Apple releases OS X Mavericks for free | CNET News


Mac users can have Apple’s latest Mac operating system, OS X Mavericks, for free, the company announced Tuesday at an event in San Francisco.

“Today we’re going to revolutionize pricing,” Craig Federighi, Apple’s chief of iOS and OS X, said. The software is available today.

Apple introduced the system in June at its developers’ conference. The company touted its extended battery life, tabs, and tags, while demonstrating new features in Safari, Maps, and iBooks.

Federighi reiterated the new features at Tuesday’s event. A 13-inch MacBook Air with Mavericks gets up to an hour more of Web browsing and up to 1.5 hours more iTunes movie playback, he said.

He also explained how the system adjusts its memory based on the task. This allows for optimal quality when you’re running a graphics-heavy program — and speed when you’re not. He also highlighted the iBook app, in which photos and videos can pop out of a textbook, and an iCloud keychain, which syncs payment information for online purchases.

CNET’s Jason Parker said in June that the OS is faster and easier to use, and apps have a cleaner look.

via Apple releases OS X Mavericks for free | CNET News.

Apple applies for iBook autograph patent | The Bookseller


Apple has applied to create a patent for a system allowing authors to sign e-books.

Read:  Apple applies for iBook autograph patent | The Bookseller.

The best and worst of iOS 7 | CNET Reviews


After reviewing Apple’s latest mobile OS, I gathered together what I liked most about iOS 7 and what I liked least.

Read: The best and worst of iOS 7 | iPhone Atlas – CNET Reviews.

Apple Patent Hints at Text-to-Speech Translation for Notes | Mashable


A new patent suggests that Apple may add text-to-speech functionality to its Notes app, specifically for communicating in a different language.

The feature will translate text into a desired language, and then convert that text to speech that can then be read aloud. Any integration with Siri is unclear.

The translation feature will be listed as another option from the pop up menu — along with cut, copy and paste — that currently shows up on the iPhone upon selecting a particular phrase.

Google Translate for the iPhone currently offers a similar functionality. The app reads an English word or phrase in a different language of your choice.

A Notes integration could potentially prove much more useful, with key phrases like “How do I get to the train station?” available in different languages at the ready.

via Apple Patent Hints at Text-to-Speech Translation for Notes | Mashable.

An Oral History Of Apple Design: 1992–2013 | Co.Design


Most efforts to explain design at Apple end up reducing a complex 37-year history to bromides about simplicity, quality, and perfection–as if those were ambitions unique to Apple alone. So Fast Company set out to remedy that deficiency through an oral history of Apple’s design, a decoding of the signature as told by the people who helped create it. A longer version of the story that includes material not published elsewhere is available in the Byliner original ebook, Design Crazy.

Read the full article: An Oral History Of Apple Design: 1992–2013 | Co.Design | business + design.

“Game Consoles” Are the Final Key to Digital Domination | Gizmodo


Game consoles have historically been their own little colony off to the side of technology. For a while that’s because they were seen mainly as an expensive kids’ toy, and later because they weren’t germane to the music sales or laptops or iPods battles of the time. Now, though, as we’re digitizing everything in our lives, that TV-connected box in the middle of every family’s living room is suddenly looking pretty important.

Google, Apple, and Microsoft want to be your one-stop digital shop. All three have a desktop OS and a mobile OS. All three are making their own hardware now. They all have stores where you can buy movies and music, and they all have their own music streaming service. They are all branching out, increasingly, into more and more parts of your life. Apple’s in your car. Google’s on your face. Microsoft is already in your living room. But their offerings are too spread out, too fragmented.

The ultimate for all of these companies, and for you, is One Device. It’ll control your music system and TV, and it will shepherd all your messages and access all of your photos and movies. It will also probably play your video games.

See the full article: “Game Consoles” Are the Final Key to Digital Domination | Gizmodo.

There’s An App for That: Using iPads in the School Library | Mary Catherine Coleman


via There’s an app for that.

Collection of Links: eBooks


I find it challenging to keep up with eBook news and resources, since it seems there are updates on an almost daily basis. I have provided links to the most informative and newsworthy below.

eBooks & Publishing

eBooks, Libraries & Publishers

Sourcebooks Upgrades the Bard with ‘The Shakesperience’ Digital Editions


“In the latest effort to use digital technology to transform how consumers, students, and teachers engage classic literature, Sourcebooks is releasing The Shakesperience, enhanced e-books that exploit the iPad’s touchscreen technology to bring Shakespeare’s plays to life in new ways with a rich selection of carefully chosen multimedia and text. Sourcebooks is releasing Shakesperience editions of Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet and Othello today, selling for $9.99 via Apple’s iBookstore.”

via Sourcebooks Upgrades the Bard with ‘The Shakesperience’ Digital Editions.

Apple: On the Horizon


Steve Jobs looked to reinvent Apple’s iPhone photography with instant capture system, advanced light-field sensors | 9to5Mac | Apple Intelligence.