Showing posts with label Radar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Radar. Show all posts

Another developer returns to iPhone post-iPad

Monday, May 31, 2010

darkslide for iphone

Frasier Speirs, one of several well-publicized developers to leave the iPhone over objections to Apple’s App Store policies and controversy surrounding app rejections, has decided to return, post iPad, and his reasons are intriguing:
I suspect that the days of everyone buying a MacBook to get online are soon to be over. I’ve already written about how I see our three-Mac family turning into a one-Mac, three-iPad family over the next hardware cycle and I imagine that scenario repeated industry-wide over time. Already the ratio of iPhone OS devices to Macs is 5:2.
He believes Apple can and will reject apps, and that the frontier days of computing are giving way to the mainstream, appliance future.
iPhone OS is the first mass-market operating system where consumers are no longer afraid to install software on their computers (I’m not counting read-only media software platforms like games consoles here). In a conversation recently, a friend recounted a scene that he passed by in an airport. Four fifty-something women were sitting at a cafe table discussing the latest apps they had downloaded on their iPod touches. New software can’t break your iPhone OS device and, if you don’t like it, total removal is only a couple of taps away.
Speirs also thinks iPads are cheap enough you can buy each year’s new model and still save money compared to traditional computers. And he wants into that ecosystem.

In stock: Ten 1 Pogo Sketch for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Ten One Design Pogo Sketch for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad 

The Ten 1 Pogo Sketch [$14.99 - TiPb store link] is superbly designed using a light-weight aluminum alloy and detailed graphics, and features a look that’s hard to ignore. The soft tip glides easily over the surface of your device, making it fun and easy to sketch, draw characters, or just slide to unlock. Sized for comfort, it does away with inaccuracies common to fingertip-only use.
Features:
  • High-gloss curved pocket clip keeps the stylus handy
  • Works with any combination of gloves and nails
  • Allows you to use your touchscreen device or multi-touch device at a natural drawing angle
  • sleek aluminum design with detailed graphics

AT&T international data plans for iPad come at a hefty price

Thursday, May 27, 2010


att-settings-6

Yesterday AT&T released roaming data plans for the iPad 3G and they do not come cheap. Pricing starts at $25 per month for 20 megabytes and goes as high as $200 for 200 megabytes. Unlike the normal data plans, these international plans do not auto-renew on a month to month basis. Here’s the full breakdown:
  • $24.99/month: 20 MB data
  • $59.99/month: 50 MB data
  • $119.99/month: 100 MB data
  • $199.99/month: 200 MB data
These plans work in over 90 countries and can be accessed directly from your iPad 3G’s cellular data settings. You do have the option to select a start date and AT&T encourages travelers to set this up prior to leaving the country.
What are your thoughts on the above prices? Too much to be paying for data in this day and age? And with the iPad 3G being unlocked and GSM, could pay-as-you-go MicroSIM plans picked up when you visit be a far cheaper alternative (if they become available). Sound off in the comments!

HTC max 4G or a Cloned device?

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

htc max 4gWith cell phones popping up left and right these days, it seems more and more manufactures in the Clone World are trying to outsmart the original proteges. But, to me honest when it comes to anything of luxury, you simply can't fake it. It's almost like trying to compare a $500 bottle of aged wine versus a cheap $5 substitute. While some people that don't drink wine all the time might not know the difference, most anyone with a palate will.

Cell phones that are cloned are the same way. You might be saving a few hundred dollars, but in the end you are skipping out on all the reasons people buy the phone in the first place! Take the HTC max 4G. While this phone is a whopping $800-ish dollars, it also comes with cutting-edge technology one simply cannot fake. If technology isn't really that important to you, you could consider taking a look at the Yota MAX4G Pro HD2. It has a price tag of about $600 less, and it does have a few nice little functions such as the Samsung CPU, 512 RAM and 256M Rom, Windows 6.5 Mobile OS, Wifi, 5.MP camera, GPS built into the phone and a 3.5mm sound jack. In the end, if you want a cheap replica without the horsepower of a Lamborghini - go with the clone. Personally for me? You can take the phone and clone the heck out of it, but the original is always going to be the better route!

UPDATED: Beta back! iPhone OS 4 beta 3 now available for developers

Sunday, May 23, 2010

sdk_hero

Continuing their two-week cycle, Apple has just released iPhone OS 4 beta 3 for developers. You can download it now via developer.apple.com.
What bug fixes and new features lurk within? We’ll have to wait and see (and keep an eye on the comments below…)
UPDATE 1: Apple has (temporarily?) removed the beta download from their developer site. It’s not clear if there’s an issue or not yet, but we’re keeping our eyes open and will update again when (we’re assuming not if) it returns.
UPDATE 2: The beta is back up. Go get it. Again.

iPhone OS 4: orientation lock, iPod controls in fast app switcher

Wednesday, May 19, 2010


iphone_4_fast_app_switcher_orientation_lock_ipod_controls

Today’s iPhone OS 4 beta 3 update has brought with it some interesting new features, including a soft-version of the iPad’s orientation lock and iPod controls added into the fast app switcher (multitasking) UI.

When you double click the home button to bring up the fast app switcher, you can now scroll all the way to the left to get the new orientation lock and iPod controls. The default on the orientation is off but a tap will turn on, or turn off, the lock. (Home screen doesn’t sound like it rotates, however).

iPod controls include back, play/pause, and forward, with the name of the current track written beneath.
The background for the app switcher (and for folders) has also changed from the rubbery, pock-mocked, dark gray of beta 1 and 2 to a new cross-hatched medium gray.

Google prepares for eBook sales, increase competition with Apple

Saturday, May 15, 2010


google-ebook1

According to The Wall Street Journal Google is planning on introducing their very own eBook store as early as this next month, and gearing up once again to go head-to-head with Apple. This news comes just after Apple announced that in just 28 days, iPad users have downloaded over 1.5 million eBooks via iBooks.
“Google says its new service–called Google Editions–will allow users to buy digital copies of books they discover through its book search service. It will also allow book retailers to sell Google Editions on their own sites, taking the bulk of the revenue. Google has yet to release details about pricing and which publishers are expected to participate.”
Unlike on devices such as the iPhone, iPad and Kindle, Google’s approach will be to allow users access to the digital books from a complete range of websites and over various devices.
Would any of our readers prefer Google’s eBooks over Apple’s iBooks? Sound off in the comments below!

How to install any paid or free game or app directly from your iPhone 3G!

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Hi, all Apple iPhone 3G fans.
Finally I have finished my First Unofficial Apple iPhone 3G manual.
Today I start official sales of this unique manual on my website. Let me explain why this manual is so amazing.
This manual is so-called „step-by-step” instructions created for all amateur, newbie and professional iPhone users,  so this is a detailed instructions with pictures and educational videos on 25 sheets.
It means that every iPhone 3G without any basic PC or Mac knowing can easily free his iPhone from Apple, download and install any FREE or PAID app or game from App Store database completely for FREE. You won’t need PC or Mac computer, you won’t need iTunes software. All you need is your iPhone and Internet access. That’s it.
This method is truly unique you won’t find a manual in the Internet explaining this method, I guarantee.
How to install any paid or free game or app directly from your iPhone 3G!
I will explain two methods on how to install any game or app into your iPhone: official and unofficial.
- official method - using App Store database. you can download and install any Free game or app from App Store;
- unofficial method, this method will allow anyone to download and install any PAID game and app directly from your iPhone 3G, without connecting to PC or Mac computer. This method is truly unique, you won’t find anything similar in the Internet.
I ask a small money compensation for this unique manual - $9,00
I have dedicated almost two weeks to create this manual, it took some time to record educational videos and create very detailed instructions, as I said this is really „step-by-step” instructions.  All you need is to download this manual, open it, and then follow all operations step by step, this method works with all iPhone 3G, 100% guarantee.

Ellen makes spoof iPhone commercial. Apple doesn’t think it’s funny

Wednesday, May 12, 2010


Ellen iPhone Ad

Comedian Ellen DeGeneres played a spoof iPhone ad during her Monday talk show. In it, she is glorifying the iPhone, yet having difficulties with texting.

Apple didn’t see the humor in her commercial and complained that she implied that the iPhone is difficult to use. Ellen responded during her Tuesday show by apologizing and explaining that the iPhone is in fact not hard to use, it’s the only phone she can text on, and that she loves her iPhone, iPad, iPod, and even iHop!

Watch the ad and her apology below and let us know what you think. Is Apple being a little too sensitive?
UPDATE: Ellen’s official YouTube video says “no longer available” (all her YouTube videos now say that(?!)) so we’ve switched to whatever non iPhone-friendly version they use on the official website. Sorry!

iPhone OS 4: File transfer via iTunes sync

Monday, May 10, 2010

iPhone OS 4 beta 3 file transfer via iTunes sync

Again it looks like the iPhone is finally getting in iPhone OS 4 what the iPad got in 3.2 with the file/document transfer feature now exposed in iTunes sync.

While the iPad version identifies document-friendly apps (like Apple’s own Keynote, Numbers, and Pages) and lets you find and sync over files, the iPhone OS 4 beta 3 version currently only shows Mail and doesn’t really let you do much. However, it stands to reason this will at least reach feature parity with the iPad when Apple releases iPhone OS 4 to the public later this summer.

Now all we need is an elegant way to share and wirelessly sync those documents across multiple devices and users. MobileMe 2.0, souped up iWork.com 2.0, where are you?

Adobe complaint behind possible DOJ/FTC inquiry into Apple?

Sunday, May 9, 2010

thumb_550_Adobe CEO.PNG

Apple’s lock-out of Adobe CS5 iPhone packager as part of the iPhone OS 4 SDK, thus preventing Adobe from locking developers into CS5, has has allegedly so angered the Flash-maker that they’re rumored to have complained to the Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission, triggering those talks about an inquiry.
Adobe says Apple is stifling competition by barring developers from using Adobe’s products to create applications for iPhones and iPads, said the people who spoke on condition of anonymity because they aren’t authorized to discuss the case.
Adobe, Apple, and the agencies that may or may not be looking into it all declined to comment. Since the smartphone market is thriving, and any developer upset with Apple can choose to develop for Android, webOS, BlackBerry, Nokia, Windows Phone (maybe), etc. — which would ultimately hurt Apple if enough developers decide to do just that — it’s hard to see where government involvement has any place.

And no, you can’t manufacture an artificial “mobile app” market and say Apple has a dominant position in that. Apple has a control on iPhone and iPad apps, that’s it. All other platforms have their own apps completely outside of any Apple involvement or influence. That includes the aforementioned smartphone platforms, Nintendo’s Gameboy and DS lines, Sony’s PSP, Microsoft Windows running or UMPCs and portables (and OS X running on laptops for that matter, which are huge app markets), and — wait for it — the world wide web, which also runs on the iPhone completely outside of Apple’s control.

I understand Adobe being angry — they’re business model requires developers use Flash to build cross-platform apps and native app development hurts them. I understand Flash developers being angry because if they choose to stay Flash-exclusive they lose easy access to the lucrative iPhone/iPad user base. But the case that that anger should translate into government action at this point just doesn’t seem makable.
Then again, this probably isn’t about anything more than headlines right now anyway, is it?

Walkthrough: How to Jailbreak iPhone 3.1.3 with Spirit

Saturday, May 8, 2010


iphone_pirate_2

So with the release of the Spirit jailbreak for iPhone, 3.1.3, it’s only appropriate to post a quick how-to, so here it is.  And of course, with a jailbreaking tutorial, here comes the disclaimer:

If you’re not sure what you’re doing and have misgivings about jailbreaking, you probably should stray away.  I will say, out of all the jailbreaks that have been released, this one is one of the simplest, and I’m talking blackra1n easy.  Walkthrough and video after the break!

TeleNav AT&T Navigator/Rogers Navigator give-away winners!

Friday, May 7, 2010

3885811534_eb7f66423e

Thanks to everyone who joined TeleNav and TiPb on Facebook for the AT&T Navigator/Rogers Navigator 1-year subscription give-away!
The entry was simple, all you had to do was:
  • Become a fan of TeleNav
Tons of you did, and we very much appreciate it. Without further ado, here are the winners this time around (and if you’re not one of them, stay tuned, we have more great give-aways coming your way)
  • mgoff
  • cpeluso
  • beingdrew
  • devonair
  • Crissy557

Next generation iPhone to support 720p HD video recording?

Thursday, May 6, 2010

500x_iphone3

The 4th generation iPhone looks like it will be able to do some high definition (HD) video recording according to the iPhone 4 Beta SDK. A little digging into the code reveals that there are two presets for recording resolution, the current 640×480 (VGA) and a 1280×720 (720p).
  • AVCaptureSessionPreset640×480
  • AVCaptureSessionPreset1280×720
It is looking more and more like Rene will finally get that iPhone HD he has been craving for the past two years. If you were on the fence about upgrading your iPhone does HD video recording sway you to make the purchase?

iPhone Live! Tonight at 8pm ET/5pm PT

Wednesday, May 5, 2010


podcast_iphone_live

iPhone Live! comes to you LIVE tonight at 8pm ET, 5pm PT (12am GMT) so please join Rene, Chad, Leanna, and Georgia to chat about all the week’s iPhone news, how-tos, and app and accessory reviews!

Want to be part of the show?

Grab your iPhone, launch VoiceMemo (or your favorite voice recorder of choice!), and record yourself introducing the show. Tell us your name, where you live, your favorite iPhone app, and finish it off with “…and my favorite podcast is iPhone Live!” Then email it to news (at) tipb (dot) com. We’ll pick one of you, and you’ll be on the show!
  • Example: “Hi, this is Eric from Mountain View, my favorite app is Google Voice (Ad Hoc!), and my favorite podcast is iPhone Live!”

Android tablet shown off running (and crashing) Flash

Android_tablet

An Android-based tablet was captured on video running Flash — or should we say trying to run Flash — before it crashes:
“Here’s a quick and dirty hands-on video review of the Android multi-touch tablet prototype (Android ipad). Yes, it does Adobe flash and air well.”
Ironically, you can hear the cameraman boast how he’s happy he did not purchase an iPad just as he goes to YouTube and the tablet crashes.
(For the record, after watching this video I am perfectly content with my iPad purchase.)
In fairness, this is beta software on a beta device, and it will no doubt improve as they throw time, money, and hardware at it. Then again, it’s 2010 and Apple’s had YouTube on the iPhone since 2007, and now have it on the iPad (running cool to the touch with 10 hours of battery life).

FileMaker Pro 11 and FileMaker Pro Advanced 11

Saturday, May 1, 2010

UI improvements

The most obvious changes to the user interface in FileMaker Pro 11 are found in Table View, where you see fields as columns and records as rows, much like you would in a spreadsheet. Table View is now the default view for new databases. As soon as you name a new database, you start defining fields right in Table View. And since you are actually working in browse mode, you can start entering data at the same time. (ProVue’s Panorama database has had this for a long time.)
As a data-modeling fanatic and notorious killjoy, I worry that FileMaker Pro 11 may have made things easier here than they should be. You can’t create a new table or define a relationship working this way. I will bet a plate of barbecued pork ribs that somebody is going to make a mess of a new database using this new user interface, since it really doesn’t require much thought. On the other hand, careful do-it-yourselfers building flat-file databases (i.e. fairly simple lists) will surely be grateful for the running start that the new interface provides. Experienced developers will probably continue to do things the old-fashioned way, using the Manage Database dialog.
Another neat enhancement to Table View: You can now quickly show or hide fields without having to edit the underlying layout, which wasn’t possible before.

 
The greatly improved table view in FileMaker Pro 11 is the default view when you create a new database, allowing you to create new fields by simply clicking a + button (shown here to the right of the Zip field). In this shot, the user has created some fields, added some data, then created a new field (“#”), moved it into place as the first column, and the user is now changing the type of this field from text to number. Note also that the user has previous defined a Quick Report that groups and counts records by City.
 
FileMaker Pro 11 expands upon dynamic subsummaries, which were introduced in FileMaker Pro 10. With dynamic subsummaries you can total sorted groups of records while you continue to edit data. To set up a dynamic subsummary in FileMaker Pro 10, you had to define the summary calculation (say, count of records by state) in the Manage Database Dialog, then you had to switch into Layout Mode and use a couple of dialogs to set up the subsummary display. In FileMaker Pro 11, you can do all of this on the fly (so to speak) without leaving browse mode. You tell FileMaker Pro what you want to summarize and how (count by state, average by total sales, etc.) and FileMaker does the rest for you: creates the summary field and the subsummary layout part, and displays the results immediately. However, there is one potential gotcha—if you create a subsummary total this way, you won’t be able to format the result, so you might see “7.333334” when you would prefer to see “7.3.” For experienced developers, these changes are not a big deal, but for ordinary do-it-yourself users, they represent a real step forward.

The new Quick Find search field in the Status Toolbar looks like your Web browser’s search field or the quick search fields in many other Mac OS X apps. It simply does a quick search for records that have your find criterion in any of the fields on the current layout. When you need precision, you simply switch into Find mode and enter your find criterion in the right field, as you’ve always done in FileMaker.
Although FileMaker Pro 11 tries to make it unnecessary for you to go under the hood, you will end up in Layout Mode sooner or later. When you do, you’ll notice the new Inspector, which provides quick access to various property palettes that used to be hidden in a variety of modal dialogs. And the Manage Layouts dialog now allows you to organize layouts in folders.

Charts

Perhaps the most exciting new feature (and the top reason to upgrade) is the ability to make charts. This isn’t an entirely new capability for FileMaker Pro; earlier versions could create charts with the help of third-party plug-ins or through the use of ingenious but very complicated calculation techniques. But now charting is available to everybody and is easy to use. It took me only a couple of minutes to create and format my first chart (a bar chart) and then change it into pie chart.


 
FileMaker now provides a variety of chart options allowing you to visualize your data quickly. Here, the user has analyzed 2009 expenses in a pie chart. This chart took less than 2 minutes to set up and format.

Sharing data

Two nifty features in FileMaker Pro 11 relate to the exchange or sharing of data.
The new Snapshot Link saves the precise found set, layout and sort order of your current view in a FileMaker Pro Snapshot Link (.fpsl) file. You can send this little file to another user (who must have FileMaker Pro 11 and access to the database) who can open it and instantly see exactly what you were looking at.
The Snapshot Link file isn’t a true snapshot, as if you made a screen capture; nor does it save the find criteria you might have used to get the records you are looking at. It simply saves the record IDs of the records in your found set. A Snapshot Link won’t reflect records that have been added or deleted after the Snapshot Link has been created. If something has changed in a record, the record will be displayed with the new data. For these reasons, Snapshot Link seems most useful when you’re dealing with relatively stable data and you want to save customized record sets that would be hard to recover otherwise.

Snapshot Link is also a neat way to save your own found set. Say you’re planning a wedding and trying to sort out the guest list. You could create a Snapshot Link to save your mother’s preferred list, and another Snapshot Link to save your own preferred list. Here again, this functionality has been within the reach of experienced developers for a long time, but saving and retrieving found sets involved marking records or capturing record IDs and saving them in the database itself, and in either case required a little intermediate-level scripting. Snapshot Link, on the other hand, is quick and easy.

The new Recurring Imports feature was something that could be done in FileMaker Pro 10 with a little scripting, but FileMaker 11 will write the script for you in response to a couple simple questions. A Recurring Import is simply an import that occurs over and over again. You might use it, for example, to update mortgage rates daily.

For serious developers only

The emphasis in FileMaker 11 seems to be on making things easier for normal, do-it-yourself users who are not experienced developers. Nevertheless, there are a few things in FileMaker Pro 11 for experienced developers to get excited about.

The new Portal Filters option makes it fairly easy to design a portal—a list showing related “child” records. For example, if you’re looking at a record in the CLASSES table, a portal might be used to show the students enrolled in a particular class. Portal filtering allows you to filter that list of related records so that, using our example, you see only students whose current grade in the class is below a certain number.
Now this, too, is something pro developers have been doing for a long time using calc fields and/or scripts. FileMaker Pro 11 makes it easier than ever before, but it stills requires some setup and the writing of a calculation formula, and I suspect it’s still a bit beyond the reach of the average FileMaker user. Experienced developers will be most grateful for this new feature, since it eliminates much of the work they used to have to do to achieve the same result.
Other improvements found exclusively in FileMaker Pro Advanced include a modest simplification of the Custom Menus dialogs and the ability to copy/paste and/or import custom functions.
Perhaps the best news for developers in FileMaker Pro 11 is that the database file format remains .fp7, the format introduced years ago with version 7. In other words, FileMaker Pro 11 does not require you to upgrade all of your existing databases if you don’t want to do so immediately.

Macworld’s buying advice

FileMaker Pro 11 is a solid upgrade with one really exciting new feature (charts) and a whole slew of more modest but nonetheless welcome improvements. If your database needs are very simple indeed, you should consider FileMaker Inc’s consumer database product, Bento (). If you need to share a database, if you are building a relational database, or if you simply need the more advanced scripting and other features found in FileMaker Pro or FileMaker Pro Advanced, then this new version of FileMaker Pro offers Mac (and Windows) users the best combination of power and ease of use you’ll find anywhere. And if you’ve been using spreadsheets to list data because you found the spreadsheet user interface easier to understand or because you needed to chart your data, well, you really ought to take a look at FileMaker Pro 11. You might never launch a spreadsheet again.

eBay Made $400 Million This Year From Its Free iPhone App

Thursday, April 29, 2010

According to eBay CEO John Donahoe, shoppers have already spent about $400 million on the popular commerce site using the company’s free iPhone application.

The number pales in comparison with eBay’s total sales figure ($59.7 billion last year), but it’s fairly significant considering the fact that the iPhone has a relatively small market share – about 15% of the smartphone segment – and mobile payment transactions are still new to many. Who would have predicted around half a billion dollar in sales a year would be recorded through the eBay iPhone app when it debuted on the App Store last year?

According to this report by the Financial Times, some wealthy people have used the mobile app to buy a Lamborghini, a Bentley and a $150,000 boat. And if Mobile Marketer heard Donahoe right when he talked numbers at a summit in Las Vegas, the Lamborghini went for $350,000. Talk about being at ease with making purchases from mobile devices.

Most likely, these are the high-profile exceptions to the rule and most people use the app to buy books, clothing and electronics much like regular eBay shoppers do. In total, approximately 4.6 million iPhone owners have downloaded and installed the app to date.

Adobe Gets Aggressive With iPhone Flash Failure Message

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Adobe's Flash supports a large portion of the internet's rich content. And it will soon be coming to almost all smart phones, opening a world of internet possibilities. All the smart phones, that is, except one of the most popular smart phones on the market -- Apple's iPhone.

Apple remains cold and aloof about the topic of Flash. While the iPhone could easily support hardware-accelerated Flash, CEO Steve Jobs has stated in interviews that Flash is irrelevant and not something that iPhone customers have demanded. He insists the iPhone is the perfect internet phone -- even if it can't run Flash.

Adobe seems to be hoping to push Apple's customers to demand the feature with a new humorously passive aggressive browser failure message.

On the iPhone customers trying to use Flash now get a message stating:

Apple restricts the use of technologies required by products like Flash Player. Until Apple eliminates these restrictions, Adobe cannot provide Flash Player for the iPhone or iPod Touch.

Before the message merely read:

To view this content upgrade your browser and flash plug-in.

Will the new message inspire users to complain to Apple, or will it merely annoy iPhone users, making Adobe look bad? It should be interesting to see how Apple's customers react to the new, more pointed error message.

Streaming NBA Games Available For iPhone, Android Phones

Sunday, April 25, 2010

The National Basketball Association is now offering mobile phone owners the ability to watch entire live games for $40 per year.

Just a few games into the 2009-2010 NBA season, this is the first time entire games are available for streaming -- only game highlights were previously available through an official service.

There are now three methods to watch complete games in the NBA: via TV, PC, or now using a mobile phone. Initial estimates report 59M mobile phone owners have the ability to watch streaming NBA games using their mobile phones.

The coverage is available through AT&T and T-Mobile, with Verizon Wireless beginning service on November 6. Apple iPhone and Google Android phone owners have access to the streaming feature now, but RIM BlackBerry owners are expected to have streaming NBA coverage at some point in the near future.

Mobile subscribers can watch 40 live games each week while accessing game statistics and game replays. In addition, it's possible to record 30-second video clips that can be watched up to 48 hours after the game ends.