts shuffling.

Jason Chen:
JOHN MAYER AGAIN OMG SHUFFLE!!!!!

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
Now photo viewing. Thumb through photos with the clickwheel, switch to landscape then back to portrait.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
Battery life: 24 hours music, 4 hours video. Jobs reiterates that it's the thinnest iPod ever.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
He's now talking about the environmental concerns that Apple's thinking about. These new nanos are using arsenic-free glass, BFR-free, mercury free, PVC-free and highly recyclable. Jobs says it's the &#8220;cleanest&#8221; most &#8220;toxic free&#8221; iPods they've ever made. 10:25 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
The nanos now come in a whole crapload of colors. Black, purple, blue, green, yellow, orange, red, violet BUT NO WHITE.

Jason Chen:
$149 for the 8GB model, $199 for the 16GB model.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
8GB should be in stock today, 16GB early next week at the latest (probably this weekend).

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
They're also announcing accessories including headphones and armbands. The headphone, actually, has an in-band control feature to have volume control, playback control (next, prev, play pause) from the button. There's also a microphone on the back that works with the voice recording app. These will be $29 next month.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
Apple's also announcing a new in-ear headphones, with two drivers each (woofer + tweeter) and will be $79. Jobs says &#8220;they finally got it right this time&#8221;, which is good because the old in-ear ones kind of suck.

Jason Chen:
New iPod nano ad coming up. All the different nano colors flying on screen to arrange the rainbow lineup you saw earlier. Sort of like the New Line movie studio logo, if you remember how that looks.

B. Lam:
10:30 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
The iPod Touch is also being redesigned. The Touch now is thinner, with a contoured steel design. What's the same? a 3.5-inch display, accelerometer, 802.11b/g and the app store. What's different? An integrated volume control on the side, a speaker, and Genius playlist creation.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
There's Nike+ iPod! Built in to the iPod Touch. BUILT IN to the iPod. The receiver is built-in to the iPod Touch, so no receiver necessary.

Jason Chen:
It's unclear whether the Nike+ hardware is only in the new ones or if the old Touch or the iPhones can do this. Will look out for any info on this.

B. Lam:







Jason Chen:
Now Jobs is demoing the Genius playlist creation directly on the iPod Touch. Pretty much what you'd expect, and the playlist will remain on your iPod for as long as you want.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
As for the App Store, people have downloaded 100 million apps in 60 days. Not sure how many of these are paid and how many are free.

Jason Chen:
The wireless App Store is available in 62 countries as of now.

Jason Chen:
The Genius button is at the top of the now playlist list, under the scrubber where you can fast forward through the song. Click that and you can make a Genius playlist. 10:35 am ON Sep 9 2008

B. Lam:


B. Lam:
Is Iron man out yet?

Jason Chen:
He's showing Iron Man, and saying that the screen is great to watch movies on. Adrian says David Lynch would disagree.

Jason Chen:
Jobs is now inviting Phil Schiller on stage to demonstrate some unreleased games on the iPod Touch.

Jason Chen:
First up Spore Origins, which we've seen before. Spore, which actually isn't all that much fun. Think flow, on the PS3, but with a really disgusting microbe as your guy.

Jason Chen:
Brian says: &#8220;That's what herpes looks like. Gonorrhea maybe.&#8221; I defer to his expertise.

Jason Chen:
Someone is laughing crazily in the background. He must be watching a different keynote than we are.

Jason Chen:
Schiller says: &#8220;the graphics are incredible, and the game play is just&#8230;&#8221; Yeah, he really likes it. 10:40 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Now Gameloft's Real Soccer 2009. Shipping today. He's picking US vs. Italy, customizing his uniforms and picking a stadium. Graphics are PS1-level 3D, but the 2D stuff looks nice.

B. Lam:



B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
The game overlays a D-Pad and A/B buttons on screen, so your fat fingers will be all over the bottom of the screen, blocking part of the display.

Jason Chen:
Now Need For Speed: Undercover. Customize your car, deliver a package across town. Not too bad graphics, actually, in terms of 3D. No Maggie Q like on the console version though. :(

B. Lam:





Jason Chen:
Graphics are nice, but the game itself is kind of buggy right now. Comes November to iPhone and iPod Touch.

Jason Chen:
The iPod Touch also works with the new headphones previously announced. Battery life is 36 hours for music, 6 for video.

Jason Chen:
The environmental checklist is the same as the nano (scroll down to check it out). 10:45 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
&#8220;This is the funnest iPod ever.&#8221; – Steve Jobs

Jason Chen:
The 8GB is $229, 16GB is $299 and 32GB is $399. All available starting today. Here's an iPod Touch ad.

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
The ad focuses on games, which includes shaking, gestures and screen pressing. There's also music tacked on there at the end to show that it's still an iPod. &#8220;Funnest iPod ever&#8221; is the catchphrase used.

Jason Chen:
The iPod Touch has software 2.1, which includes Nike+ and Genius playlists. First-gen iPod Touch owners get a free update from 2.0, but if you haven't, it's $9.95 to 2.1 from 1.x. Updates are available today.

B. Lam:

(Forgot to upload this earlier &#8212; this was the first slide Jobs came out to.)

Jason Chen:
iPhone owners get a 2.1 software update that &#8220;fixes lots of bugs.&#8221; Significantly improved battery life, fewer call drops, crashing problems, increased speed for iTunes backups and various other fixes.

Jason Chen:
The iPhone update is free and will be available this Friday.

Jason Chen:
Steve Jobs is kind of wrapping things up, saying that these are the best iPods and iTunes ever. 10:50 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
Jobs says that whenever there is a music event, he wants to remind the customers that they're music-oriented. Is it John Fucking Mayer???!

Jason Chen:
#1 selling male artist in iTunes history. NOOO! Jack Johnson?!?!?

B. Lam:

B. Lam:


Jason Chen:
Yeah, Jack Johnson. I guess he's alright. Not too shabby, but we're still disappointed.

Jason Chen:
Sorry for the lack of updates&#8230;I'm sobbing uncontrollably.

Jason Chen:
10:55 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
John Mayer, if you're reading this. Email me.

B. Lam:
(How about this D300 &#8212; pretty nice shots for a sub $2k Nikon body.)

Jason Chen:
The event's wrapping up, but you should head over to Gizmodo for the rest of the day to see our updates, hands ons and impressions.

Jason Chen:
Jack Johnson's speaking now that his song is done. He says he's used to 20-something year old girls [not balding, overweight businessmen and media]. 11:00 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
JJ's firing up for a second song. Wee!

Jason Chen:
Jack says he's picturing his buddies in front of their computers, watching him sing a love song to his wife. You're alright, Jack. You're alright.

B. Lam:
This is definitely the most romantic liveblog I have ever done with Jason and Adrian.

Jason Chen:
Nice work Jack. Standing ovation, so we can't see anything but a sea of jeans. 11:04 am ON Sep 9 2008

Jason Chen:
It's over! Thanks for reading folks. Stay tuned for our hands-on coverage here. See ya!
Jason Chen:
We've got iPod Touch and iPod Nano impressions over on the site. Hit up the links to get to them. 12:15 pm ON Sep 9 2008

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<![CDATA[Apple's September 9 Event - What Do You Want To See From Us?]]> Apple's September 9 event is only one lazy weekend away, but we here at Giz are already preparing for our usual liveblog directly from the event. You already know the rumors—new nanos, iTunes 8 with new features and various other things—what might be coming, but what do you want to see from us? We'll be at live.gizmodo.com, same as always, but do you want something to change? What do you want to see more of? Less of? None at all of? We'll hopefully have some fun new interactive stuff as well. Let us know in the comments, and we'll see you early morning on Tuesday, September 9 for our pre-game coverage.

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