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Review: AmazonBasics Lightning to USB Cable

AmazonBasics Apple Certified Lightning to USB Cable – 6 Feet (1.8 Meters) – Black

You never know just how dependent you are on your cellphone until you’re stuck with a dead battery.

You forget to charge your phone the night before.

You wake up and have to run to a meeting. 20% charge.

“Well”, you think. “I can make it through the day, right?”

Then you get three phone calls, ten texts, need directions to where you’re going, and BOOM.

Brick.

You get smart to this, though. You bring an extra Lightning cable in the car, just in case.

But it being in the car, the lifespan of the Apple Lightning cable is about 3.7 minutes. One pump of the brake at a red light and your precious cable has been julienned.

Apple makes incredible, elegant, but not always durable products. Their charging cables have a particular weak point at the juncture between the Lightning (or 30-pin) connector and the cable itself. This area tends to hold a great deal of stress. Apple is aware of the problem and if you bring your cable back to the Genius Bar, they’ll usually kindly replace it if the product is within warranty.

However, you’re simply getting another soon-to-be-faulty cable.

Other manufacturers have solved the problem by reinforcing this area on their cable or making thicker cables.

But out of every third-party cable I’ve tested or used, the best by a mile is made by, of all companies, Amazon.

AmazonBasics is a new line of electronic and home accessories that are generic versions of everything from charging cables to Bluetooth speakers to coat hangers.

They’re priced right, too. While Lightning cables can cost anywhere from $9 at the cheapest on eBay to $29, the AmazonBasics cable is $10.99. It’s Apple Certified too, so no more sketchy-mall-kiosk cables that work half the time and the other half either elicit a pop-up on your phone saying how it’s less compatible than you and your ex. Or it burns your house down, just like your ex.

The best part of all – it comes in a 6-foot length for $3 more. You can plug it into the wall next to your bed and use your phone while laying in bed. You can plug it into the front of your car and someone in the backseat can use it. You can plug it into a wall outlet and use it while seated in an actual chair in the airport instead of huddling next to the wall like a transient.

This is the most durable cable I’ve ever owned, and I’ve had it for almost a year. It doesn’t have a single weak point, fray, rip, tear, or patchy spot that electrocutes you every time you touch it.

Since buying my first one, I’ve bought four and (reluctantly) given two away as stocking stuffers. I keep one at home and one in the car and I’m never, ever without a charge.

Are you bent out of shape with the iPhone 6?

In the wake of the explosive release of the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus are reports that the devices, the 6 Plus in particular, are very easy to bend.

Some customers are returning their bent iPhones to Apple for a refund–per Genius discretion.

The main concern is not over intentionally bending the phone, but the phone developing a bend over time–for instance, if it’s carried in the pocket of a pair of jeans.

According to Apple, they’ve received a total of 9 complaints of bent phones.

Has your iPhone 6 bent since you bought it?

Let us know!

Google partners copy Apple for new products?

The new line of Google Chromebooks is out and they look, well, familiar.

The design of the new Chromebooks match very closely with Apple’s MacBooks, which have had the same unibody design since 2008.

This is nothing new for the Chromebook line.

The Samsung Chromebook, first generation, looked like a knockoff MacBook Air, and apparently had the build quality to match, with frequent reports of screens separating from their casing.

The second-generation Chromebooks continue the tradition, with 2 out of 3 that look shamelessly Apple-inspired.

As you can see, the black beveled screen of the MacBook Pro was lifted by the HP Chromebook, as well as the centered silver text and rounded-edge bottom.

The Chromebook on the left apes the MacBook air’s bottom case shape, with the same vertical and rounded bevel and profile.

There’s more than one way to design a sleek, affordable laptop.

But Samsung and HP (who Google partners with to manufacture Chromebooks, as well as Acer and others) have designed Apple lookalikes to run Chrome OS, showing that the industry just can’t get over that classic Apple design.

Apple solves USB flaws for iPhone 6?

Despite the advent of FireWire and Thunderbolt. USB continues to remain king in the world of peripheral and device connections.

Every iPhone and iPad is charged via USB, every Apple laptop and computer has at least two USB ports–even the Air.

But USB has one handicap by design–finding which way is up.

We’ve all been there.

Apple may have found the solution.

A leaked photo by an Apple inside purportedly shows the iPhone 6’s reversible USB plug.

In other words, it will work no matter which direction you plug it in.

So no more fumbling around to plug it in!

Also, it will reportedly support USB 3.0, which means faster speeds and the capability to handle HD audio and video file transfers.

iWatch drawings, name, features leaked?

The iWatch is one of the most anticipated Apple products of the decade.

Considering that Apple has not released a new product line since the iPad in 2010, and has never made a wearable product (unless you count the iPod Shuffle which had a clip, the iWatch will be a gamechanger.

Few details have been released about it, and Apple hasn’t even confirmed its existence.

Other industry players like Samsung have released wearable gadgets, to little success, in the same way that before the iPad, there were Android tablets and, earlier yet, Palm Pilots, which never quite broke into the market.

But Apple’s been hiding plans for an iWatch right under our noses at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office since July 2011.

The patent refers to a “wrist-worn electronic device”. Check it out:

The name?

“iTime”.

The “iTime” can do the following:

  • Store and playback media (listed as its “first set of functions”)
  • Accept notifications from a mobile phone.
  • Accept or decline incoming calls from the mobile phone.

It also includes a “sensor to detect an arm or wrist gesture” along with haptic functionality, which means it can vibrate and alert you of an incoming call or iMessage.

Interestingly, 3 different designs are posed, so there could be multiple iWatch models.

Figure 5 is for an iTime with a removable center and Bluetooth capability.  This would likely be the one that connects with the iPhone.  Given the details earlier, this would be the iTime Pro.

Figure 6 is for an iTime with a removable center that is another device in itself.  The patent filing specifically states that it could fit an iPod Nano.  This would be more of a wristband with added features to the iPod Nano, so this would be like the standard iTime.

Figure 7 is for a fully-integrated iTime, where the device is permanently encapsulated within the band.  It also appears to be almost paper thin, so could this be an iTime Air?

In the way the iPad took tables from “bulky, clumsy touchscreens” to “elegant slates controlled with a flick of a finger”, the iTime seems poised to do the same.

Throwback Thursday: Apple Pippin

AppleTV is one of the most little-known current Apple products, yet has incredible functionality. For a relatively low price, you can do just about anything you can do on your iDevices right on your TV.

But long before AppleTV, there was a humble product known as the Apple Pippin. Named after a variety of, well, apples, the Pippin was designed to be a video-game player with functionality unheard of in 1995 when it made its debut.

Originally, Pippin was intended to be an open software platform, almost a proto-App Store. The description, per Apple’s original FAQ for the product, is fascinating:

Apple believes that families are looking for more than video game players today. Certainly they want to be able to play their favorite games, but they also want to communicate, learn, play interactive music, access information and much more. Pippin provides them this capability. In addition it provides them a high level of compatibility with a mainstream personal computer technology. This will provide them the knowledge that their investment in CD-ROM titles and experience will not go to waste.

In other words, Apple wanted to use the Pippin as something resembling a modern XBOX:

Their Pippins will integrate within their audio-visual consumer electronics world. In addition, it will be able to communicate and transfer files with their personal computers should they have them in their home. Finally, the Pippins with the addition of a GeoPort adapter or external modem will permit the customers to communicate over cyberspace.

While these descriptions of communicating over cyberspace seem laughably dated, this was cutting edge for the mid-90s. This was a device that was expandable, had multiple uses, and was one of the first entries of a computer company into the video game market.

This was my favorite portion of the FAQs, just because of how dated it feels:

Apple is integrating hardware technologies which improve the “on-screen” appearance of text on a TV screen. While the text will never be as clear as that on a computer monitor it is substantially better than anything in the video game industry today.

The Pippin was manufactured by Bandai and was intended to expand to other manufacturers, but with the return of Steve Jobs to Apple in 1997, the project was shut down along with all other projects where Macintosh technology was whitelabeled for other companies to use.

This museum description says it all:

It was not a success.

Have you used an Apple Pippin? Let us know in the comments.

The secret to the new iPad: its cover?

As Apple looks for ways to revamp and refresh their current product line, the iPad stands out.

Outside of an upgraded screen and typical size/speed/space differences, the iPad has not changed much, hardware-wise, since its 2010 debut.

Surprisingly, Apple has not released many accessories or peripherals for the iPad except the iPad Smart Cover, which turns into a stand and has a soft lining that can wipe off the fingerprint-magnet screen.

According to recent patent filings, the lowly iPad cover may be getting a huge upgrade, becoming a peripheral entirely of its own:

these cover devices contain a variety of embedded LEDs and electroluminescent (EL) panels to display various notifications. In some versions of the invention, the cover also contains a transparent window to allow the use of the portion of a tablet device to display notifications as well.

iOS 8 is all about notifications and integrating them between iOS devices and OSX devices, so this fits in line with Apple’s current strategy.

However, this cover would have its own LEDs imbedded within the cover to alert you to calls and messages, and has a pattern in the center similar to the current iPhone 5c case.

Most interestingly of all, it would be powered by a small MagSafe adapted located in the side of the iPad where the cover attaches. With the iPad’s notoriously slow charging speeds, this MagSafe adapter could also potentially be used to rapid-charge the device.

 

Prior patent filings show that traditional charging may not even be necessary, with embedded solar panels in the cover.

Would a notification cover compel you to purchase a new iPad?

Your MacBook like you’ve never seen it before

There’s a part of your MacBook that even you, as the most skilled Apple technician, has never seen before.

It involves something common to not just your MacBook, but a PC too. And an iPhone. And a radio.

It’s an electromagnetic field.

And instead of being a terrible textbook diagram or drawing, it has actually been mapped out—and it’s beautiful.

Two students, Luke Sturgeon and Shamik Ray, of the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design, came up with an unusual project:

To get their images, Sturgeon and Ray holed themselves up in a pitch-black, totally silent room for three days to experiment with different visualizations and processes. They ended up creating their own Android app in Processing that would allow them draw and map EMFs. The phone, with its built-in magnetic sensors, acted as a sort of “light brush” that reacted based on the strength of the EMF being read. To capture the streak of light coming from the radio, they would slowly drag the phone over the device and wait for the long exposure image to process.

The result? Gentle, spindly, hallucinatory waves in rainbow colors emanating from your MacBook’s surface.

Hopefully, this artistic display can translate to better understanding and monitoring of electromagnetic fields from these devices—and how that can create more powerful and efficient future technologies.

iPhone 5s prototype spotted?

The iPhone 5S is still a few months away, and rumors are abound.

But photos have recently emerged of the inner workings of the new iPhone 5S, showing a new A7 chip as well as a dual-flash on the back of the phone.

Additional markings on this new iPhone 5S chip indicate that it carries Elpida DRAM, apparently in the same 1 GB amount seen on the A6.

So what does this all mean? A faster chip, quicker processing speeds, and a flash that can make photos look more natural.

Definitely looks like a step in the right direction.

Why now is the time to buy a MacBook Air

I’ve always liked the idea of the MacBook Air.

They’re light as paper, look sexy, and I know I’d take it everywhere.

However, a few things have always kept me from buying it:

  • Speed: my MacBook Pro can simply handle and do more than the Air ever could
  • Battery Life: what’s the point of being super-portable if the battery life is worse than the MacBook Pro?
  • Price: cost was always a little rich for my blood, especially for just a lighter MacBook Pro

But the new MacBook Air just debuted, and it seems like Apple’s addressed all of the above:

  • Speed: “Apple also claims a modest performance boost to overall CPU speed, as well as a 40 percent speed boost to graphics processing.”
  • Battery Life: “The company claims the new Haswell-powered Airs can achieve up to 12 hours of battery life on the 13-inch model, and up to nine hours on the 11-inch model.”
  • Price: “The new MacBook Air models are available Monday and start at $999.”

Really, I can’t think of a reason to not get one now. And with the battery essentially shot on my current MacBook in its fourth year—it’s looking pretty tempting.

Would you buy the new MacBook Air? What have been your concerns with it in the past?

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