Happy Thanksgiving from MacStories

I wish we could write an article about this every single day: we’re thankful we get to wake up every morning, check on our emails (ok, maybe a full inbox isn’t something to be thankful for) and do what we love. We’re thankful we can talk about the things we love every day and share them with you. It’s been an amazing 2010 so far for MacStories, and we have only you to thank.

That said, happy Thanksgiving folks. Personally, I never had the chance to be invited to a Thanksgiving lunch (we don’t have such a thing here in Italy) but I’m pretty sure Cody and Chris are lost somewhere in their houses right now trying to figure out how they managed to eat so much while talking about apps with their non-geek friends.

Seriously though, we wish you the happiest of holidays. Oh, and in case you missed it: we’ve taken care of Black Friday Apple-related sales for you.


Find My iPhone Triggers MobileMe’s Free Account Limit

Rumors of some features of MobileMe going free started surfacing online days before the public release of iOS 4.2. On November 22nd, a few hours before Apple flipped the switch on the new OS, Find My iPhone – a MobileMe functionality that allows users to remotely locate and wipe the iPhone and iPad – went free for all iOS users running the latest firmware on last generation devices. It turned out, though, that enabling the feature for free on older devices wasn’t that difficult.

Apple’s refreshed MobileMe offering, however, comes with some limitations, namely the impossibility to activate Find My iPhone for free more than 3 times on a device. Read more


Single-Station Radio Apps Are The New Fart Apps: Banned

Remember the App Store Review Guidelines Apple published a few months ago? They’re available for you to read here, although an Apple Developer account is needed. Basically, Apple opened up to many more kinds of apps and frameworks with the publicly available Review Guidelines, but took a clear position on some kinds of apps as well. Namely, fart apps:

We have over 250,000 apps in the App Store. We don’t need any more Fart apps. If your app doesn’t do something useful or provide some form of lasting entertainment, it may not be accepted.

Read more


Apple Goes Back To Where The Woz Started with HP Campus Purchase

The San Jose Mercury News is reporting that Apple has made a 98-acre land purchase in Cupertino to double the capacity of its original campus. The new location is the historic Hewlett-Packard campus, the same where Steve Wozniak was working when he and Steve Jobs were working on the first Apple computer in the 70s.

HP is in the middle of an operation to consolidate its headquarters in Palo Alto, and Apple apparently secured the old HP campus in an effort to expand Cupertino’s Infinite Loop. Put simply, Apple needs more room. Read more


Office for Mac 2011: 26% Off

Office for Mac 2011: 26% Off

Office for Mac Home and Student 2011 includes Mac versions of Word 2011, Excel 2011, and PowerPoint 2011; the most familiar and trusted productivity applications used around the world at home, school, and business.

Home & Student single license pack, save 30 bucks. If you need the most recent version of Office for Mac, this is a good time to buy it.

You can also save $40 on the Family Pack.

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Apple Big Winner at 2010 LA Auto Show

The Los Angeles Auto Show is one of the biggest, baddest auto conventions in the world. With all of the innovations and breakthroughs in the auto industry this year, it was the way in which the manufacturers communicated with the audience within the Los Angeles Convention Center walls that was unique. Every car manufacturer that had any serious interest in interacting with their consumers used Apple products.

Many young women were holding iPads asking for attendees email addresses and as the post from Cosby Sweaters says, “There might be more efficient ways to retrieve valuable customer contact information, but nothing is more fun and personal than a pretty girl with an iPad.”

Touchscreen displays have been popular at car shows over the past few years and the technology has gotten more popular. Apple has made it easy for exhibitors to effectively and easily integrate touch screen devices in their showroom areas, and the price is relatively inexpensive. Many times iPads were getting more atention that the cars themselves. The iPads (and iPod Touches as well) were being used to show short films, picture gallerys or promote car-based apps.

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Some companies, like Nissan, had a space so big that iPads were not big enough so they placed several iMacs with touch-screen capabilties around their exhibiting space. There was even a ‘wall of iDevices’ made for the Lexus booth.

As Cosby Sweaters put is so nicely, “One could say that the touchscreen interface or the tablet won the auto show, but that assumption is completely false. Others tried. Apple still dominated. At General Motors showcases, over-sized Verizon Android phones littered about, illustrating GM car models and OnStar service. These were largely walked past and ignored. Why? Because over-sized Android phones do not exist in the real world and the over-sized buttons surely did not work either. Come back when you are trendy.”

[via Cosby Sweaters]


Just Ahead Of Thanksgiving, Games Take Over The App Store

Frankly, I saw this coming: with all the offers and deals that have started to pop up in the App Store since last week, the rapid arise of games in the App Store charts doesn’t come as a surprise at all. Still, the results and numbers are noteworthy: while counting all the games in the App Store is nearly impossible (at least basing on official data, which Apple doesn’t provide), we can simply take a look at the “Top Paid Apps” and “Top Grossing Apps” charts to see what happened.

Games are dominating the Thanksgiving week in the App Store. Especially on the iPhone App Store, where at the moment of writing this only 26 apps out of the top 100 are non-games apps. The fact that we refer to them as “non-games apps” also tells a lot about the environment Apple created. The situation is slightly different on the iPad App Store (“only” 40,000 apps, newer platform) but the trend is just about the same on both the stores. Games are selling like hotcakes, huge discounts or not. Read more