Posted on 12 June 2012
Tags: apple, desktop, Facebook, feature-at-its, microsoft, missed-the-news, mode, News, take-the-right, vista, windows, work
Isn’t Power Nap an awesome new feature of OS X? It is if you’re a Mac user but to Windows users, it’s old news. If you missed the news, Power Nap allows your Mac to keep up to date while in sleep mode. So emails are updated, things get synced to iCloud, system updates are pushed through and even TimeMachine backups are performed in a silent and power efficient manner.
(We’d be remiss in not acknowledging the fact that some of this comes directly from iOS 5, too.)
You see, Microsoft had a similar feature in Vista called SideShow. It was supposed to herald the arrival of secondary displays that were going to be built into laptop lids, for example. Those displays were supposed to show you incoming email, upcoming calendar appointments and similar information – all while your computer was in sleep mode. It was, too put it mildly, a dismal failure. Hardware manufacturers never embraced SideShow (with the exception of a handful of laptops) and most consumers probably never heard of it to begin with.
Microsoft being Microsoft, it didn’t quite kill the program, but let it live on quietly in Windows 7, where it also remained forgotten and unutilized.
With Windows 8, however, Microsoft is launching a feature that is pretty much equivalent to Apple’s Power Nap and the spiritual descendant of SideShow (whiteout the reliance on hardware manufacturers). Dubbed ‘Connected Standby,’ Microsoft announced this feature at its Build developer conference in September 2011. In this mode, email will still arrive in your inbox and you will still hear a ping when somebody IMs you are tries to call you on a VoIP app that supports this feature. While all of the desktop versions of Windows 8 will support this feature, Microsoft is mostly aiming it at Windows 8 tablets and apps running in the Metro interface, it seems. Desktop apps will not be able update while a computer is in connected standby mode. It’ll also take the right mix of hardware to make all of this work, though, and many existing Windows 7 laptops, for example, won’t be able to use this mode.
So who gets Power Nap? It’s a little unclear and Apple has yet to clarify (we’ve reached out for comment) but those with the new MacBook Pro with Retina Display and second generation and newer MacBook Airs are eligible. But apparently any MacBook with an SSD is also eligible via firmware update.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch
Posted on 31 August 2010
Tags: coffee, during-the-last, Facebook, inevitable, like-the-thrill, missed-the-news, News, Social Media, work
Here’s what’s fun about TechCrunch’s new(ish) San Francisco office. I go out to grab a sandwich, see people I know and get to rudely grill them about how well their company is doing. Today it was Mat Honan, one of the founders of Longshot Magazine, which just put out its second issue, around the theme of “Comeback.”
You may know Longshot better by its pre-lawsuit name of 48 HR Magazine. It’s a really cool concept that leverages every new technology surrounding the publishing space to create a magazine on the fly. Those technologies include using social media to get submissions, cloud services like GoogleDocs to edit across space and time, using MagCloud for on-demand, glossy publishing and using the iPad to get it in people’s hands even faster. It got a ton of buzz during the last issue—so much that it prompted said lawsuit.
But oh how fickle we Web consumers are. Honan says this issue has so-far only sold half as many copies as the first one, and the founders are all scratching their heads as to why—especially considering the volume and quality of the submissions was up substantially.
Maybe it’s the August doldrums. Maybe you just missed the news. Or maybe it’s because–as Honan realized once he finally slept– they neglected to send out an email blast this time. But wanting it to survive isn’t enough– if you care about this project you have to actually buy it.
Clearly there is a lot of pent up artistic talent out there withering in a crumbling media economy wrecked by a combination of the Web and the old media fat cats who are fighting the inevitable. Longshot Magazine is a scrappy, bootstrapped effort to use the same technology that’s destroying glossy print publications to create one that makes economic sense. If you’re a writer, designer or photographer you know there’s nothing quite like the thrill of holding a beautiful glossy magazine displaying your work, and even as a reader there are still a few products I want for the coffee table. We don’t need another near-death experience of a radical new publishing idea.
Buy your copy here now.




Article courtesy of TechCrunch