Apple iPod Nano Seventh-Generation

After the unveiling of the iPhone 5 came the fifth-generation iPod Touch. After that, we were also introduced to a whole new iPod Nano seventh-generation, from the most valuable company in the world. Completely redesigned and 38% thinner than its predecessor, the new Nano features a 2.5″ multitouch display with 240×432-pixel resolution alongside 16GB of storage, an FM tuner, slimmed-down Lightning connectivity, Bluetooth capabilities and built-in Nike+ support. Available in a pallet of colorways you can pre-order the all new iPod Nano this Friday, September 14, from the Apple online store and it will be shipped to you sometime in October. 

Pre-Order HERE.

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iPod Touch 5th Generation & Apple EarPods

Although attention was steered toward the all new iPhone 5 today, the brand new, redesigned 5th Generation iPod Touch also caught many eyes along with a total redesign of Apple’s earbuds. Almost a replication to its counterpart, the new iPod Touch is thinner, lighter and boasts a 4-inch Retina display – just like brother.

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Apple iPhone 5

Many people were pissed off to learn about the iPhone 4S announcement that was expected to be the iPhone 5 announcement. Well, the day has finally arrived and the word anticipation can be deemed an understatement for the people who have been waiting for this day to finally come. A larger screened, slimmer and expected two-tone iPhone has just been announced in front of the world’s media at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in downtown San Francisco. Continue reading

Apple iDesk by Adam Benton

Imagination can go a long way and its proven right here with the Apple iDesk by illustrator Adam Benton. Mac|Life imagined the desk and put Adam to work on the illustration efforts. If the desk were to ever become a reality it would be a collaborative effort between Microsoft and Apple. It would apply Microsoft Surface Technology along with signature Apple design and operating system.

More after the jump.

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MacBook Pro With Retina Display

As suspected, a slimmer and much lighter MacBook Pro has been unveiled at WWDC and is already on the Apple store ready to ship! Of course, the key feature to the new Pro is the outrageous clark Retina display coming in at 15″ (2880 x 1800) making it the world’s highest resolution notebook display. Shedding inches and pounds it comes in at 25% thinner than the previous generation, and is the lightest MacBook Pro weighing in at 4.46 lbs. It’s internals come packed with a quad-core CPU up to 2.7 GHz, up to 16GB of RAM, Intel HD Graphics 4000, NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M with 512MB of GDDR5 memory and up to 768GB of SSD storage.

More HERE.

Apple iOS 6

Interesting and exciting announcements have come to us today from the WWDC Conference in Downtown San Francisco. Apple has announced that the new iOS 6 will be released this fall and it is packed with updates. Serving up 200 new features for the new iOS, including new apps and upgrades to Siri, the announcement is sure to please the Apple fanatics.

Key Features after the jump!

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Foxconn Chief Confirms Apple iTV

We are not huge fans of rumors here at DKC, that’s why we didn’t jump on the bandwagon of the Apple iTV rumor mill. Of course if the rumor is there – especially for game changers like Apple then we think there has to be a hint of truth somewhere in the process. Most of us know that Apple has been pushing to enter the TV industry and now there is finally confirmation. Continue reading

How an iPad is Made

With Apple’s bank account seeing no weakness or debts anytime soon or in the future we take a look into the factory that constructs the ever so famous iPad. With 50 million iPads being sold as of January 2012. Have you ever wondered where the hell it was coming from? Sure, on the back it says “Designed in California”, but does “Made in China” ring a bell. With this video we get an exclusive look into Apples biggest Chinese plant that constructs your iPad. As most of us know negative allegations about Apple’s labor practices have been brought to question so Marketplace.org Shanghai Bureau Chief Rob Schmitz was recently granted an exclusive, and extremely rare opportunity to visit the factory floor at Foxconn. The video also offers a brief glimpse into a Chinese worker’s life outside of their workday and the factory.

Read interviews and more HERE.

This is London: Sir Jonathan Ive – The Man Behind Apple's Design

A key figure in designing and curating the function of the iPod, iPad and iPhone. Sir Jonathan Ive has set an aesthetic in the industry that no one else can seem to conquer. Sir Ive acted as the leading designer in conceptualizing many of the original Apple products as well as the ones we use today. With a background in industrial design the 45-year-old was born in Chingford, England and now lives in San Francisco. The London Evening Standard recently sat down with Ive in Cupertino where the Apple headquarters stands. Excerpts from the interview are below.

Q: What makes design different at Apple?

A: We struggle with the right words to describe the design process at Apple, but it is very much about designing and prototyping and making. When you separate those, I think the final result suffers. If something is going to be better, it is new, and if it’s new you are confronting problems and challenges you don’t have references for. To solve and address those requires a remarkable focus. There’s a sense of being inquisitive and optimistic, and you don’t see those in combination very often.

Q: How does a new product come about at Apple?

A: What I love about the creative process, and this may sound naive, but it is this idea that one day there is no idea, and no solution, but then the next day there is an idea. I find that incredibly exciting and conceptually actually remarkable.

The nature of having ideas and creativity is incredibly inspiring. There is an idea which is solitary, fragile and tentative and doesn’t have form.

What we’ve found here is that it then becomes a conversation, although remains very fragile.

When you see the most dramatic shift is when you transition from an abstract idea to a slightly more material conversation. But when you made a 3D model, however crude, you bring form to a nebulous idea, and everything changes – the entire process shifts. It galvanises and brings focus from a broad group of people. It’s a remarkable process.

Read the interview in its entirety HERE.

This is London: Sir Jonathan Ive – The Man Behind Apple’s Design

A key figure in designing and curating the function of the iPod, iPad and iPhone. Sir Jonathan Ive has set an aesthetic in the industry that no one else can seem to conquer. Sir Ive acted as the leading designer in conceptualizing many of the original Apple products as well as the ones we use today. With a background in industrial design the 45-year-old was born in Chingford, England and now lives in San Francisco. The London Evening Standard recently sat down with Ive in Cupertino where the Apple headquarters stands. Excerpts from the interview are below.

Q: What makes design different at Apple?

A: We struggle with the right words to describe the design process at Apple, but it is very much about designing and prototyping and making. When you separate those, I think the final result suffers. If something is going to be better, it is new, and if it’s new you are confronting problems and challenges you don’t have references for. To solve and address those requires a remarkable focus. There’s a sense of being inquisitive and optimistic, and you don’t see those in combination very often.

Q: How does a new product come about at Apple?

A: What I love about the creative process, and this may sound naive, but it is this idea that one day there is no idea, and no solution, but then the next day there is an idea. I find that incredibly exciting and conceptually actually remarkable.

The nature of having ideas and creativity is incredibly inspiring. There is an idea which is solitary, fragile and tentative and doesn’t have form.

What we’ve found here is that it then becomes a conversation, although remains very fragile.

When you see the most dramatic shift is when you transition from an abstract idea to a slightly more material conversation. But when you made a 3D model, however crude, you bring form to a nebulous idea, and everything changes – the entire process shifts. It galvanises and brings focus from a broad group of people. It’s a remarkable process.

Read the interview in its entirety HERE.