Have you ever been in a situation where you have
wanted to take a picture of something and didn’t have
a camera with you
It can be quite frustrating because you miss a great
photo opportunity simply because you don’t have the
right equipment with you.
But if you have an Apple iPhone, you never have to
worry about missing those great photo opportunities
again.
The Apple iPhone has a two-megapixel camera that is
built right in and is ready to use when you want to
take a picture. Even if you have had a cell phone with
a built in camera before, you will find that it
doesn’t compare to what the Apple iPhone can do.
The Apple iPhone makes it easy to share your photos
with its easy and automatic synchronization, whether
you are using a Mac or a PC for your docking.
It’s never been easier to display the pictures you
take - all it takes is a touch of a finger. Not only
that, but when you take your pictures they can be
posted directly to a Mac Photo Gallery.
The Apple iPhone is a photographer’s dream come true.
It’s ready to take pictures when you are and makes it
easy to show off the pictures that you have taken
almost immediately.
You will never have to worry about missing out on
taking a beautiful picture because you have a great
camera built right into your cell phone.
No matter whether you are a professional or an
amateur, you will find the camera on the iPhone easy
to use.
Showing posts with label mp3 player. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mp3 player. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Creativity is key in Ringtones
When you have a cell phone, one thing that you want is
to be able to define your phone by choosing your own
ringtone. This way you know that your ringtone is
special and that you can immediately pick it out from
all the other ringtones in the building.
With some phones, it can be frustrating because you
only have a limited amount of ringtones to choose
from. But that is not the case with the Apple iPhone.
Apple has made it easier than ever to find just the
right ringtone for your iPhone.
When you choose the Apple iPhone, you have a directory
of over 500,000 songs on iTunes to choose from, but
the options don’t stop there.
Once you have found a song that you want to select in
the iTunes store, you can use your own imagination and
creativity to have the song played the way that you
want it to be played.
You can have it fade in and out, loop, and preview it
before you purchase it to make sure that it’s just the
way that you want it to be.
With the Apple iPhone, you never have to worry about
having the same ring tone as everyone else because you
make it the way you want it to be.
When someone hears your phone ringing, and how cool it
sounds, you can say to him or her, “Thank you. That’s
my Apple iPhone that you hear, and I created that
ringtone myself.”
There is a certain satisfaction in knowing that you
took charge of your own ringtone.
to be able to define your phone by choosing your own
ringtone. This way you know that your ringtone is
special and that you can immediately pick it out from
all the other ringtones in the building.
With some phones, it can be frustrating because you
only have a limited amount of ringtones to choose
from. But that is not the case with the Apple iPhone.
Apple has made it easier than ever to find just the
right ringtone for your iPhone.
When you choose the Apple iPhone, you have a directory
of over 500,000 songs on iTunes to choose from, but
the options don’t stop there.
Once you have found a song that you want to select in
the iTunes store, you can use your own imagination and
creativity to have the song played the way that you
want it to be played.
You can have it fade in and out, loop, and preview it
before you purchase it to make sure that it’s just the
way that you want it to be.
With the Apple iPhone, you never have to worry about
having the same ring tone as everyone else because you
make it the way you want it to be.
When someone hears your phone ringing, and how cool it
sounds, you can say to him or her, “Thank you. That’s
my Apple iPhone that you hear, and I created that
ringtone myself.”
There is a certain satisfaction in knowing that you
took charge of your own ringtone.
Breaking the Bounds of Boredom with iPhone
How many times have you been traveling somewhere and
there is nothing to do but watch the scenery go by
You have listened to your music over and over again,
you have read your books, and you just want to watch a
movie.
But when you are traveling in a car, it’s impossible.
But that isn’t true anymore. If you have the Apple
iPhone, you can take your movies and television shows
with you wherever you go.
The Apple iPhone has a generous 3.5-inch screen and it
lets you enjoy anything that you have rented or
purchased from the iTunes store right there on your
iPhone, wherever you are.
The iPhone controls work very much like a DVD player
remote - you can use them to play, pause, or even view
certain chapters.
It’s also easy to adjust the volume on your iPhone so
that you don’t disturb the people around you.
It’s hard to believe that Apple has packed so many
features into one small device, but the company also
knows what people are looking for in their cell
phones.
They want to have plenty of options and they want
their cell phone to give them a lot of technology
right there at their fingertips.
The iPhone not only is a great phone and camera, but
it’s also a wonderful way to get rid of boredom. With
the big selection of movies and television shows on
iTunes, you will be able to find something that you
want to watch no matter what your tastes are.
there is nothing to do but watch the scenery go by
You have listened to your music over and over again,
you have read your books, and you just want to watch a
movie.
But when you are traveling in a car, it’s impossible.
But that isn’t true anymore. If you have the Apple
iPhone, you can take your movies and television shows
with you wherever you go.
The Apple iPhone has a generous 3.5-inch screen and it
lets you enjoy anything that you have rented or
purchased from the iTunes store right there on your
iPhone, wherever you are.
The iPhone controls work very much like a DVD player
remote - you can use them to play, pause, or even view
certain chapters.
It’s also easy to adjust the volume on your iPhone so
that you don’t disturb the people around you.
It’s hard to believe that Apple has packed so many
features into one small device, but the company also
knows what people are looking for in their cell
phones.
They want to have plenty of options and they want
their cell phone to give them a lot of technology
right there at their fingertips.
The iPhone not only is a great phone and camera, but
it’s also a wonderful way to get rid of boredom. With
the big selection of movies and television shows on
iTunes, you will be able to find something that you
want to watch no matter what your tastes are.
A Ton of Tunes on iPhone
No matter where you are going, you want to be able to
take your music with you. It used to be that you would
need to carry around a CD player with you.
When you add the time it takes to decide on what type
of music that you want to take with you and the
bulkiness of the CD player, it can get to be a real
hassle.
But those days are gone, because with the Apple iPhone
you have all of your favorite music right there at
your fingertips.
The Apple iPhone makes finding your favorite music
easy. With a touch of a single finger, you can quickly
browse through your playlists, albums, artists, or
songs.
If you can’t think of the album name but can picture
it in your mind, Cover Flow makes it easy for you to
find albums according to the artwork on the album
cover.
Do you want to sing along with your favorite song but
aren’t completely sure of the right lyrics If you
have added the songs with iTunes, you can have the
lyrics displayed right there on the screen.
It’s almost like having a karaoke machine right there
in front of you all the time.
Customers who have the Apple iPhone don’t have to
worry about bringing a separate MP3 player with them,
because all of the music they know and love is right
there on their cell phone. It’s ready to play when
they are ready to listen to it.
take your music with you. It used to be that you would
need to carry around a CD player with you.
When you add the time it takes to decide on what type
of music that you want to take with you and the
bulkiness of the CD player, it can get to be a real
hassle.
But those days are gone, because with the Apple iPhone
you have all of your favorite music right there at
your fingertips.
The Apple iPhone makes finding your favorite music
easy. With a touch of a single finger, you can quickly
browse through your playlists, albums, artists, or
songs.
If you can’t think of the album name but can picture
it in your mind, Cover Flow makes it easy for you to
find albums according to the artwork on the album
cover.
Do you want to sing along with your favorite song but
aren’t completely sure of the right lyrics If you
have added the songs with iTunes, you can have the
lyrics displayed right there on the screen.
It’s almost like having a karaoke machine right there
in front of you all the time.
Customers who have the Apple iPhone don’t have to
worry about bringing a separate MP3 player with them,
because all of the music they know and love is right
there on their cell phone. It’s ready to play when
they are ready to listen to it.
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
A Brief History Of Ipod
iPod is a digital mp3 / mp4 player developed and marketed by Apple Inc., an American consumer electronics multinational corporation. During their research, Apple found that in comparison to available camcorders, digital cameras, and organizers; digital music players recorded poor sales, primarily due to their awful user interfaces. Apple wanted to do something about it and so Jon Rubinstein, Apple's hardware engineering chief brought together a team comprising of Tony Fadell (who dreamed of a hard disk based music player), Michael Dhuey (hardware engineer), Jonathan Ive (design engineer), and Stan Ng (marketing manager). In less than a year, they designed a hard disk based music player, that had a 5 GB hard drive and capable of storing 1000 songs.
Apple's iTunes software is utilized to operate the iPod (m3 / mp4 player). The software is compatible with all Mac systems. The operating system is stored on its hard disk. A boot loader program is contained in a NOR flash ROM chip (either 1 MB or 512 KB) which instructs the device to load the operating system from the hard disk. The iPod has a 32 MB of RAM, a portion of which is used to hold the operating system from firmware, and the rest is used to cache songs from the hard disk. Apple also invented a technology whereby the hard disk of iPod could spin up once and about 30 MB of upcoming songs could be cached into the RAM. This did not require the hard disk to spin up for every song and thereby saved battery power. Apple also introduced a Windows version of iPod, at a later stage.
The audio files that iPod (mp3 / mp4 player) supports are MP3, AAC/M4A, Protected AAC, AIFF, WAV, Audible audiobook, and Apple Lossless audio file formats. MIDI and WMA files can be played only after a convertor accomplishes conversion, for non-Digital Rights Management (DRM). Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, and other open-source audio formats are not supported at all.
Apple wanted an extremely user friendly interface and thus adopted the minimalist interface, which features only five essential buttons, namely, Menu (to access functions and to toggle the backlight); Center (for menu item selection); Play/ Pause (this also works as an off switch when held for few seconds); Skip Forward/ Fast Forward; and Skip Backwards/ Fast Reverse. An additional Hold button is provided for accidental button pressing prevention, and it can reset the iPod if it has frozen or crashed. Functions such as volume control, scrolling are handled by the usage of the rotational click wheel. Later models have some minor changes in the functions of the buttons but overall the number of buttons has remained at five.
To market this path-breaking mp3 / mp4 player, they needed a suitable futuristic name and so they hired a freelance copywriter, Vinnie Chieco, and other writers to give a name. Inspired by the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey and the dialogue "Open the pod bay door, Hal!" with reference to the context of the Discovery One spaceship and its white EVA Pods, Vinnie Chieco proposed the name of the product as iPod. The management of Apple accepted the proposed name and on 23 October 2001, the iPod was officially launched. The rest they say is history.
To enable customers to access songs of their choice, Apple opened up an online media store The iTunes Store on 29 April 2003, where individual songs could be downloaded at prices less than a U.S. dollar per song. The purchased songs can be played only on iPods. Subsequent versions of this iPod (mp3 / mp4 player) also featured video capabilities, and thus iTunes Store started selling short videos from 12 October 2005. From 12 September 2006, full-length movies were also available at the iTunes Store.
iPods have come a long way from their inception, and now the latest fifth generation iPods possess multimedia capabilities and are available in both Mac OS and Windows OS versions. Usually, if a new iPod is plugged into a Mac OS computer, then the hard disk of this mp3 / mp4 player is formatted as per the HFS+ file format, and if it plugged into a Windows OS computer, it is formatted as per the FAT32 file format. From being a digital music player, the iPod has now transformed into a digital media player.
Apple's iTunes software is utilized to operate the iPod (m3 / mp4 player). The software is compatible with all Mac systems. The operating system is stored on its hard disk. A boot loader program is contained in a NOR flash ROM chip (either 1 MB or 512 KB) which instructs the device to load the operating system from the hard disk. The iPod has a 32 MB of RAM, a portion of which is used to hold the operating system from firmware, and the rest is used to cache songs from the hard disk. Apple also invented a technology whereby the hard disk of iPod could spin up once and about 30 MB of upcoming songs could be cached into the RAM. This did not require the hard disk to spin up for every song and thereby saved battery power. Apple also introduced a Windows version of iPod, at a later stage.
The audio files that iPod (mp3 / mp4 player) supports are MP3, AAC/M4A, Protected AAC, AIFF, WAV, Audible audiobook, and Apple Lossless audio file formats. MIDI and WMA files can be played only after a convertor accomplishes conversion, for non-Digital Rights Management (DRM). Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, and other open-source audio formats are not supported at all.
Apple wanted an extremely user friendly interface and thus adopted the minimalist interface, which features only five essential buttons, namely, Menu (to access functions and to toggle the backlight); Center (for menu item selection); Play/ Pause (this also works as an off switch when held for few seconds); Skip Forward/ Fast Forward; and Skip Backwards/ Fast Reverse. An additional Hold button is provided for accidental button pressing prevention, and it can reset the iPod if it has frozen or crashed. Functions such as volume control, scrolling are handled by the usage of the rotational click wheel. Later models have some minor changes in the functions of the buttons but overall the number of buttons has remained at five.
To market this path-breaking mp3 / mp4 player, they needed a suitable futuristic name and so they hired a freelance copywriter, Vinnie Chieco, and other writers to give a name. Inspired by the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey and the dialogue "Open the pod bay door, Hal!" with reference to the context of the Discovery One spaceship and its white EVA Pods, Vinnie Chieco proposed the name of the product as iPod. The management of Apple accepted the proposed name and on 23 October 2001, the iPod was officially launched. The rest they say is history.
To enable customers to access songs of their choice, Apple opened up an online media store The iTunes Store on 29 April 2003, where individual songs could be downloaded at prices less than a U.S. dollar per song. The purchased songs can be played only on iPods. Subsequent versions of this iPod (mp3 / mp4 player) also featured video capabilities, and thus iTunes Store started selling short videos from 12 October 2005. From 12 September 2006, full-length movies were also available at the iTunes Store.
iPods have come a long way from their inception, and now the latest fifth generation iPods possess multimedia capabilities and are available in both Mac OS and Windows OS versions. Usually, if a new iPod is plugged into a Mac OS computer, then the hard disk of this mp3 / mp4 player is formatted as per the HFS+ file format, and if it plugged into a Windows OS computer, it is formatted as per the FAT32 file format. From being a digital music player, the iPod has now transformed into a digital media player.
Labels:
iPod,
mp3 player,
mp4 player,
podcast,
podcasting
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)