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June 13, 2007 4:23 PM PDT

Happy hour with the iPhone

by Tom Krazit
  • 5 comments

The American public will get its first chance to buy the iPhone at 6 p.m. in each local time zone, Apple confirmed Wednesday.

We don't recommend putting your iPhone in a pint.

(Credit: Casimir Fornalski/CNET News.com)

Somehow, I don't think Apple and AT&T will have two-for-one specials on the iPhone, but my New York-based colleagues will be the first to see how crowds react to the release of the iPhone at 6 p.m. ET. Those of us out here in California will have to wait until 6 p.m. our time for the official release of the phone, in yet another blatant example of East Coast bias.

And yes, Chicago and Denver residents who have to be first on the block with an iPhone will also get to spend Happy Hour standing in line, although you'll probably want to take the day off if you really want to get one. Apple and AT&T are being coy about how many units they expect to have on hand in major stores around the country, but it's not expected to be very many, and presales are not an option.

It also means that those of us following TMHGIH (The Most Hyped Gadget In History) will have to work late on what will probably end up being a beautiful Friday summer evening, thanks very much, Apple. After weeks of speculation about the launch date itself, Steve Jobs decided to end all speculation during his Worldwide Developers Conference keynote, revealing the iPhone would go on sale at 6pm. It took a couple days, however, to confirm whether Apple was aiming for a simultaneous launch or a rolling New-Year's-Eve style event.

June 12, 2007 3:11 PM PDT

Apple's Leopard will use ZFS, but not exclusively

by Tom Krazit
  • 7 comments

Apple has clarified reports regarding the use of Sun's ZFS file system in Leopard, confirming that ZFS is present in the operating system but that Apple has not yet made it the default file system.

Last week, Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz said that Apple planned to announce a switch to ZFS as the basic file system for Mac OS X at its Worldwide Developers Conference. That announcement didn't arrive on Monday as part of the WWDC extravaganza, and then Information Week reported Monday that an Apple executive denied that ZFS was present in Leopard.

The full story emerged on Tuesday: apparently the executive misspoke. Leopard will support two file systems, the HFS+ technology currently found in Mac OS X, as well as ZFS, a next-generation file system developed by Sun and unveiled in 2005. However, HFS+ will remain the default option.

If you're familiar with the ins and outs of file system technology, you'll know the ramifications. If you don't, here's a quick and dirty explanation.

File systems outline how information is stored on a computer. They are complicated beasts that generally are kept in place for years as operating systems change around them. Windows supports two file systems, the older FAT32 technology and the default NTFS technology, which has been around since the introduction of Windows NT in 1993.

Apple's HFS+ was introduced with Mac OS 8.1. Adding ZFS to the mix basically means that you can take advantage of a number of features, like adding huge amounts of storage, that my colleague Declan McCullagh outlines here. At some point, Apple will likely make ZFS the default file system for Mac OS X, but Sun hasn't even gotten around to doing that yet for Solaris 10. These transitions can take years.

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