The latest from TechCrunch
- Some Key Subtle Details From Apple's Textbook Event
- iPads And Digital Textbooks Do Not Belong In Classrooms Yet
- No More Swiping: Card.io Launches New Consumer App, Developer Tools Which "See" Your Credit Card
- New iTunes U App Hits iTunes With Over 500,000 Free Lectures, Videos & Books
- Nike Officially Announces The Nike+ FuelBand
- AppAddictive Raises $1.2 Million For Drag-And-Drop Facebook Page Builder & Ad Platform
- TCTV: Hundreds Rally In The Streets Of NYC To Defend The Internet
- German Clone King Faces Battle With Former Staff, And Satirical Dance Track Of His Memos
- Houghton Mifflin, McGraw Hill, Pearson First Textbook Publishing Partners For Apple's iBooks 2
- Apple Isn't The Only Disruptor: How Amazon Is Killing Publishers
- The Shareholder Pitchforks Are Out For Netflix
- Apple Unveils New iBooks Author Tool, Not Just For Textbooks
- Sea Change: Apple Guts Textbook Publishing
- The Soul Still Burns: Classic Brawler Soul Calibur Lands On iOS
- Apple: 20,000 Education iPad Apps Developed; 1.5 Million Devices In Use At Schools
- Apple Announces iBooks 2, A New Textbook Experience For The iPad
- Foxconn Chief Equates Employees To Animals
- Here Come The iPad 2S/3 Cases!
- Samsung: One In Ten South Koreans Now Owns A Samsung Galaxy S II
- Report: 798 Daily Deal Sites Folded In The Last 6 Months Of 2011
| Some Key Subtle Details From Apple's Textbook Event | Top |
Today at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City, Apple held an event to talk about two key things: "Reinventing textbooks" and "Reinventing curriculum". But perhaps lost amid the tentpole announcements (iBooks 2, iBooks Author, and the all-new iTunes U) were some subtleties of those products and Apple's plans for the education space. Among them: | |
| iPads And Digital Textbooks Do Not Belong In Classrooms Yet | Top |
I do not want my children learning math proofs on iPads. I simply do not see the value in it. iPads will not help with identifying sentence clauses or writing an essay. There's a place for interactive learning and there's not. It's a clear line. Give science and history teachers iPads loaded with demos, videos and soundbites. Allow children to pinch and zoom DNA strands and the inner workings of WWI trenches. But make my kids do math drills on paper with a dull pencil. Please. Simply put, the movement to digitalized learning scares me. iBooks 2 is just the start. Digital interactive learning has always been the future but I fear for my children now that it's here. | |
| No More Swiping: Card.io Launches New Consumer App, Developer Tools Which "See" Your Credit Card | Top |
Card.io, the toolkit for mobile app developers which lets users pay for items by holding their credit card up to the phone's camera, is today launching a consumer-facing app. It's something like Square, but without the dongle. It's also not aimed at merchants, as Square is. Instead, the new Card.io applications, available for both iPhone and Android, are meant for person-to-person payments. Splitting lunch, borrowing money, paying for gas - that sort of thing. | |
| New iTunes U App Hits iTunes With Over 500,000 Free Lectures, Videos & Books | Top |
Following this morning's education event, Apple has launched a new, dedicated iOS application called "iTunes U." This educational content portal, previously available only in iTunes, has now arrived in the App Store for all iPhones, iPads, and iPod Touch devices. It has also undergone a major revamp so as to better complement Apple's newly-announced educational offerings, including iBooks 2 and its iBooks Author Tool, which allows anyone to easily create books and textbooks. | |
| Nike Officially Announces The Nike+ FuelBand | Top |
Exercise gadgetry seems to be all the rage this season, with products like the Jawbone UP and MotoACTV entering the marketplace. Nike of all companies will certainly not be left behind, and has today announced a new wristband called the FuelBand. Not unlike its competitors, the FuelBand measures time, steps and calories during your fitness routine. | |
| AppAddictive Raises $1.2 Million For Drag-And-Drop Facebook Page Builder & Ad Platform | Top |
AppAddictive, a newly launched DreamIt-backed startup from its 2011's NYC class, has just scored $1.2 million in seed funding for its drag-and-drop Facebook page creation tools and (forthcoming) ad platform. Designed to bring the same tools the big guys use to smaller businesses and other industry verticals, AppAddictive will offer dozens of easy-to-install applications for Facebook pages, including things like custom landing pages, photo and video galleries, static HTML, quizzes and more. | |
| TCTV: Hundreds Rally In The Streets Of NYC To Defend The Internet | Top |
Yesterday, as some of the biggest sites on the web 'blacked out' in bold protests of the deeply flawed anti-piracy bills SOPA and PIPA, hundreds of protesters took to the streets in several cities across the US to take the fight offline. | |
| German Clone King Faces Battle With Former Staff, And Satirical Dance Track Of His Memos | Top |
Rocket Internet, the Berlin-based incubator most famous for slavishly cloning US companies like Zappos, AirBnB and now Pinterest in Germany, now faces a new competitor - in the form of some of its key employees. As we reported recently the core team of Rocket, lead by Oliver Samwer and his two other brothers, left to set up something new, and now we know what it is. | |
| Houghton Mifflin, McGraw Hill, Pearson First Textbook Publishing Partners For Apple's iBooks 2 | Top |
Today at Apple's education event, the company introduced iBooks 2, a textbook platform that effectively transforms $200 textbooks into iPad apps at a much more reasonable price. But of course, a textbook platform isn't worth a thing without the educational powerhouse publishers behind it. Luckily, the first up to the bat on the iBooks 2 platform are names we know well: Pearson, McGraw Hill and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. They're responsible for 90 percent of the textbooks sold. | |
| Apple Isn't The Only Disruptor: How Amazon Is Killing Publishers | Top |
While we're on the subject of publishing, Sarah Lacy found a great monologue on the current state of publishing and how, in short, Amazon is tearing old publishing houses a new one. Publishers, like music producers, don't make money piddling around with 50 mid-list books. They make money buying (for millions) and selling (a few) books by human black holes like Snooki and the Kardashians. They make money selling Stephen King novels and Newt Gingrich screeds. They make money, to mix industries, by betting on big budget dramas and reality TV. Sometimes a gem sneaks through, but it's rare. | |
| The Shareholder Pitchforks Are Out For Netflix | Top |
Armed with pitchforks and hindsight, class action lawyers are gathering up mobs of angry shareholders who lost money and going after the company. Earlier this week a lawsuit was filed against Netflix senior management for not disclosing the short-term nature of its contracts to stream certain movies. And this morning a shareholder rights group called Robbins Umeda announced an "investigation" which could lead to another class-action suit. | |
| Apple Unveils New iBooks Author Tool, Not Just For Textbooks | Top |
Apple has spent the past few moments demoing all the new education-friendly featured in iBooks 2, but they have just now answered the question of how authors can create that kind of rich content. All the magic happens in a new OSX application called iBooks Author, which gives users a simple way to integrate different types of media in order to create iBooks of any stripe. | |
| Sea Change: Apple Guts Textbook Publishing | Top |
The days of the $500 college textbook bills are, it seems, over. With Apple's announcement of iBooks 2, the world of textbooks is changed forever. Education is a hard nut to crack. There are bright spots and clever new ideas, but technology hasn't quite figured out how to do a better job than the "old ways." That's why Apple's decision to launch iBooks 2 and the attendant editing tools is so important: it tears down a number of entrenched technologies while maintaining the scaffolding of familiarity. It leaves the stuff that works and saves the schools, students, and parents money and time. In short, it stabs the publishing industry while it embraces it, ensuring that its old methods are no longer profitable but offering it new tools to go forward. Whether they survive the initial thrust, though, is anyone's guess. | |
| The Soul Still Burns: Classic Brawler Soul Calibur Lands On iOS | Top |
Ready for a blast of late 90's fighting game nostalgia? Well, get those thumbs ready, because Namco's arcade/Dreamcast classic Soul Calibur has just been released for iOS. I enjoyed a long-standing fling with Soul Calibur in my younger days, mostly because it was the only fighting game I was ever good at. My skills seem to have dulled considerably over the intervening years, though the touch controls probably don't help much. | |
| Apple: 20,000 Education iPad Apps Developed; 1.5 Million Devices In Use At Schools | Top |
At Apple's education event today, the company revealed a number of compelling stats regarding iPad use in the education and learning space. Apple's SVP of Marketing Phil Schiller announced that there are currently 20,000 education and learning applications that have been built for the iPad. He added that 1.5 million iPads are currently in use in educational institutions and schools. Obviously, Apple is looking to increase this number, which is why the company is partnering with publishing houses and innovating on iBooks to offer more a more student-focused and education-friendly experience. | |
| Apple Announces iBooks 2, A New Textbook Experience For The iPad | Top |
"Education is deep in our DNA, and it has been since the very beginning," said Phil Schiller, Apple's SVP of Worldwide Marketing. On that thought Apple just announced iBooks 2. This move is centered around reinvent the textbook. Schiller explained today that Apple sees textbooks as amazing devices, but they're heavy, not searchable or durable. According to Apple the iPad is the perfect counter. It's portable, durable, interactive, searchable, current and capable of containing even richer content. | |
| Foxconn Chief Equates Employees To Animals | Top |
While I suspect there's a lot lost in translation here,Foxconn chairman Terry Gou made a wildly distasteful joke this week at the Taipei Zoo, saying (according to WantChinaTimes): "Hon Hai (Foxconn) has a workforce of over one million worldwide and as human beings are also animals, to manage one million animals gives me a headache." The comments came during a presentation at the zoo where the superintendant Chin Shih-chien gave a talk on feeding and taking care of his charges. Gou has apparently hired Chin to make recommendations and help Foxconn executives learn how to manage large organizations. | |
| Here Come The iPad 2S/3 Cases! | Top |
It's that time again, friends. Apple rumors are swirling and case makers are trying to get a jump in their competitive field. So much so that a Chinese manufacturing company "Chineestyle Co., Limited" is actually selling cases for the next-gen iPad, which they are calling the iPad 2S. Yep, it's that time again. | |
| Samsung: One In Ten South Koreans Now Owns A Samsung Galaxy S II | Top |
It's not really news to say that the Galaxy S II is a hit, but it has actually become a mega hit in South Korea. According to maker Samsung, the Android handset has been sold a whopping 5 million times in its domestic market since release at the end of April 2011. In other words, a little more than 10% of the country's entire population (48 million people) are now proud owners of the phone. It's the first cell phone that has reached this milestone in mobile-crazy South Korea, according to Japanese business daily The Nikkei. The paper also says that one out of four South Korean smartphones users owns a Galaxy S II (sounds like feature phones don't play a big role in that country anymore). | |
| Report: 798 Daily Deal Sites Folded In The Last 6 Months Of 2011 | Top |
According to a new report from Daily Deal Media, a great source of news, information and data about the hot daily deal industry, there's a whole lot of consolidation and death going on among the many Groupon wannabes on this planet - at least in some regions. Daily Deal Media is keeping most of the good stuff behind a steep paywall, but shared some key findings from its report in a press release earlier this morning. According to them, the world has lost close to 800 - 798 to be precise - daily deal sites in the second half of 2011. | |
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Today at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City, Apple held an event to talk about two key things: "Reinventing textbooks" and "Reinventing curriculum". But perhaps lost amid the tentpole announcements (
I do not want my children learning math proofs on iPads. I simply do not see the value in it. iPads will not help with identifying sentence clauses or writing an essay. There's a place for interactive learning and there's not. It's a clear line. Give science and history teachers iPads loaded with demos, videos and soundbites. Allow children to pinch and zoom DNA strands and the inner workings of WWI trenches. But make my kids do math drills on paper with a dull pencil. Please. Simply put, the movement to digitalized learning scares me. 
Following this morning's
Exercise gadgetry seems to be all the rage this season, with products like the Jawbone UP and MotoACTV entering the marketplace. Nike of all companies will certainly not be left behind, and has today announced a new wristband called the FuelBand. Not unlike its competitors, the FuelBand measures time, steps and calories during your fitness routine. 
Yesterday, as some of the biggest sites on the web 'blacked out' in bold protests of the deeply flawed anti-piracy bills SOPA and PIPA, hundreds of protesters took to the streets in several cities across the US to take the fight offline.
Rocket Internet, the Berlin-based incubator most famous for slavishly cloning US companies like Zappos, AirBnB and now Pinterest in Germany, now faces a new competitor - in the form of some of its key employees.
Today at Apple's education event, the company introduced iBooks 2, a textbook platform that effectively transforms $200 textbooks into iPad apps at a much more reasonable price. But of course, a textbook platform isn't worth a thing without the educational powerhouse publishers behind it. Luckily, the first up to the bat on the iBooks 2 platform are names we know well: Pearson, McGraw Hill and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. They're responsible for 90 percent of the textbooks sold.
While we're on the subject of publishing,
Armed with pitchforks and hindsight, class action lawyers are gathering up mobs of angry shareholders who lost money and going after the company. Earlier this week a
Apple has spent the past few moments demoing all the new education-friendly featured in
The days of the $500 college textbook bills are, it seems, over. With Apple's announcement of
Ready for a blast of late 90's fighting game nostalgia? Well, get those thumbs ready, because Namco's arcade/Dreamcast classic Soul Calibur has just been released for iOS. I enjoyed a long-standing fling with Soul Calibur in my younger days, mostly because it was the only fighting game I was ever good at. My skills seem to have dulled considerably over the intervening years, though the touch controls probably don't help much.
At Apple's
"Education is deep in our DNA, and it has been since the very beginning," said Phil Schiller, Apple's SVP of Worldwide Marketing. On that thought Apple just announced iBooks 2. This move is centered around reinvent the textbook. Schiller explained today that Apple sees textbooks as amazing devices, but they're heavy, not searchable or durable. According to Apple the iPad is the perfect counter. It's portable, durable, interactive, searchable, current and capable of containing even richer content.
While I suspect there's a lot lost in translation here,
It's that time again, friends. Apple rumors are swirling and case makers are trying to get a jump in their competitive field. So much so that a Chinese manufacturing company "Chineestyle Co., Limited" is
It's not really news to say that the Galaxy S II is a hit, but it has actually become a mega hit in South Korea. According to maker
According to a
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