CultCast #275 - How Apple will make iPad SEXY again đ±đđ
The CultCast - Een podcast door America's favorite Apple Podcast

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This week: Appleâs about to overhaul the iPad, and itâs long overdue!  Plus: why Steve Jobs was cool with your kids using an iPad, but not his own; how the technology we love might be making us all stupid;  and we wrap up with an all new CultCast Choices, the game of great gifts with strange side effects...
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- Smartphones that fold out into a tablet are one of the many awesome inventions the creators of Westworld promised we have to look forward to in the future. But according to a new rumor, Samsung might make them a reality in 2017.
- Apple will announce its next-generation iPad lineup next month during its very first event at Apple Park, according to a new report.
- Sources say that production of the new 10.5-inch iPad Pro has been brought forward for the launch. The device is expected to be accompanied by an updated 12.9-inch iPad Pro and a more affordable 9.7-inch iPad.
- Apple âis expected to unveil the new iPad at a product event to be held in early April to mark the inauguration of Appleâs new headquarters in California,â
- The new 10.5ⳠiPad would have the exact same resolution as the 12.9ⳠiPad Pro (2732 x 2048), but the same pixel density of the iPad mini (326 ppi instead of 264 ppi). Crunch the numbers, do a little Pythagorean Theorem, and you end up with a screen 10.5Ⳡdiagonal
- Device logs obtained by mobile marketing firm Fiksu appear to show that four different iPad models are currently being tested in the San Francisco Bay Area.
- Just because four model numbers have been discovered doesnât mean Apple will release four different iPads this month.
- Last year, Fiksu saw new device model names pop up in its logs about a month before the new iPads were announced.
When Steve Jobs was running Apple, he was known to call journalists to either pat them on the back for a recent article or, more often than not, explain how they got it wrong. I was on the receiving end of a few of those calls. But nothing shocked me more than something Mr. Jobs said to me in late 2010 after he had finished chewing me out for something I had written about an iPad shortcoming.
- New York Times reporter Nick Bilton said he once assumingly asked Jobs, âSo your kids must love the iPad?â
- âThey havenât used it. We limit how much technology our kids use at home.â
- âEvery evening Steve made a point of having dinner at the big long table in their kitchen, discussing books and history and a variety of things,â
- Since then, Iâve met a number of technology chief executives and venture capitalists who say similar things: they strictly limit their childrenâs screen time, often banning all gadgets on school nights, and allocating ascetic time limits on weekends.
- Evan Williams, a founder of Blogger, Twitter and Medium, and his wife, Sara Williams, said that in lieu of iPads, their two young boys have hundreds of books (yes, physical ones) that they can pick up and read anytime.
- Ali Partovi, a founder of iLike and adviser to Facebook, Dropbox and Zappos, said "Â I wouldnât dream of limiting how much time a kid can spend with her paintbrushes, or playing her piano, or writing, I think itâs absurd to limit her time spent creating computer art, editing video, or computer programming,â
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