Weekly Apple News Recap | 09.28.12

iPhone 5 Begins Readily Shipping, Sales Hit 5m in 3 Days
Announced on the 12th, iPhone 5 began shipping on Friday, September 21st. Sales of the phone reached over 5 million in just about three days, and quantities are constrained worldwide due to overwhelming demand.

We’ve received limited supply thus far, but we’ve filled most of the preorders at this point and expect more stock.

Watch Rebecca unbox her new iPhone 5!
Read more on the sales shortage here.

Apple Addresses Maps Criticism
CNET writes about the recent flap about Apple’s new app, Maps, and its less-than-stellar reception.

Read more here.

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  • Introducing Mike Burl!

    Mike B., or “Boots” as we call him (for no other reason than that Dawn threw it out there one day), has joined the Marketing Department! A long-time sales associate and Apple Sales Professional in the S. Burlington store, he has come over to the south side (__not__ The Dark Side, mind you) to help us connect with our customers and use his product and sales expertise for new endeavors!

    Here are some facts about Mike:

    * Originally from upstate NY, so “Go, Yankees!” (__Editor’s Note:__ Ugh) 😉
    * Has a Pomeranian named Wesley
    * Favorite color: White

    Of course, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. We’re getting to know him here in Waitsfield a little better, too, and we’re very excited to have him join us. He’ll be a regular contributor to Kibbles & Bytes, so if you’re so inclined, feel free to send him a hearty welcome email at “*michaelb@smalldog.com.*”:mailto:michaelb@smalldog.com

    “*Read more about Mike here!*”:http://www.smalldog.com/michaelb

  • Apple Refurbs: What Does That Mean?

    Apple has an amazing refurbishing process — when a product has that Apple Refurbished sticker on it, you can be assured that what you’re getting is as good as new. My 13-in MacBook was refurbished and it is still kicking today — nearly six years later. So be assured that even though these machines are refurbished, you will still get years out of them.

    So what are you really getting by purchasing a refurbished machine? The 17-inch MacBook Pros we have in stock include a quad-core Intel i5 or i7 processor, 4GB of memory, a 500GB hard drive for storage, an NVIDIA GeForce GT330M with 512MB of video memory, and (here is the kicker) they are eligible for AppleCare. That’s right, unlike a used computer, Apple Refurbs are eligible to have AppleCare applied to them.

    As if that’s not enough, here is the final nail in the coffin (you know, in a good way). Buying a refurbished machine can save you over $1,000. These are Macs that when purchased new at the time of release, ran a machine over $2,500! Our 17-inch MBPs now start at $1,350 (in limited quantity). If you add AppleCare to it, you are sitting pretty at $1,660 and that is still $140 cheaper than a new 15-inch MacBook Pro without AppleCare. If that isn’t the deal of the year, I don’t know what is!

  • The leaves are changing rapidly and we have a brilliant fall foliage season in full swing. Not all the tourists know that the last week in September is usually the best to see the brilliant colors. As I look out my window here on the Mad River, I see a quilt of autumn colors with reds, yellows and browns mixing with the still-green fields and trees. Simply beautiful.

    I hope to get out this weekend for a little riding. I know the roads where there are fewer slow moving tourists, so my fall foliage tour should be fun. I am off to China on October 10th to look for new products and to visit our manufacturers, so I have to get it in now because we will undoubtedly be in stick season when I get back.

    Thank you so much for reading this issue of Kibbles & Bytes!

    Your Kibbles & Bytes Team,
    _Don, Kali & Dawn_

  • iOS 6 Maps App. Flop or Not?

    It has been just over a week since Apple released iOS6, which has given me some time to play around with the “*new features.*”:http://www.apple.com/ios/whats-new/ So far, I really love the changes, but I have heard the scuttlebutt about the new Maps app. For those of you that haven’t heard or haven’t experienced it yet, the new Maps app can in some cases be dramatically incorrect. While I can brush off some cases as just being user ignorance — like asking where London is and getting a result for London, Ontario rather than London England — if you aren’t specific, don’t get mad when you don’t get exactly what you want.

    I have seen pictures on a tumblr feed entitled “*The Amazing iOS 6 Maps*”:http://theamazingios6maps.tumblr.com that show graphical errors like the green grass textures where a parking lot should be and other errors that show landmarks miles away from their actual location. Yes, this annoying and unlike Apple to ship a product that isn’t perfect, but it does have some nice features that you didn’t get with the old Maps app.

    For example, I was zooming in and all of a sudden, I rotated the whole map. Call me easily impressed, but I thought that was the bees knees. Sure, all you had to do before was spin your phone around, but now all the UI elements stay in a readable orientation. Also, now my phone will tell me audibly where I am going so I don’t need to be looking down and playing with my phone to figure out what I’m doing when. Turn-by-turn navigation is a nice safety feature to make the Maps app more like a GPS. (Yes, it might take you to the completely wrong place, but you will get there without having to fiddle with your phone!) Because Google Maps doesn’t allow for turn-by-turn, that was the single-biggest reason for Apple to develop something internally.

    If we take a little stroll down memory lane, I can tell you that “*Google*”:http://www.google.com/about/company/history/#2004 (the original engine of the iOS maps) started development way back in 2004 with Google Local. This eventually was merged into Google Maps and officially launched in 2005. That gave Google 8 years to develop and perfect a system. I would certainly hope that with an 8-year development cycle, you would have a product as perfect as Google Maps. So what if the iOS 6 Maps app has some inconsistencies — have we all become so dependent on technology that we have no more intuition? Frankly, I have never 100% trusted anything, except for the adage that one should never follow anything blindly otherwise you won’t know where you are or how you got there (literally).

    The bottom line is that this app is new to Apple, and it is something that will be fixed. As Jobs said back in 2010 with that whole iPhone 4 antenna issue, “We’re (Apple) not perfect. Phones aren’t perfect. We want to make all our users happy.” We don’t think that Apple is just sticking their head in the sand and ignoring these issues, so I am confident that Apple will have a fix for this and they will launch it when they have it. As “*Mr.Incredible*”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_Incredibles_characters#Mr._Incredible once said, “We’ll get there when we get there!” In the meantime, if I need to figure out how to get somewhere, I will use the app and take it with a grain of salt — i.e. a paper map in my glove box in case of emergencies.

  • SPECIAL | AirPort Express and 4-Port USB Hub

    Looking for more expandability of your WiFi network and USB connections? Here is it is in one great bundle.

    *Apple AirPort Express Base Station 802.11n Wi-Fi + Targus USB 3.0 Combo Hub (4-Port) for only $142.*