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Apple eNewsFebruary 1, 2006



In this issue:


Put some color on

Aperture: Shining bright in black & white

Making the cut. In GarageBand.

Telling the unexpected story

Capturing passion in a podcast

Make it a red-letter Valentine's Day

Technically speaking

What’s new?










Hot News Headlines







“This is the simplest phone ever,” says Andy Ihnatko (Chicago Sun-Times) of the forthcoming Apple iPhone. Having used iPhone for about 45 minutes during a private briefing an Macworld, Ihnatko reports that “the touch-interface works flawlessly, in terms of both technical function and user interface design. Whatever you want to do—select an album to play, make or take a call, compose and send an e-mail—your first impulse is almost always the correct one.” What’s more, “it’s the most beautiful freakin’ display I’ve ever seen on a phone or PDA, both in range of color and level of detail. Even microscopic browser text is credibly readable.”

Reporting from NAMM, Jim Dalrymple (Macworld) found Mac usage all but ubiquitous among musicians attending the show. “‘We use the Macs for everything from recording to mastering,’” he quotes an independent recording artist as saying,” And as for quality, Dalrymple quotes the same source: “‘The tracks we took into the engineer came out so good, the engineer couldn’t believe it.’”

More news...












What's new?


Movie Deal


You can save up to $200—instantly or via a mail-in rebate—if you
purchase any Mac computer and Final Cut Express HD between now and
March 27. Conditions apply, so be sure to visit our Movie Deal page
to learn how you can take advantage of this cinematic offer.






Scott Bourne


While John Stanmeyer makes the case for processing black-and-white
images in Aperture, a recent Inside Aperture post by Scott Bourne
lets everyone know how impressively Aperture handles JPEG images.
“With the exception of the RAW fine tuning controls, every command
in Aperture that works with RAW files, also works with JPEGs. It
just works faster. And of course, all the compare, select,
keywording and publishing tools work with JPEGs too.”






iPod TV ads


If you enjoyed the new Mac TV ads, we told you about in our last
issue, you’ll also want to watch the new iPod TV ads. Both feature
Flathead by the Fratellis, the lead song on the EP with the same
name.





Keynote


Do you storyboard? Most creatives do. And while you may do most of
your work in Final Cut Pro, another Mac application—Keynote, part
of the iWork productivity suite—can help you pitch your ideas very
successfully. Especially if you pair it with PitchBoards 3 Pro a
suite of new Keynote templates designed for HD presentations.










Sundance Film Festival


Although the final curtain has dropped on the 25th annual Sundance
Film Festival, you can still catch some of the great short films
seen at Sundance. Right on your Mac or PC. Ranging from animated
films to documentaries to dramas, you’ll find 29 Sundance shorts in iTunes—and a collection of more than 30 free podcasts. All released at the 2007 Sundance festival, they’re available exclusively in iTunes for just $1.99. And they have a limited run, so be sure to check them out while you can.









EarthDesk 4.0


Many applications promise you the world. But EarthDesk 4.0 actually
delivers it—right to your desktop. Placing a dynamic image of the
p***t on your Mac desktop, the new Universal version of the
application supports multiple monitors, displays real-time clouds,*
lets you track storms, and provides numerous customization options.
(* Some features require a live Internet connection.)







Using satellite data, scientists at the American Museum of Natural
History use their Macs to generate 3D animations to illustrate the
ways human activity has encouraged climate change. And you can see
the results for yourself by attending one of the upcoming Pro
Sessions
at a retail Apple Store.










Found an article you think a few dozen friends ought to read? Send them to the online version of Apple eNews.




Every week, developers release new products for us to enjoy. Like to see some of the more recent arrivals?





Send Me eNews











Apple eNews

February 1, 2007

Volume 10, Issue 2



We hope you thoroughly enjoyed reading this first issue of Apple
eNews for 2007. You can expect your next issue on February 15. See
you then.




Written and designed by Apple in Cupertino, Apple eNews is a free, bi-weekly email publication.



Event dates are subject to change. Some products, programs, or promotions are not available outside the U.S. Visit your local Apple site or call your local authorized Apple reseller for more
information. Prices are Apple Store prices as of the date of this
publication. They do not include sales tax or shipping charges, are
subject to change, and are listed in US dollars. Product
specifications are subject to change.











Put some color on


Now the world’s most wearable iPod comes in five brilliant colors: silver, pink, green, blue, and orange. That means you can make a very colorful music statement—one that sets off your eyes or that handsome hoodie you’ve got on—just by clipping a 1GB iPod shuffle to your sleeve. Or wherever else you’d care to wear it.



Whatever color you choose for your iPod shuffle, you can still carry up to 240 songs with you. And you can listen to all the songs, podcasts, or audiobooks you’re wearing for up to 12 skip-free hours. Color me delighted.



Already available from the online Apple Store, iPod shuffle sells for just $79. Visit a store in your neighborhood soon, and see which color you’d like to wear home.










Aperture: Shining bright in black & white


Truly a smart phone

“What a lot of photographers don’t realize,” John Stanmeyer reports,
“is that the power of Aperture is not only in digital RAW
photography. It really shines in the traditional film-based
photography that we’ve been doing for decades.”



An awarding-winner frontline news photographer for TIME Magazine and
National Geographic, Stanmeyer discovered Aperture’s prowess on a
recent project documenting Balinese culture. Capturing his originals
on black-and-white film, he brought scans of the images into
Aperture for cataloging and processing.



“We imported around twenty files and, you know, the hairs on the
back of my neck were completely on end,” he says. “The outcome with
Aperture and black-and-white film is just astonishing.” “I’ve never
had that degree of control in any digital editing tool I’ve used
previously.”










Making the cut. In GarageBand.




When Lyle Ritz entered the recording studio to cut “How About Uke,” his first jazz ukulele album for Verve Records, engineers edited the recording sharply enough. Using razor blades. They were, after all, the editing tool du jour in 1957.



Lyle Ritz

For his latest album, however, the 75-year-old Ritz left the razor blades in the medicine cabinet, opting instead to bring GarageBand and his new Mac laptop into his home recording studio. There, the world-renowned ukulele and string bass player taught himself how to wield his new Mac. The result: “No Frills,” an album of jazz standards Ritz recorded and edited entirely in GarageBand. Released on the Flea Market Music label, “No Frills” now frequents the iTunes Store, along with several other Ritz recordings.










Telling the unexpected story



Everything changed for filmmaker Mark Becker when he spoke with
Carmelo Muñiz Sánchez. Interviewing mariachis for what he envisioned
as a 10-minute short film, he instead found himself face-to-face
with a story that would grow into an 80-minute film reaping multiple
awards (including Official Selection at the 2005 Sundance Film
Festival) and absolutely rave reviews.



“Romantico,”

“Romántico,” now in limited nationwide release, tells the story of
the difficult choice confronting Sanchez: to live and work in the
U.S. but never see the wife, children and dying mother he supported
from afar. Or to return to them, only to live in poverty.



Shot in 16mm film and edited in Final Cut Pro, “Romántico” has
become a more-than five-year affair for Becker. One he couldn’t have
consummated without the Mac and Final Cut Pro.









Capturing passion in a podcast


Capturing passion in a podcast

“Podcasting is at its best,” says journalist Joseph Vella, “when
you can close your eyes and you can see the story while you listen.”
It’s the type of experience Vella remembers during the heyday of
radio, when DJs, passionate about the music they played, “talked
about technique, about history, and about the musicians themselves.
Podcasts allow us to do that kind of retro-style radio, yet we can
modernize it and use all these great tools to create something that
goes beyond that.”



The “great tools” Vella uses include a MacBook Pro, GarageBand, and
Soundtrack Pro, instruments he’s plied to bring us podcast series—several available on iTunes—on
Pat Metheney, Christian McBride, McCoy Tyner, the Beach Boys, Yo-Yo
Ma, John Coltrane, and other musical luminaries.








Make it a red-letter Valentine's Day



Talk about lucky. You have 13 whole days left to pick out the
perfect Valentine's Day gift for that special someone in your life.
Need a suggestion?



iTunes (PRODUCT) RED Card

Think iTunes. You’ll find a ton of amazing content on the iTunes
Store. Music. Music Videos. Movies. TV Shows. You’ll even find a
Valentine’s Day playlist with some great ideas. You can gift
anything and everything on the Store. You can even get a Gift
Card—like the new iTunes (PRODUCT) RED Gift Card.



Even more options await on our Valentine’s Day Gift Guide. They
include the iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED, which like the RED Gift Card
also helps the Global Fund fight AIDS in Africa. And if you purchase
gift guide items from the online Apple Store, you get free iPod
engraving and free gift wrapping, too.








Technically speaking


iPod shuffle
If you have a new iPod shuffle, we have a great resource for you.
It’s a new tutorial explaining how to get the most mileage out of
the most wearable iPod ever.



The tutorial steps you through all of the buttons on iPod shuffle,
showing you how to turn it on and off, navigate through songs,
change the volume, pause your music, and toggle between playing your
tunes in order or randomly shuffling through them. You’ll even find
out how to lock the buttons to prevent musical accidents.



Would you like iTunes to fill your iPod shuffle for you
automatically? Or would you prefer to pick and choose the songs
you’d like to wear on your sleeve. The video, joining other
informative tutorials on the Support site, explains how.














Copyright © 2007 Apple Inc.  All Rights Reserved

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