AT&T will knock $100 off your bill when you add a new iPhone, iPad.

AT&T will knock 00 off your bill when you add a new iPhone, iPad

AT&T is offerring a $100 bill credit to new and existing customers that add a device to their plan, including smartphones and tablets. For iPad users, this is on top of the $100 discount you get when buying a new iPad through AT&T with a two-year commitment. Customers will get $100 taken off their bill for each new device they add, and they must remain in good standing with AT&T for 45 days.

The offer is open through March 31.

Will you be taking advantage of this offer? Let us know in the comments.

AT&T coverage map

How to watch the 2014 Super Bowl live on your iPhone or iPad.

How to watch the 2014 Super Bowl live on your iPhone or iPad

Super Bowl 48 is upon us and for the first time ever, FOX is offering ways for you to watch it live, no cable subscription required! So if you can’t sit in front of the TV this Sunday with your friends and family, you can tune in on your iPhone or iPad and catch up with all the action when the Broncos and the Seahawks take the field. Here’s how!

How to watch the Super Bowl live on your iPad

Anyone can stream the 2014 Super Bowl live if they have an iPad. All you have to do is download the FOX Sports GO app before game time. Then before the game officially starts, just load it up and you’re good to go. Typically FOX Sports GO requires you to have a cable provider in order to use the app. These restrictions will be lifted temporarily for the Super Bowl from 12am Eastern time on Sunday, February 2nd until 3am Eastern on Monday, February 3rd.

How to watch the Super Bowl live on your iPhone (Verizon customers only)

Due to a licensing deal with Verizon, FOX can’t live stream the Super Bowl to iPhones, or any smartphone for that matter, unless you’re a Verizon customer that subscribers to NFL Mobile Premium. For those not already familiar with the service, it costs $5 a month and you’ll need to download the NFL Mobile app to your iPhone via the following link:

  • NFL Mobile – Free (subscription required for live streaming) – Download Now

Other ways to stream the Super Bowl live

If you don’t have an iPad and Verizon wireless isn’t your wireless provider, that doesn’t mean you can’t live stream the 2014 Superbowl. If you’ve got a Mac or PC you can go to the following website in order to watch a free live stream of the game:

http://www.FOXSportsGO.com

Same deal as the FOX Sports GO app for iPad, content will be available for a limited time the day of the Super Bowl for anyone.

Apple Has More Money Than Luxembourg.

Apple is WAY up the list, if it were a country.

Apple is WAY up the list, if it were a country.

More money than a lot of countries, really. If you look at a list of the Gross Domestic Product of countries around the world, you see that Apple’s first quarter revenue, reported today in an earnings call, places it quite high, if it were a country, of course.

Profit is greater than revenue.

Profit is better than revenue.

What’s so stunningly intense about the earnings call today is that Apple’s profit is just about as much as Google’s entire revenue. That means Apple takes the same amount of money to the bank that Google makes altogether. That’s pretty amazing.

Winning.

Winning.

We took a look at the latest reported annual revenues from each of Apple’s major rival tech companies and compared that to each company’s net worth. Facebook hasn’t reported yet for 2013, so that’s older data, and Samsung’s number is their revenue across every one of their divisions, so take the chart above with a grain of salt. What it really shows is that Apple could pretty much buy out one of its major rivals. Maybe even two or three. That’s winning.

Source: Cult of Mac.

See iOS in the Car in action on iOS Simulator ahead of release.

Earlier this month we reported that a developer was seemingly able to get Apple’s upcoming iOS in the Car feature running through what we assumed was the iOS Simulator. Today, the same developer, Steven Troughton-Smith, has posted the video embedded above showing the feature actually up and running in a 800×480 Simulator window. Using the iPhone Simulator and iOS 7.0.3, the video shows the Maps app, a crude multitasking tray of sorts, and the ability to search by voice to navigate. No other apps are shown in the video, but it does appear that media controls of some kind are in the multitasking tray like in previous versions of iOS.

We noted before that the design had changed quite significantly since Apple first showed off the feature on stage at WWDC last year. The first set of screenshots posted showed a horizontal navigation bar, but the new video shows a design that’s much closer to what Apple showed on stage and what it is currently displaying on its website. Smith also made some notes of his own after playing with the simulator:

• Supports Multiple Resolutions
• Supports touchscreens (presumably single-touch?), hardware buttons, wheels and touchpads
• Does not support multitasking – car display will always show same current on-screen app as iPhone (which can be locked/asleep)
• Whitelisted to specific Apple apps – no public API for developers [yet?]
• Has no keyboard UI – voice recognition as input
• UI clearly subject to change
• Missing functionality in video is due to iOS Simulator not containing all the stock iOS apps

iOS in the Car is expected to make an appearance in new vehicles in 2014 and Apple is already working with Audi, BMW, Chrysler, General Motors, Jaguar, Land Rover, Mercedes-Benz, and Toyota to implement Siri Eyes Free features.

Source: 9to5Mac.

Apple TV gets a place of its own in Apple’s online store; are big changes in store?

Apple TV gets a place of its own in Apple's online store; are big changes in store?

Apple has added a new section to their online store all about the Apple TV. While other store sections have multiple models of Macs, iPhones, iPads, and iPods, the Apple TV has just one, so the area is mostly useful for finding accessories for your Apple TV. These include Apple’s own HDMI cables, Time Capsule, various adaptors, digital optical audio cables, and speakers. There is also a directly link to community answers regarding the Apple TV, as well as the portal to find refurbished devices. This is ahead of a major update to the device, according to Mark Gurman of 9to5Mac:

Of course, the timing of the Apple TV’s “graduation” is interesting. Last week, we reported that Apple is working on a new version of the Apple TV set-top-box that will integrate new content (such as apps).

What do you think of the Apple Online Store’s new Apple TV section, and do you think we’ll see a new Apple TV soon? Let us know in the comments.a

Source: iMore.

Virgin Mobile cuts unsubsidized iPhone 5s to $495 or iPhone 5c for $405 shipped.

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Virgin Mobile is knocking another 10% off their marked down iPhones yielding the lowest prices we’ve ever seen on the unsubsidized phones.

virgin-mobile-iphone-plans

Note Apple charges $650 for an unlocked iPhone 5s and $550 for an iPhone 5c so savings is around $150/iPhone. While the iPhones are unsubsidized, Virgin does offer extremely competitive plans on the Sprint 4G LTE network starting at $30/month for unlimited text/data.

Apple builds full size sample section of new Spaceship campus.

Image via Reddit

Image via Reddit

While a lot of the focus surrounding Apple is on the next iPhone, the next iPad, or possibly even the iWatch or iTV, there is one major non-device related project under development: the upcoming Apple Campus 2 building, also known as the new ‘Spaceship’ campus. The new campus building has been in talks for a while and is expected to be partly finished in 2016, when the first construction phase is expected to be completed.

Image via BizJournals

Today, however, a life-sized model of the upcomign campus has been discovered. It was expected that the tech giant would be building models of its upcoming campus building, but we now know that at least one model has been built, and eagle eyed folks at both Reddit and Silicon Valley Business Journal have snapped some pictures of the new model building. BizJournals also pointed out that it has uncovered a proposal submitted by Apple to build a 9,000 square foot demo building to test out the looks of the new building of the campus.

Expected finished spaceship campus design

While the images above don’t appear to look too much like a spaceship, the mockup is only one segment of the building, which is expected to eventually curve around into a circle, and look like a spaceship. While ground has broken at the campus site, the site won’t be complete for quite some time.

Dark Sky update brings iOS 7 design, beautiful 3D radar maps and more detailed forecasts.

schematic

The Forecast team today released their iOS 7 update for Dark Sky ($3.99), the ‘down-to-the-minute’ weather app. The update strips back the bevels and gloss to fit the iOS 7 aesthetic. The new design puts the most important information — the current weather conditions — front and center. A graph plot of upcoming precipitation is also available at a glance on the main page of the app.

maps

Blurring has also been used to great effect, with the forecast information superimposed on a blurred view of the global radar maps. These maps are beautifully rendered; the radar patterns smoothly transition over time. In addition to the radically new design, version 4 also brings much forecasts that span longer into the future. The next 24 hours is prioritised, but 7-day outlooks are available with a swipe. The day-by-day breakdowns offer a lot of information, more so than most weather reports will provide.

From the developers’ blog:

Completely rewritten from scratch, it sets aside the limitations of the web to become the weather app we’ve always wanted — and always wanted to build. It’s the culmination of over two years of work in figuring out how to display and organize weather data the right way. And it’s a full featured weather app — something we swore we’d never do — but it still remains true to its original focus on what’s happening right now, where you’re standing.

The developers say the app is a complete rewrite, which makes the fact they are not charging for the update impressive. For new customers, Dark Sky is available for $3.99 on the App Store. Note that Dark Sky coverage currently encompasses the United States, the UK and Ireland. The developers have said that they are actively working on adding data for more regions.

Apple execs say iOS and OS X won’t merge, and 10.10 will prove that.

mac-os-x-mountain-lion-messages-ipad-iphone-macbook-air

Among the hoopla surrounding the 30th anniversary of the Mac last week, Macworld‘s Jason Snell had an excellent interview with Apple’s Phil Schiller, Craig Federighi, and Bud Tribble about both the past and the future for the Mac. While the entire interview is well worth a read, the talk from Apple executives about iOS and OS X convergence being a “waste of energy” stood out to me the most.

“It’s obvious and easy enough to slap a touchscreen on a piece of hardware, but is that a good experience?” Federighi said. “We believe, no.”

“We don’t waste time thinking, ‘But it should be one [interface]!’ How do you make these [operating systems] merge together?’ What a waste of energy that would be,” Schiller said. But he added that the company definitely tries to smooth out bumps in the road that make it difficult for its customers to switch between a Mac and an iOS device—for example, making sure its messaging and calendaring apps have the same name on both OS X and iOS.

Of course, it appears that the Apple executives are taking shots at Microsoft, Windows 8, Surface line of products, and Google’s new Touch-enabled Chromebooks. Microsoft is well known to believe that computer operating systems should be the same regardless of devices. On the other hand, Apple has two complete different operating systems: one for the iPad and iPhone, and the other for the Mac. Federighi explains why:

“The reason OS X has a different interface than iOS isn’t because one came after the other or because this one’s old and this one’s new,” Federighi said. Instead, it’s because using a mouse and keyboard just isn’t the same as tapping with your finger. “This device,” Federighi said, pointing at a MacBook Air screen, “has been honed over 30 years to be optimal” for keyboards and mice. Schiller and Federighi both made clear that Apple believes that competitors who try to attach a touchscreen to a PC or a clamshell keyboard onto a tablet are barking up the wrong tree.

That being said, Apple obviously believes in there being some shared design elements between products. Remember, by the time Scott Forstall was fired, OS X Mountain Lion and iOS 6 were both filled with similarly appalling linen. Now that Jony Ive has put his stamp on iOS, natural speculation points to him doing the same for the next release of OS X.

But I don’t think we’re in for that… just yet.

Sure, OS X 10.10 (codenamed “Syrah” and currently sitting around development build number 14Z109) will pick up some of the enhancements from iOS 7 like improved notifications (and perhaps AirDrop compatibility with iOS and Siri — which the company has been toying with for months on the former and years on the latter), but I don’t believe we should expect a thorough iOS 7-like overhaul for OS X 10.10 this year.

Instead, I am expecting OS X 10.10 to have user-interface tweaks that will make the interface “flatter,” but not as stark as iOS 7′s look. I’d also expect some blur and translucency effects in a few places, but not in anyway that is central to the experience like it is on iOS. There will be a little bit more white space, more defined menu bars, and squared-off window controls, but I would not expect a full color palette change and redesigns for every single application and icon.

So don’t expect OS X and iOS’s designs to converge this year. Instead, think of 2014 for the Mac OS as more of a transition year. A transition from glitz to flat(ter), but nothing too dramatic.

Source: 9to5Mac.

Apple put up celebratory posters with names of every Apple employee, past and present | TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog

To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Mac, Apple this past Friday really went all out, a noteworthy feat for a company that doesn’t tend to bask in the glory of their past successes. Apple’s website, for instance, has been completely revamped and now features an engaging look back at 30 years of Mac computing. What’s more, Apple CEO Tim Cook, along with other Apple executives, made themselves available for rare interviews withMacworld and ABC News. And last but not least, Apple on Friday evening held a good ole’ fashioned party on its campus featuring a live performance from the band OneRepublic.

“We don’t spend a lot of time looking back,” Cook said as he addressed throngs of Apple employees. “We spend all of our time looking forward and working on the next big thing. But we’re making an exception for today, because 30 years ago today, the Macintosh was born.”

One of the cooler, though perhaps subtle, things Apple did to commemorate the Mac’s 30th birthday was to put out commemorative posters that contain the names of every single employee that ever worked at Apple in order of their badge number. There are reportedly 10 giant posters in all.

The text at the bottom of each poster reads:

A promise to everyone, kept by every one of us. On January 24, 1984, we made a promise to take the power of technology from the few and put it in the hands of many. This series of ten poster recognizes all those who have helped turn that promise into reality. In other words, every single person who has ever worked at Apple.

Apple Engineering Project Manager Michael Jurewitz posted a photo of one of them.

It’s hard to tell form this distance, but the poster is comprised of the names of past and present Apple employees.

Thankfully, Jurewitz goes in for a closer look. And what prime placement, right on the leaf!You can check out some brief concert footage along with Tim Cook’s remarks from the event over here, courtesy of Instagrammer Mindy Hu.