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After a lengthy standing ovation as Steve Jobs came onstage, he said the following:
"I'm very happy to be here today with you all. As some of you know, about five months ago I had a liver transplant. I now have the liver of a mid-20s person who died in a car crash and was generous enough to donate their organs. I am alive because of their generosity. I hope we can all be that generous. I'd like to thank everyone in the Apple community for their concern. It means a lot. I'd like to thank Tim Cook, and everyone at Apple who rose to the occasion. Thank you guys."
Among the changes in iPhone OS 3.1:
Genius Recommendations for Apps - Get recommendations for apps you might like based on apps you’ve already downloaded.
Genius Mixes - Have iTunes create up to 12 playlists based on what’s already in your library. You don’t even have to choose a sample song.
Download Ringtones Wirelessly - Choose from thousands of iPhone ringtones on the iTunes Store and buy them with a tap.
Organize Apps in iTunes - Use iTunes on your computer to drag apps onto virtual Home screens, then sync them to your iPhone.
Additionally, iPhone OS 3.1 also includes these features and updates:
iPhone OS 3.1 is free for all 3.0 users (including iPod touch users).
Besides that, Apple released iTunes 9.0, which includes the following:
How about some hardware updates? Cue the iPod touch. The 8GB model drops to $199. There is now a 64GB model ($399), and it and the 32GB model ($299) contain under the hood changes: these models are 50 percent faster, and add support for Open GL | ES version 2.0. Sorry guys, no camera.
How about the iPod classic? Rumor was Apple might dump this old favorite, but that's not the case. Instead, capacity is being upped to 160GB, with the same size, and the same price, $249.
iPod shuffle? Apple said, responding to criticism about requiring on-cord controls to use it, that they're working with headphone makers to include the integrated shuffle control. New colors for the shuffle are black, silver, pink, green, and blue, with the 2GB model now $59 and the 4GB model still $79. There's also a new iPod shuffle special edition, $99 for 4GB, made of polished stainless steel.
The iPod nano, as expected, gets a video camera on the back. This will place it in competition with the Flip's video recorders, which Jobs held up as an example of an endangered species, er, sorry, as a portable video recorder that's caught on.
Additional changes: a larger 2.2-inch display, a built-in FM radio with live pause (meaning Tivo-like functionality) and iTunes Tagging. iTunes Tagging allows users to tag a song the like on FM, and then preview and purchase that song when they sync to iTunes. Additionally, the iPod nano now has a built-in pedometer.
Pricing: the 8GB model for $149 and a 16GB model for $179, and nine colors including silver, black, purple, blue, green, orange, yellow, (PRODUCT) RED and pink.
That's it guys, but isn't it enough? I certainly wasn't expecting the iPhone OS 3.1 today, so that's like bonus coverage. Definitely an Apple event full of great announcements, albeit mostly (with the exception of the iPhone OS 3.l) music-related.
Oh, and no Beatles on iTunes. Sob!