New Twitter Design Debuts !

Wednesday, January 13, 2010



The famous Micro Blogging Platform has finally transformed to a brand new design. It looks more in line with current web applications and retains its characteristic simplicity it does not include new features, but if it significantly improves the aesthetics and a little accessibility.
 
According to the official blog, a lot of these changes are with a view of the future where if you can add new features. Perhaps the section for more changes has been to design, where you can customize the background and the color of the subject in a more insightful.

I think the change you feel good service, because by now it seemed that it was not working to improve it or to a very slow. Now we have to wait for new features.

Exceptional Eyewear Values, From Zenni

Nowadays most them are having vision difficulties. Vision is so important and it is important for all the human being. So, it is very important for us to take good care of our eyes. Our eyesight should be well taken care of because with out it our life or everything will turn into something that we would not want to have. Nowadays a lot of vision difficulties are caused by viewing the computer monitor for a long period. As a precaution, there are computer glasses eyewears. Currently Eye wear glasses are not cheap. It is pretty much expensive compared to last time. If a normal frame are expensive then what about the stylish frames?

But now there an online optical store which provides quality eyeglasses with all sort branded frames for an affordable prices. The online store is Zenni Optical. The price quoted on their website is pricing which Ur paying for its quality. Zenni Optical sells Stylish Prescription Glasses Online which starts from $8, well that is cheap. 

So if you wanna get a brand new frame now, then don’t hesitate to purchase it from Zenni Optical. Please visit their website today and get a lot of offers and purchase an optical glass for $8 today.

GMail goes offline



Good news, Gmail fans. Google is experimenting with a new ability of Gmail to work offline, when an active Internet connection is not available. This feature relies upon the Gears platform, a browser add-by Google which can plug itself to Internet Explorer, Firefox and comes pre-installed in Chrome.
When offline, you’ll still be able to read retrieved emails, compose, and search. As and when Internet comes online, Gmail will automatically sync the changes you’ve made with Gmail servers. For instance, send unsent messages or check for new messages and retrieve them to your local cache. 

Take a look at this video tour:
 
How to get this feature?
Offline Gmail will be slowly rolled out this week to the English interface of Gmail. Here’s how to enable the feature:
  1. Change the language & Country of your Gmail interface to English & USA.
  2. Make sure you use a browser supported by Gmail Labs and Gears: Internet Explorer 7.0+, Firefox 2.0+, Safari 3.0+, and Google Chrome. You can’t use Gmail Labs in Internet Explorer 6.
  3. Wait until this feature is added to your account. When you see "Offline Gmail" in Gmail Labs, enable the feature, save the changes and click on the "Offline" link that will be displayed next to your username.

Nikon D700 dSLR Cake

Flickr user fsumaria’s Coolest birthday cake – a Nikon D700 DSLR Cake, by her coolest husband..;)

Nikon D700 - 1


Nikon D700 - 2

Nikon D700 - 3


Nikon D700 - 4


Nikon D700 - 5

Nikon D700 - 6

Wind Meter for iPhone - calibrated to reveal the speed of said wind

Thursday, January 7, 2010



Good news, Now sailors have another tempting application to bring out the best from their favorite high-tech gadget. Your iPhone now can become a windspeed instrument as well! Some very clever engineer types realized that the intensity of wind blowing into the microphone of an iPhone (that roaring static we hear when people call us from their boats) could be calibrated to reveal the speed of said wind.

The harder the blow, the more intense the sound—and the higher the wind gauge needle moves. How cool is that! According to reviews, it really works.

Notes from Apple’s iPhone Tech Talk World Tour

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

tech_talks09_iphone

TiPb had a chance to talk to some developers who attended Apple’s recent iPhone Tech Talk World Tour (San Jose, Seattle, New York, Toronto, Paris, London, Hamburg, Bejing, and Tokyo), where they promised expert advice at cities near developers. So how has it gone? The T-Shirt’s given away say it all they “came, saw, and coded”.

There were different tracks for developers to choose from, and one of the complaints we heard was that the devs wished it had been longer so they could have attended them all. Still, we have some notes they were willing to share, after the break!

(And if you think this is just for geeks… well it is, but it explains some of why the iPhone does what it does, and what developers could do to ease some of our frustrations).

WebKit

  • One dev who was new to Apple technologies found WebKit and their specific CSS (-webkit-gradient, -webkit-mask, webkit-box-reflect) to be “astoundingly powerful”. (If you run WebKit or Safari-).
  • Apple stressed the advantages of using WebKit and embedded WebView. The AppStore app is an example of a native app with a WebKit UI made by Apple.
  • A button made in CSS is much lighter than an image file and also scales elegantly (resolution independent).
  • Even a JPG that’s only 50k in size will take up 10 times more memory when it’s decompressed and rendered in a UI.
  • WebKit interfaces can be updated outside of the App Store approval process, so no resubmission just to change UI elements.
  • Client-side database storage API in HTML 5 saves state locally and reloads the next time you view the page.=

App Performance

  • Apple believes every developer should be obsessed about performance.
  • For the end user experience, every fraction of a second is important. They want to load and go, not invest time in waiting for an app to load.
  • iPhone uses 12MB for graphics, 32MB for kernel, 12MB for daemons, 4MB for phone, so for iPhone 2G and 3G, half the memory is gone before any 3rd party app even loads.
  • There’s no swap file, so the size of binaries matter since they’ll be loaded into memory.
  • When a low-memory situation occurs, there’s a warning. On second warning, background apps are killed, on third warning (95%), front-facing app is killed. (Think Safari disappearing and getting dumped back onto the home screen).
  • Apple stressed that developers need to handle these warnings elegantly and free up memory as/when appropriate.
  • A user should never be warned about memory or asked what to do (hello AnDROID!).
  • Where a developer stores cache is important. If a developer stores cache in a location that iTunes backs up, it creates slow iTunesbackups for users. They should cache in temporary areas instead.
  • The iPhone uses a single core processor, but can handle multiple threads. In the future these devices may be multi-core so starting now and building them for that future is a good idea.
  • Apple believes that great apps come from developers who pay attention to details beyond just what’s necessary to get the job done.

What About Those Rejections?

  • The most common reason for a rejection, according to Apple, was when an app crashed on launch.
  • Developers tended to know that if an API was private, they shouldn’t try to make an app that depended on it since it would likely get rejected.
  • No specific rejections were brought up or addressed.
  • One dev we spoke to liked the App Store and Apple as “gatekeeper” because it created greater end-user trust — people were more likely to trust that App Store apps would work and not mess up their phone or do anything criminal.
  • Another dev, when asked about iPhone development vs. another platform, liked that Apple handled all the transactions and getting all the apps in front of all the users, which would be a huge chore and expense otherwise.
  • Yet another dev just thought the size and reach of the App Store made it the best place to develop at the moment.
All in all it sounds like developers enjoyed the free event, and the free coffee, pastry, and t-shirts. Hopefully Apple will continue to provide them next year, and going forward.

Mythical iTablet Competitor CrunchPad Undead — JooJoo Coming for $500

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

joojoo-hands-1-dsc_0090-rm-eng-1260271696_600x398

The CrunchPad has crashed and burned amid antics and accusations worthy of the silliest TV legal dramas (Denny Crane!), but from its ashes has risen might rise the JooJoo. No, really, that’s what they’re calling it because it’s magic.

A 12″ capacitive tablet that runs only a Unix kernel and boots in 9 seconds into a WebKit browser, and… that’s it. Think Chrome OS but not Google’s in a mythical iTablet package but not Apple’s. Other specs include 4GB of storage, WiFi (no cell data), 5 hours of battery life, USB, headphone, and $500 to take home.

We’re with the many other tech’ers who think that’s a hefty price for a mobile web browser, given the price of everything from the iPod touch (or iPhone) to ultra-cheap netbooks, but there may just be a niche for those early adapters who don’t blink at half a grand.

Perhaps not ironically, Steve Jobs is rumored to have said he won’t ship an Apple tablet until the device does more than let people browser the web on the toilet. Whether that means this specific a device is a space Apple isn’t going to enter, or that $500 for anything that won’t run more than just a web browser is a non-starter in the minds of arguably the best product picker of the last 20 years… you tell us. Want?

Apple Removes 1000 Molinker iPhone Apps for Alleged Astroturfing of Fake Reviews

Monday, January 4, 2010

NightCam Pro1

Apple, on orders from Senior VP of Marketing Phil Schiller, has removed all 1000 Molinker-developed iPhone apps from the App Store for allegedly astroturfing the iTunes review system with fake 5-star reviews. Says iPhone camera and video site, iPhoneography, which reprinted an email from a friend named SCW, and jointly followed up with Apple:
Please investigate for I have just looked at 44 of the reviewers who posted reviews for this Molinker Inc app “NightCam Pro” & EVERY Review except 2 of the 44+ are ALL FAKE 5 ★★★★★ reviews. (on my iPhone I could view more reviews but on my computeronly 35 were visible & of the 35 visible 34 ARE fake). If you investigate ALL have ONLY reviewed ONLY Molinker apps. A little odd that 42 of 44 US reviews are poorly written & that all users have only written reviews for either All Molinker photography apps (giving 5 star reviews to 6-7 Molinker apps ONLY no other apps by any other developer) or the same 2 apps. 10 Reviewers who only reviewed NightCam Pro & ColorMagic (5 Stars), 24+ Reviewers have ONLY written reviews for 6-7 other Molinker photography apps (5 Stars) & 1-2 are real Reviews giving a 1 Star review
Schiller’s response:
“Yes, this developer’s apps have been removed from the App Store and their ratings no longer appear either.”
So, was this one of the rare positive uses of Apple’s rejection hammer? Any negatives that could come from it?

iTunes Rewind: Apple Highlights the Best and Top-Selling Apps of 2009

Sunday, January 3, 2010

iTunes Rewind 2009

Apple has once again released their iTunes Rewind listings, highlighting the best, and top-selling iPhone and iPod touch apps of 2009. In the US App Store, it breaks down as follows:
  • Spider: the Secret of Bryce Manor [$2.99 - ] and Real Racing [$4.99 - iTunes link] lead best games
  • Sims 3 [$6.99 - iTunes link] and the Oregon Trail [$4.99 - iTunes link] lead top selling games.
  • ReelDirector [$4.99 - ] and Magellan RoadMate 2010 North America [$79.99 - iTunes link] lead best apps.
  • MobileNavigator North America [$89.99 - iTunes link] and MLB.com At Bat [Currently free - iTunes link] lead top selling apps.
Apple also has lists up for best music, best movies [iTunes link], best TV shows [iTunes link], best audio books [iTunes link], and best podcasts.

Airlock : Lock Your Mac with Your iPhone or iPod touch via Bluetooth

Friday, January 1, 2010

airlock

If you own either an iPhone or iPod touch along with a Mac computer then Airlock may just be the security OS X application you’ve been looking for. For only $7.77 you can have a very effective lock for your Mac computer with just your iPhone or iPod touch.

How does Airlock work? It’s pretty simple, the program determines when you are near your computer. If you leave your computer’s Bluetooth reach with your iPhone or iPod touch, your computer locks itself. As soon as you are back within Bluetooth range it unlocks your computer. If your iPhone/iPod touch is in a place that is out of range and you need access to your computer, simply set Airlock up to allow for your user name and password to gain access.

If any of you give Airlock a try let us know how you like it!