Archive for December 3rd, 2009

Watch Your Blu-Ray, DVD, & YouTube on iPods, CellPhones & More…

It is likely that you or someone you know received or purchased a dvd, cell phone, ipod, or maybe even a laptop recently. I feel that it is the perfect time to introduce you to a new product that just came out called MediaCopyPro.

Media Copy Pro lets you take your dvds, blu-rays, and even you-tube videos and transfer them to your ipod, iphone, cellphone, apple tv, and laptop! The step-by-step process will make it QUICK & EASY for you to convert all your DVDs, blu-rays, and videos to whichever device you need to.

You can learn more about it by going to:
Besides having perfect quality back up copies, here are some reasons to copy your media to those devices:

-People spend tons of money on portable DVD players for trips; instead you and your family can watch movies on your laptop, phone, or ipod.
-Long airplane or car rides get boring, so watch your DVDs or you-tube videos on your laptop, ipod, or phone.
-Share your favorite or homemade you tube videos with friends and family without having to access a computer or the internet.

Click here to have a look at Media Copy Pro:

Apple CEO Jobs backtracks on health

Apple Inc CEO Steve Jobs displays a redesigned iPod Nano at Apple’s “Let’s Rock” media event in San Francisco, California in this September 9, 2008 file photo. [Agencies]

Apple’s chief operating officer, Tim Cook, will take over Jobs’ responsibilities while he is on leave, though Jobs said he plans to remain involved in major strategic decisions while he is out.

Cook is seen as one of Jobs’ most likely successors, along with Apple’s top marketing executive, Philip Schiller.

“Tim Cook is a very experienced and highly regarded chief operating officer,” said Calyon Securities analyst Shebly Seyrafi. “He’s qualified.”

Apple’s shares slid $6.19, or 7.3 percent, to $79.14 in after-hours trading.

SEATTLE — Apple Inc. co-founder and Chief Executive Steve Jobs said Wednesday he is taking a medical leave until the end of June — just a week after the cancer survivor tried to assure investors and employees his recent weight loss was caused by an easily treatable hormone deficiency.

Apple’s stock plunged 7 percent.

Jobs, 53, said in a letter last week that he would remain at Apple’s helm despite the hormone problem, and that he had already begun a “relatively simple and straightforward” treatment. But in an e-mail to employees Wednesday, Jobs backtracked.

“During the past week I have learned that my health-related issues are more complex than I originally thought,” he wrote.

Apple’s shares have surged and crashed over the last year in step with rumors or news about the CEO’s health and his gaunt appearance. While the top executive’s health is an issue for investors in any company, at Apple the level of concern reaches fever pitch because Jobs has a hand in everything from ideas for new products to the way they’re marketed. Investors fear that without Jobs, Apple will not be able to sustain its growth of the last decade, which has seen Apple branch out from its Mac computers into the iPod and the iPhone.

Last week, Jobs said his disclosure of his hormone problem was “more than I wanted to say, and all that I am going to say” about his health. It came on the eve of Macworld, the biggest Apple trade show of the year, and Jobs said he wanted everyone to relax and enjoy the show.

Even so, the limited amount of medical information in that announcement did little to soothe Wall Street’s nerves, and in interviews last week analysts predicted that the health watch would continue.

Apple’s history of keeping information about Jobs’ health under wraps is only fueling the speculation. The company waited until after Jobs underwent surgery in 2004 to treat a very rare form of pancreatic cancer — an islet cell neuroendocrine tumor — before alerting investors. That type of cancer is easily cured if diagnosed early, unlike the deadlier and more common adenocarcinoma.

And last summer, Apple insisted Jobs’ weight loss was due to a common bug, even as The New York Times cited anonymous sources who said Jobs had undergone “a surgical procedure” to address the problem.

iPhone developer to put ads in game ,Piracy prompts

According to Bossert, this is not an isolated incident.

“Many developers are upset that the (Apple) digital rights management is broken and nobody has gotten a response from Apple, that I know of,” Bossert, co-founder of Fairlady Media, told CNET News on Tuesday. “The pirates are so far ahead of Apple now that … games are cracked the day or the day after they are released.”

An Apple spokesperson said the company had no comment.

Bossert said he plans to release a free, ad-supported version of Whack ‘em All within a few weeks as a result of the piracy. “I’ll leave the 99 cent version out there and see what happens,” he added.

Pirating of iPhone apps appears to have been going on since at least last July with the pirating of the Super Monkey Ball from SEGA.

When James Bossert saw he that his Whack ‘em All iPhone game had 400 new users in one day last week he initially got excited. But that sentiment quickly changed when he saw that only 12 people had paid 99 cents for the game on Apple’s iPhone App Store. Bossert e-mailed the person who claimed to have cracked and distributed it and posted the response on his blog.

 

“As many iPhone and iPod touch owners have discovered, Apple’s iTunes App Store has many flaws which render it useless to the common user,” the pirate, whose alias is “most_uniQue,” wrote. “Apple has chosen to allow a multitude of ridiculous, worthless, poorly-represented applications through its ’strict’ screening process, nearly all written by mediocre programmers with a dream of getting rich quick. Many of these programmers game the reviews system, misrepresent their application in the description, and generally try to swindle the honest buyer.”

The pirate then suggested that Apple offer trial versions of the apps and that Bossert offer an ad-supported version of his game.

“Most_uniQue” said he used Crackulous, “one-tap” cracking software developed by Hackulous, to crack the app. After cracking 35 apps, he is retiring, he told Bossert in their surprisingly friendly e-mail exchange.

These pirated apps run only on iPhones that have been jailbroken, or opened up to third-party applications without Apple’s authorization.

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