• Djay For iPhone is Now Available on the App Store


    Algoriddim has released an iPhone version of djay, which is available to download in the App Store for $9.99. Much like the Mac and iPad version of the application, djay for iPhone transforms your handset into “a full fledged DJ system,” allowing users to add tracks from their music library, and mix them on the go.

    If you have a Mac computer, you can get this free demo. Currently, djay for iPhone is available in the App Store for $9.99. The iPad version costs $19.99, and the Mac version is available for $49.99.

  • iPhone 5 to Hold two SIM Cards for Dual Phone Lines?


    According to iDealsChina the iPhone 5 will not only hold one, but two SIM cards to support dual phone lines. This sounds very odd and I think iDealsChina could have misinterpreted the information from their source.

    The iPhone 5 is rumored to include a Qualcomm just like the Verizon iPhone that allows for both GSM and CDMA connections in the same phone. Perhaps this is what they mean by dual SIM-cards?

    iDealsChina, a Chinese parts reseller, is the site that brought us iPhone 5 design images. The site has a mixed track record of correct & incorrect rumors. They incorrectly reported that an iPhone nano would launch in 2008.

  • Apple’s iPad 2 Smart Cover Teardown Uncovers 21 Magnets


    A total of 31 magnets are used to make the iPad 2 and its Apple-branded Smart Cover properly align, with 21 magnets found in the accessory and the remaining 10 in the iPad 2 itself.

    After they teared down the iPad 2 the team iFixit for the first time ever,  conducted a teardown of a case, a move that highlights the unique nature of Apple’s Smart Cover for the iPad 2. When the iPad 2 was first introduced, Apple touted that its accessory cover was developed alongside the new touchscreen tablet.

    The solutions provider utilized magnetic viewing film to demonstrate the magnetic poles of the material inside the Smart Cover. It found that one magnet is used to turn off the iPad 2 screen, while the rest are used to either clamp the case to the iPad 2 or form the triangle shape that allows the case to act as a stand.

    The sleep control for the iPad 2 can even be triggered with a separate magnet without using the Smart Cover, automatically enabling or disabling the screen.

    Inside the iPad 2, a row of magnets are located on the right side of the device, making the Smart Cover clamp to the surface of the device. The magnets are clearly labeled with their alternating polarity, which ensures the Smart Cover always sits in the same orientation.

    Also included in the iPad 2 are a row of magnets along the left side of the device, which allows the Smart Cover to latch onto the side and pivot to open and allow access to the screen. iFixit found that the magnets inside the iPad and its accompanying Smart Case on the left side are “very strong,” and witnessed them make a two-inch leap to connect.

    Inside the Smart Cover, iFixit found:

    • A large metal place encased in plastic that adheres to the magnets to form the stand.
    • Two yellow all-plastic plates in the middle that exist purely for structural support.
    • A stack of magnets.

    The teardown also revealed that Apple opted for a steel-to-magnet bond, which is weaker than a magnet-to-magnet bond, which is why there are a total of 21 magnets inside the case. iFixit said that Apple needed “lots more magnets to prevent the case from literally falling apart during use.”

    The Smart Case does not use any correlated magnets, which have a complex field of patterns rather than standard positive and negative polarity. The magnets used by Apple inside both the Smart Cover and iPad 2 are regular two-pole magnets.

    Last week, iFixit conducted a more traditional teardown of the iPad 2 itself. The disassembly of Apple’s latest touchscreen tablet revealed that the new device has a slightly bigger battery than its first-generation counterpart, as well as double the RAM with 512MB.

  • iPhone 5 Will Not have Near Field Communication (NFC) Technology


    Apple has informed their European iPhone carriers that the next-generation iPhone, as the Independent states, will not include Near Field Communication (NFC) technology. Apple is reluctant to include the technology and introduce a new “wave and pay” system due a “lack of a clear standard across the industry.”

    The iPhone 5 not having NFC technology does not mean Apple isn’t working on their own NFC service for a 2012 launch.

    Apple is understood to be working on its own NFC proposition, which would link payments through iTunes. It hopes to introduce the technology in a handset likely to be released next year.

    Apple was rumored to include this NFC technology in their just released iPad 2, and that same report from Bloomberg noted the iPhone 5, too, will include the NFC technology.