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Etymotic hf3: Beatweek 2010 Earbuds of the Year

December 31, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

Not everyone is in can spend as much on earbuds as they did on their iPhone or iPod to begin with. But there’s a balance between price tag and audio quality, and the pinpoint of that equilibrium in this year is Etymotic’s hf3 earbuds. At $179 they’re not in everyone’s price range (which is why our Best of 2010 awards also include value priced earbud categories). But after having tested dozens of earbud products over the years whose price tags have ranged from less than twenty dollars to more than five hundred dollars, the hf3 is our winner for 2010. Available in black, red, and blue.

Buy now: $159 at Amazon.com.

Kensington AssistOne: Beatweek 2010 Bluetooth Speakerphone of the Year

December 31, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

How about a bluetooth speakerphone for your car that doesn’t force you to stash your iPhone elsewhere? That’s the idea behind the Kensington AssistOne. We’ve tested plenty of visor-mount bluetooth speakerphones designed to allow you to leave your iPhone in your pocket which get the job done well (in fact one such product won in this category last year), but such products are designed around the notion that you’d never want your phone visible or accessible while in your car – which makes plenty of sense for a generic flip-phone but doesn’t quite jive in the iPhone era, particularly when it comes to also having your iPhone hooked up to your car’s stereo for music playback purposes.

The AssistOne allows you to mount your iPhone within your car or leave it in your pocket, and it also allows you to rely on the AssistOne’s built in speaker (which in our tests sounds good for its size) or connect the entire thing to your car’s stereo system. It’s a jack of all trades product which may finally solve all the tasks you’re likely to perform with your iPhone in your car – at least all the cellphone-related tasks that aren’t hazardous to your ability to drive.

Buy now: $79 at Amazon.com.

Scosche flipSYNC: Beatweek 2010 iPhone+iPod Cable of the Year

December 31, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

Anyone who travels with a laptop and and iPhone/iPod is likely going to want to connect the two to each other at some point, either for charging or syncing or both, which means keeping a sync cable in tow, which are typically 3 to 6 feet long. This keychain fob folds out with a dock connector plug for your iPhone or iPod on one side and a USB plug on the other.

Buy now: $13 at Amazon.com.

Booq Boa Flow: Beatweek 2010 Laptop bag of the Year

December 31, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

The swiss army knife of laptop bags doesn’t come cheap, and its backpack form factor won’t appeal to those who prefer a hand-carried bag. But of all the laptop bags we’ve ever kicked the tires on, the Boa Flow stands out both for its excellent construction and its endless (and we mean endless) pouches and sub-pouches for storing everything while on the go.

Buy now: various sizes and prices at Amazon.com.

elgato eyeTV HD: Beatweek 2010 TV Accessory of the Year

December 31, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

If you thought the new AppleTV would win this category, think again. While Apple’s own TV accessory does a great job with playback of iTunes content, elgato’s eyeTV functions as a DVR for your computer, allowing you to record live TV, which is what most TV viewers tell us they want from a TV accessory. And now with the eyeTV HD, you can record in HD too.

Buy now: $169 at Amazon.com.

iHome iA100: Beatweek 2010 App Enhanced Accessory of the Year

December 31, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

iHome finally combines its groundbreaking iHome+Sleep app with a piece of hardware worthy of it. The iA5 showed what was possible, but the iA100 is the payoff: innovative app integration with a premium dockable stereo system. This CES 2010 product took forever to ship, but the wait is worth it as it’s now compatible with the iPad along with the iPhone & iPod Touch.

Buy now: $197 at Amazon.com.

Google unveils “GMMXIE” New Years 2011 decorative logo

December 31, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 


Google, known for decoratively altering its own logo to mark festive occasions, has managed to cook up a retro theme for New Years 2011. Way retro. Much of the Google generation may not even be aware that Roman numerals exist, making Google’s new “GMMXIE” appear to be gibberish. But those who can recognize the traditional manner of spelling out a calendar year will insantly spot the “MMXI” in the middle of the logo, which in Roman numerals of course stands for 2011. Which is fitting, as it’ll be 2011 within a matter of hours.

In the past, Google has tricked out its logo to mark the birthdays of icons such as Martin Luther King and John Lennon (and more light heartedly, the anniversary of Pac-Man), typically using hand-drawn items which vaguely take the shape of the interior letters of the Google logo. In this instance Google is being more bold, asking you to instead imagine the “MMXI” as being “OOGL” – we’ll see how many or few among the internet-using public figures it out before the evening is over and the new year arrives. Here’s more on Google logos.

Home stretch: why a Verizon iPhone and not rivals Sprint, T-Mobile

December 30, 2010 by · 11 Comments 


As U.S. iPhone exclusivity goes down for the count, the race to see which other carrier comes up with the iPhone first is in the home stretch and it’s become clear that the Verizon iPhone is set to be the winner ahead of either a Sprint iPhone or a T-Mobile iPhone. One of the three had to be first because, well, that’s just how Apple does things. If Apple had its way the iPhone would remain available on only one carrier per nation and it would use that exclusivity (and the threat of revocation) to whip that carrier into offering an Apple-like experience. But upon realizing that such a thing isn’t possible, at least here in the U.S., here comes the iPhone on a second carrier and it’s Verizon by at least a nose. In hindsight, here’s why the Verizon iPhone had to come first ahead of T-Mobile or Sprint, much as it’ll upset devotees of those two carriers:

Verizon is significantly larger than either T-Mobile or Sprint. That fact has to come first and foremost in any conversation on the matter. Expanding the iPhone to Verizon means more potential customers than expanding it to either (or perhaps even both) of the other two. It’s obvious, but there it is.

Verizon wants it. Badly. Don’t let all the Droid bluster fool you. Internal numbers from Verizon show that the iPhone is outselling the Droid by a jaw-dropping margin of 2.5 to 1, meaning that Verizon’s highly visible attempts to compete with the iPhone have been a flat out failure. While Sprint and T-Mobile have their niche markets for various reasons, Verizon is looking to play king of the world against AT&T – and without the iPhone it’ll never, ever happen. That means that Apple can get Verizon to capitulate to doing a Verizon iPhone on Apple’s terms.

T-Mobile and Sprint customers won’t want to hear this, but Apple is likely gambling that at least some of them, who rejected the idea of using an AT&T iPhone out of hand, may now be willing to settle for a Verizon iPhone instead. Even though study after study shows iPhone users to be very happy with AT&T, and Verizon and AT&T to have the same retention rates, those outside the AT&T customer base have a colossally negative opinion of the carrier. For whatever reason, despite being no better in any measurable capacity, Verizon benefits from a much better reputation. That means Apple has a shot at gaining the customers of three different carriers simply by releasing a Verizon iPhone and seeing how many Sprint and T-Mobile customers jump ship. Here’s more on Verizon iPhone.

“Just a Dream” by Nelly: Beatweek 2010 Song of the Year

December 30, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

Those who thought “Hot in Herre” was so big that Nelly could never become better known for any other song saw that prediction go up in smoke in 2010 as the hip hop artist unleashed “Just a Dream” on the world from his latest album 5.0. While remaining clearly identifiable as being a hip hop song, Just a Dream incorporates enough of a pop sensibility and a rock instrumental foundation that the song has found airplay in multiple formats. More importantly, it’s just plain catchy. In a year in which rappers and pop stars threw themselves at each other in attempting to create crossover hits, Nelly accomplished that feat the old fashioned way: he simply created a great song. And for that, “Just a Dream” by Nelly is the Beatweek 2010 Song of the Year.

Nelly.netiTunes

Carlos Santana: the 2011 Beatweek interview

December 30, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

by Bill Palmer

“I’m still relevant right now,” says Carlos Santana with a laugh as he heads into 2011 with a successful new record entitled Guitar Heaven which would be his comeback album if not for the fact that he’s had hits in each of the past five decades and has never really gone away. The twenty-first century sees the living legend with a guitar in one hand and now an iPad in the other, as he prepares to kick off a career-spanning Las Vegas residency this month.

Carlos Santana first appeared on the cover of Beatweek Magazine back in 2009. Now, as 2011 arrives, one of my favorite musicians – and interview subjects – of all time checks back in with us for a return engagement.

The last time we spoke was about a year and a half ago. You were between projects and I asked you what you might do next, and the first thing you said is I think I would like to work with Yo-Yo Ma. Now here he is on the first single of your new album Guitar Heaven. Did you know back then that this was going to happen?

Like you, my body responds to when I need a certain nutrient. For example sometimes, like a pregnant woman, you just crave pickle juice and ice cream, or you crave walnuts or you crave an apple. Your body tells you when you need greens or spinach or broccoli or brown rice. All the sudden you can’t get that out of your mind for some reason. And it’s no different than longing to share with Yo-Yo Ma or Andrea Bocelli or musicians like that. I’d like to do something with Sting. I’d like to do something with Prince. Something that is completely different than anything that they’ve done or that I’ve done. I don’t want to play Sting music or Santana music. I don’t want to play Prince music or Santana music. I want to create something more different, reminiscent of Marvin Gaye or Miles.

I’m into mixing it up. And I’m not afraid to, because all my life, if I can remember, I love variety of colors and moods and textures. You can’t tie me down to just playing Mexican music. It’s not gonna happen. Whatever that is, because at this point Mexican music is polkas, waltzes, and pre-Columbian music. So yes, to answer your question, I longed to share with Yo-Yo Ma, and by the grace of God, the opportunity presented itself to do something which is with India.Arie and doing a George Harrison song called While My Guitar Gently Weeps. It’s spectacular. I’m grateful to God that he put that thing in my conscious to do.

Olivia Harrison had some very nice things to say about your version of While My Guitar Gently Weeps. Did you tell her beforehand that you were going to do that?

We just sent the song after we did it, and we said you know, I’d like some feedback, I need to know your blessing or if you want me to stop and decease or whatever (laughs). She was very gracious. She said that as soon as she heard it, of course, she jumped with joy and she was crying at the same time. And that to me is all I need as far as validation from someone who was so close to my brother George Harrison that of course she’s not gonna lie to me. If she liked it, I know that he likes it also.

This album is different for you in that you chose songs that were already great instead of new ones. In this case did you choose the songs first, or did you change the singers first? What was the order in which this came to you?

The order came from Clive Davis’ mind. He saw Rolling Stone and another magazine, and he saw the greatest songs, top one hundred best songs ever, rock and roll songs, top guitar players. So he just said hey, why don’t we put chocolate and peanut butter together, you know? And I was like, I don’t know if I want to do that. So once he convinced me, the third time that he tried he convinced me, he picked seven and I picked seven. Then once we picked out the songs, we recorded them first and then we said you know, Joe Cocker would be great in this song and India.Arie will be great here. Rob Thomas actually, I went to a concert, and I was playing him Sunshine of your Love without a singer, and he goes “Hey.” So all the sudden, because he’s very close to Matt Serletic anyway, he decided why don’t we jump on it.

I think the whole thing about this CD is the word is trusting and accepting that God, the universe, whatever you want to call it, it has something to offer you. This is a gift for me. And the gift of Guitar Heaven for me was it taught me not to be such a nervous nelly and to trust that I have the capacity with the band and the producers and Clive to take these songs into a new place and make them completely new, totally familiar, with grace, with integrity, with honesty, with sincerity, with trueness, and genuineness.

Damn. I can’t believe I just said all that, man (laughs).

Speaking of Rob Thomas, the last time you worked together it was lightning in a bottle. It was one of the biggest hits of both of your careers. Did you guys have to think twice about, hey, if we do this again, whatever we do is gonna get compared to Smooth?

First, Bill, I want to say something. Rob Thomas and I, we should probably do a song called “Lightning in a Bottle” because you’re like the 777th person who actually alluded to that statement. Rob Thomas and Santana is capturing lightning in a bottle. That’s the song to be created right there, and I thank you for it.

Second, no, we don’t think like that. Rob Thomas and I, we don’t wake up to think what other people think. That would be disaster, you know? You follow your heart. Any artist who starts to create something, and you think hmm, I wonder what the people are gonna think, it’s already dead in the water. You can’t think like that. If you think like that you’re not an artist, and pretty much you’re a calculator or schemer. And that’s not gonna go very far. That’s not art. That’s gambling. There’s a lot of chance and fortune. Those are fool’s goals. And then there’s God’s grace.

You’ve reinterpreted all these rock songs and they still sound like rock songs, except Black In Black which you’ve turned into more of a hip hop song. Where did that idea come from?

Yours truly. I always felt that Whole Lotta Love and Black In Black can go into, here it goes, 2.. 3.. 4.. [scatting the opening riff]. So that’s how I think. Because that music is very vibrant. Think about rap when it’s really, really hit hard, it has a vibrancy that I love. Like Chuck Berry at his peak, or Little Richard at his peak. So what I look for in these songs more than anything is the frequency or vibrancy. I want it to be extremely effervescent and really vibrant. Even the ballads, Little Wing or Guitar Gently Weeps, as my friend Bill Graham would say, there’s chutzpah in it. It’s not wishy washy, you know? Not one song on this Guitar Heaven album is easy listening music, background music, like bathtub jazz. Not one song.

When you first started jamming on these, did it have that aggression right away, or did you have to get over yourself?

Once I got past myself then I had to motivate the musicians in the studio, and it only took one time for me to say it: with all respect, let’s not play this stuff like LA or New York studio session musicians. Let’s not play it like that at all, because these songs were not written with that kind of energy. These songs were written like a mangy junkyard dog. This is not a pedigree. This is not a poodle that you want a little speck to land on. This is a mother, mmm, energy. That’s what I want.

I stopped the session and I told them this is how we’re gonna play it. We’re gonna be a bunch of MF’ers who are roaring lions and we’re gonna attack. I only said it once. And everybody thanked me for it. They said you know, we really thank you for saying that. We don’t want you to think that you insulted us or you demeaned us. You just put fire under our butt, and we love playing with this kind of energy. We just needed a direction.

Last time we spoke, you had mentioned that you had just gotten an iPhone and I think it was your first cellphone. You had said that before that, you were using smoke signals to communicate. Now that you’ve had some time, is the whole digital thing getting more normal for you?

It has become really normal. I have a lot more access to the things that I love to do, which is art, whether it’s Picasso, Dali, or Miles or Coltrane. I have an iPad and I got it as soon as it came out, and because of the iPad I watch hardly next to zero TV. Because there’s the same energy of fear and vulgarity and crassness, only from different people. So I’d rather play with my iPad. If I’m gonna watch TV, I only watch sports, like tennis or basketball or football. Other than that, I really don’t need anything from television at this point. Because people who manipulate every channel, cable or satellite, they treat people like the lowest denominator of intelligence. They might as well just puke in front of the camera and laugh at you because you’re watching. So because of the iPad, I choose a lot more consciousness, a lot more integrity, a lot more elegance, a lot more excellence. It’s there.

I love being sixty-three, and I wet my finger and put it on the pulse of my wristband, and I’m in touch. Some hippies, they’re back over there. I’m very current. I don’t necessarily listen to everything that’s on the radio, but I’ll say it like this: I’m still relevant right now (laughs). I’m not a yesterday guy. I’m not a mañana guy, and I’m not a yesterday guy. I’m right now, this instant, can I touch my heart, can I touch your heart? And if I can motivate you to in a gentle way, as an invitation for you to accept that you’re significant and meaningful, that you matter and you can make a difference in the world, that’s the ultimate goal. Whether it’s Bob Marley or John Coltrane, that’s the ultimate goal, to utilize music in the media and this interview for. We remind people that everyone is significant, meaningful, that everyone matters and everyone can make a difference in the world. Stop saying my little opinion, my little two cents, and just my little this. There ain’t nothing little about you, except your perception of yourself. And that’s not arrogance. That’s claiming that you are alive and you can create miracles like Jesus. It ain’t just Jesus. Jesus kept telling us, you will be doing things that I won’t be able to do. Jesus didn’t create the Golden Gate. Although we’re all one, he was very clear that you, Bill Palmer, are capable of touching people’s consciousness with this interview. Because you’re one hand and I’m the other. The questions that you ask me allow me to invite people to say, look beyond Guitar Heaven. Just look at your life in the mirror and say, right or wrong, Carlos went after it. Can you go after it with the same zest and the same passion?

I know you just put Guitar Heaven out the door. But can you see yourself doing a Guitar Heaven II in the same form, or do you now need to go on a different path?

Those are questions that I think are up in the air because they depend a lot on the mind and the heart of Clive Davis. If he convinces his superiors that we can do it again in a different form, and I believe it’s successful enough to warrant so. But we don’t want to do a thing just because it’s successful. We want to break new ground. So my answer to you would be it’s up in the air. I have willingness and passion, and with that I can just about do anything and everything.

Santana.comiTunesLas Vegas 2011 Santana residency dates

Beatweek Magazine January 2011 Double Issue: Carlos Santana and much more

December 30, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

Beatweek Magazine’s January 2011 Double Issue highlights:

• Carlos Santana cover story interview: his new album Guitar Heaven, Las Vegas residency, how he puts his iPad to good use, and more

• The top iPad and iPhone accessories of the year including iPad and iPhone batteries and iPad keyboards

• Interviews with Sara Bareilles, Smashing Pumpkins, Jason Derulo, Fefe Dobson, and The Black Crowes

• Macworld 2011 conversation with Paul Kent

• Much more in this massive 120-page double issue!

Read this issue now

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Altec Lansing MIX iMT800: Beatweek 2010 Portable Stereo of the Year

December 28, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

We waited years years for Altec Lansing (or anyone else) to offer a successor worthy to the company’s inMotion iM7, the classic boombox-style portable stereo system. And we finally got our wish with with the MIX (iMT800): it sounds fantastic even when loud, it’s easily carryable despite being quite large, displays track info on an LCD screen and cool stuff like dual aux ports for additional devices. It kicks the iM7’s butt – finally. The MIX officially lists for an eye popping $299 but is available for barely half that.

Buy now: $171 at Amazon.com.

iHome iP1 Studio Series: Beatweek 2010 Stereo of the Year

December 27, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

It tells you something about what kind a year it was for iPhone and iPod dockable stereo systems in general when the best option on the market in 2010, the iHome iP1, actually came to market in 2009. So while iHome turned its focus toward the more economy-priced iP3 this year and most competitors treaded water or took the year off, the iP1 still stands out as the top dockable stereo on the market. It’s a $299 home system, not really portable in any sense of the word, and it looks like it’s from the future – in a good way. We’re not sure what’s more impressive, that the iP1 gets away with completely shedding the rectangular external housing found elsewhere and exposing its guts, or that it actually looks good in doing so.

In any case, looks are in the eye of the beholder and the real reason the iP1 is still the king of the year is that its audio quality is still unmatched when it comes to any dockable system in the “less than a car payment” category. And that’s before you fire up the Bongiovi acoustics, which compensates for the “compression” part of compressed music and makes most digital music sound noticeably better.

Here’s hoping, for the sake of progress, that a new product (from iHome or elsewhere) will bump off the iP1 in 2011. But as it stands, it’s our Stereo of the Year. It’s also on sale at an eye-popping discount at Amazon at the moment.

Buy now: $299 $199 at Amazon.com.

Tuesday Night Football, Tony Sparano getting whacked, Cowboys GM woes

December 26, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 


Today was the end of the road for some NFL teams today, and new life for others – or at least a chance to begin looking forward to next season. Here’s what comes to mind:

- Fair or not, the league will be accused of moving the would-be Sunday Night Eagles – Vikings game to Tuesday night instead of Monday night simply to keep NBC and ESPN from having to compete head to head for viewers, as opposed to the claim that the weather might not clear out by Monday. But then, with every move the NFL makes these days seemingly based on PR reasons, who can blame the skeptics?

- If Jerry Jones really wanted to fix his Cowboys, he’d replace the General Manager. Of course that would mean firing himself from that position, which gets to the heart of the problem.

- Speaking of that Philadelphia – Minnesota game, you can’t blame this latest bit of drama on Brett Favre, unless you believe that on top of everything else, he also secretly controls the weather.

- Actually, in hindsight the Vikings and Cowboys both managed to have great (if cringe-worthy) seasons, as they finally put up ugly enough records to shed themselves of incompetent head coaches whom they were never, ever going to contend under. At this point, Chargers fans have to be wondering what it takes to get rid of Norv Turner.

- The Jets lost a game stupidly but somehow rode into the playoffs on a Redskins field goal anyway. Has there been a luckier team in football these past couple years?

- Peyton Manning’s decision to slide and kill the clock rather than scoring himself a cheap touchdown just goes to show that the great ones A) don’t care about stats, and B) manage to rack them up over the long haul anyway.

- Mike Shanahan pretty clearly benched Donovan McNabb so interception machine Rex Grossman could lose the final three games, giving him a better draft position for acquiring a new quarterback. And then Grossman goes out and wins today. Shanahan can’t even get losing right. This is the same guy who won two Super Bowls?

- You had the feeling Mike Singletary would have been fired even if his sub-.500 squad had won the division and lost a playoff game.

- Who the hell is John Skelton?

- If Tony Sparano still has a job in Miami by this time next week, expect Dolphins season ticket holders to consider becoming Heat season ticket holders instead.

- Speaking of Miami, when Bill Parcells inexplicably retired at the start of the season, you heard it here that it was because he knew he’d screwed up by hiring his buddy Sparano and didn’t want to have to be the one to fire him when the season was over. As such, it’ll be up to new Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, who has thus far spent his reign adding celebrity co-owners and glitz, to finally make his first football related decision.


Verizon iPhone second glance: exclusivity farce a fireable offense?

December 26, 2010 by · 17 Comments 

by Bill Palmer


With minutes to midnight on the Verizon iPhone countdown clock, it’s worth stopping to pose a vital query in hindsight. This is not about blame, as everyone, including every successful regime, makes their share of mistakes along the road to success. And this isn’t about a seeming lack of foresight, as no one can predict the future with anything approaching a full degree of accuracy. But if only so something can be learned and banked on for the next time around, here goes: With that original long term iPhone exclusivity deal with AT&T having been a quantifiable mistake even amidst the greater iPhone success story, just how much of a screw-up was this? Put another way: If Apple were being run by a less accomplished CEO, one without such a stunningly positive track record of getting so many things right year-in and year-out, would the lack of a Verizon iPhone these past four years be a fireable offense?

Before anyone goes off and willfully misinterprets that, let’s be clear. Steve Jobs is the most successful CEO of the past decade, easily, and is the odds-on favorite to retain that title in the next decade. No company has been more successful, and no executive has been more vital to that company’s success. That isn’t likely to change any time soon. But that said, imagine if Steve had retired five years ago and the 2007-ish decision to sign a deal to keep the iPhone out of the hands of close to three-fourths of U.S. consumers (unless they changed carriers) for as long as five years had instead been made by new CEO Phil Schiller. Or perhaps Tim Cook. Or some new CEO from outside the company. Heck, Apple just canned iPhone hardware boss Mark Papermaster, and while we still don’t know exactly what it was that got him tossed, it can’t have been as bad as the decision to throw away the majority of potential iPhone sales in the U.S. for a five year period for reasons which in hindsight are completely indecipherable. Not only would there be two to three times as many iPhone users in the U.S. right now, it’s doubtful that the competing Android OS would ever have gotten off the ground in any mainstream capacity (see Google’s other pet geek project, Chrome, for an example of just how tiny Android marketshare would likely be if the iPhone had launched on all four U.S. carriers simultaneously and three of them hadn’t been desperately searching for a counter measure). So the iPhone user base would be massively larger, hardware revenue (and app sales, music sales, etc) would be massively larger accordingly, and the iPhone’s biggest competition would the BlackBerry (which is withering of its own accord) and the always-struggling Windows Phone.

And yet one stupid executive decision later, and here we are with the two most oft-asked iPhone questions headed into 2011 being “When is the iPhone coming to Verizon?” and “What is iPhone going to do to fight off Android?”. Of course the answer to those two questions is one and the same, and the arrival of the Verizon iPhone will likely put the Android hype, which is still significantly overproportioned in comparison to actual Android sales, to bed at last. But if you’re an Apple shareholder, or someone who roots for Apple to do well, or an iPhone user who believes your experience will improve as the user base grows, ask yourself this: if it had been Apple CEO John P. Smith who had signed that absurd AT&T exclusivity contract to keep the iPhone off Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile for all these years instead of Apple CEO Steve Jobs, you’d probably be calling for his head by now. On the other hand, if the lack of a Verizon iPhone is the biggest screw-up of the second Jobs era (and it is), then that actually speaks volumes about just how well the rest of that era has gone. Here’s more on Verizon iPhone.

Verizon iPhone success could prompt Cingular rebirth as counter move

December 24, 2010 by · 2 Comments 


When Verizon took a pass on the iPhone back in the day, it wasn’t AT&T who scooped up U.S. exclusivity. Well, it was the same company. But back then it was known as Cingular. But around the time the iPhone was first showing its face to the public, Cingular picked up a new CEO, a new subsidiary, and the rights to the long dormant “AT&T” brand name, which it eventually adopted company wide. Many speculated at the time that the name change was made because Cingular had done such a fine job of earning a horrid reputation among the public that by changing its name, it would lure back clueless former customers who, by moving to “AT&T” after finding no luck with Verizon or Sprint, would have no idea they were going right back to the first carrier they dumped. In hindsight, the iPhone has been almost singularly (no pun intended) responsible for the rapid growth of Cingular/AT&T, not the name of the carrier. But just as the new name arrived with the rise of the iPhone, don’t be shocked if the AT&T brand name once again disappears just as the Verizon iPhone makes its debut.

There’s no inside information here, no secret memos, nothing rising to the level of TMZ or WikiLeaks here. Instead there’s just the cold hard logic of it: the company formerly known as Cingular has spent the past four years running the AT&T brand name into the ground reputation-wise, and with iPhone users in the U.S. about to have a choice of whom get their iPhones from, AT&T is going to need an edge in combating the temptation among existing iPhone users to go running to Verizon – if not now then in a year or two, once the service contracts of existing iPhone users begin to expire en masse. And if AT&T can’t be bothered make any actual improvements to its services and offerings (why start now?), then a name change might be the company’s best strategy. After all, at a time when everyone is hearing about the iPhone expanding to additional U.S. carriers anyway, why not become Cingular again? After, no company named “Cingular” has ever sold the iPhone, meaning that those T-Mobile and Sprint customers who want an iPhone but have been avoiding AT&T (and don’t care much for Verizon either) might well be confused into buying a “Cingular iPhone” because, hey, at least it’s not AT&T. No consumer should be that foolish or misinformed. But if history has shown us anything, plenty of them are. Just take a measure of how few consumers are aware that the company currently known as “AT&T” used to be Cingular. Here’s more on Verizon iPhone.

Sara Bareilles: Beatweek 2010 Artist of the Year

December 24, 2010 by · 1 Comment 

When 2010 started, Sara Bareilles had one hit song to her name and had seemingly waited too long to follow up on it. But by the time the year was over that had all changed, as her September release Kaleidoscope Heart debuted at number on one the charts, spawned a new Grammy-nominated hit single of its own with King Of Anything, and contains a treasure trove of other potential hits which will fill the radio airwaves throughout 2011. The trick to it all, as Sara told Beatweek at the time of the album’s release, was to get past her long running writer’s block by witting a song called Uncharted which cleverly documented the awkward position that her first hit Love Song had placed her in career-wise. Not coincidentally, Uncharted has been pegged as her next single.

Other albums and tours sold more this year, but no one did more in 2010 to establish themselves as an artist who will be with us for a generation than Sara Bareilles. Not bad for an artist who back in 2007 was, comically in hindsight, tagged as a one-hit wonder by many a music pundit. As such, Beatweek is pleased to name Sara Bareilles our Artist of the Year for 2010. Let’s just hope it doesn’t take her another three years to come up with her third album. Here’s our conversation with Sara Bareilles.

Mophie Juice Pack Air and Plus: Beatweek iPhone 4 Battery Case of the Year

December 24, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

It’s always a good thing for consumers when the quality options grow in number even as the best gets better. That’s been the case in 2010 when it comes to iPhone 4 battery cases, those slightly oversized two-piece form fitting cases which just happen to have extra battery life hidden inside. While there are now more good choices than ever on this front, last year’s winner, the Juice Pack Air from Mophie, has evolved quite a bit in time for the the fourth iPhone. It’s also gained a more powerful cousin in the form of the Juice Pack Plus.

The latest Air comes fairly close to doubling your iPhone 4′s battery life while encasing it in a ruggedized rubber design with plastic brushed metal silver trim or a choice of other highlight colors (the Plus, by virtue of being a little thicker, offers one-third more battery life and fully doubles the iPhone 4′s battery life). That iPhone 4-esque styling gets carried down to the smallest details, as even the iPhone’s hard buttons are perfectly replicated on the exterior of the Juice Pack.

As we said, there are plenty of good options in this category (search for “iPhone 4 battery case” in our search bar for results). But our winner is the one-two punch of the Mophie Juice Pack Air and Juice Pack Plus for iPhone 4.

buy now: Juice Pack Air for $79 or Juice Pack Plus for $99.

iPad-iPhone road warrior weapons of choice: a 2011 guide

December 23, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

by Bill Palmer

This iPad and iPhone user is about to hit the road – for about a month. It’s a cross country journey that’ll see me living out of suitcases and staying in one too many hotels as I work my way westward in time for CES, Macworld 2011, and quite a bit else along the way. With most of what I own packed away (did I mention I’m also moving to a new residence in the process?), I thought I’d take a moment to share to iPad, iPhone, and MacBook related tools that I’ve chosen to keep handy at all times over the next five weeks. Some of these products are more perfect than others, so to speak, but they’re what I rely on when I’m playing road warrior. Depending on your travel situation, you may find them handy as well:

Mophie Juice Pack Plus for iPhone 4: Even as comparatively long lasting as the iPhone 4 internal battery is, working from the road often means whipping out my iPhone and doing “real” work directly on it. Try that for an hour and see what’s left of the internal battery. The Juice Pack Plus doubles my iPhone’s battery and fits perfectly with it stylistically. Learn more.

Dexim P-Flip for iPhone 4: Too many hotel rooms don’t have an electrical outlet next to the bed. And because I’m too insecure to leave my iPhone on the other side of the room while I’m sleeping, I get around that quandary by docking it in the P-Flip overnight. It’s a flipstand with a battery built in, meaning that so long as I remember to charge up the P-Flip during the day, it’ll keep my iPhone 4 fully charged overnight. Also doubles as a bottom snap-on battery in a pinch. Learn more.

Kensington PowerBack for iPad: The first of its kind, the PowerBack is to the iPad what battery cases are to the iPhone. Killing the iPad’s long lasting battery isn’t easy, but this product gives me the freedom to. Learn more.

ZAGGmate with Keyboard for iPad: For day to day iPad use, I have no problem with its virtual keyboard. But in those instances where I’m using my iPad in place of a laptop, writing full length articles on it, that’s when I like to break out the physical keyboard. When I’m at home, Apple’s own iPad Keyboard Dock is my weapon of choice. But it’s not really meant for travel. So I travel with the ZAGGmate with Keyboard, which is designed with portability in mind. Learn more.

Kensington PowerBolt Duo: Most car chargers are a dime a dozen. But rise of micro chargers, which eliminate the traditional big bulb design in favor of a barely-there streamlined look, changed all that. A dual micro charger, one of whose ports charges the iPad at fast speeds? Let’s just say that the ability to keep both my iPad and iPhone charging while I’m driving, and with a small form factor charger, is of value. Learn more.

Twelve South BassJump for MacBook: My MacBook Pro is my main computer whether I’m at home or on the road. Naturally, at home I’ve got it connected to nice multi-component speaker system. On that road that’s not so practical. Rather than lugging along a traditional small two piece speaker system which sounds like a small two piece system, I instead opt for this little USB subwoofer which works in conjunction with my MacBook’s built-in tweeters instead of replacing them. The result is a form of 2.1 audio from my MacBook which only requires me to haul one speaker unit. Learn more.

Just Mobile Lazy Couch for MacBook: Don’t be silly. Always use a laptop stand at home which keeps your MacBook elevated (so it won’t run overly hot) and angled toward you (for better typing posture). But the laptop stand which usually resides on my desk isn’t exactly travel-worthy, so rather than traveling with a portable or fold-up laptop stand (I’ve tried various over the years), I’ve finally settled on a simple set of rubber-topped props which work surprisingly well and take up very little space when not in use. Learn more.

Smashing Pumpkins: Beatweek 2010 Indie Artist of the Year

December 22, 2010 by · 1 Comment 

We promise this is the first and last time we ever give our “Indie Artist of the Year” award to a world-famous band which has spent most of its existence on a major label. But not only have the Smashing Pumpkins parted ways with their label, frontman Billy Corgan and crew have walked away from the entire music industry model as we know it. Not only are they giving away every song from their new forty-four song album Teargarden By Kaleidyscope, they’re doing so as each song is finished. One MP3 at a time, the Smashing Pumpkins are helping rewrite the blueprint for being an indie artist. Here is Beatweek’s conversation with Billy Corgan.

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