Apr 18 2009

22 Tips and Apps for Your iPhone’s Camera

The iPhone’s biggest weakness is its 2-megapixel camera. Not to worry, though—we’ve put together a whopping 22 tips and apps to help you get the most out of Apple’s underpowered shooter.

Share

Apr 16 2009

AT&T needs Apple, but does Apple need AT&T?

The chief of AT&T is dying to hold on to its exclusive iPhone deal with Apple, which expires next year. And I can’t blame him.But it might not be a great deal for Apple.

Share

Apr 16 2009

Apple Researching Movement-Aware Interfaces for iPhones

Apple has been conducting ongoing research into how to further improve their mobile device interfaces as evidenced by a couple of patent applications published over the past couple of weeks. Two different patent applications reveal a couple of different approaches to movement-aware interfaces found on portable devices.

Share

Apr 16 2009

Rumor: Upcoming iPhone parts list published

Once again, the folks at DigiTimes have leaked information about a forthcoming Apple product. Citing “Industry sources in Taiwan,”

Share

Apr 15 2009

at&t looks to keep its iPhone exclusive

AT&T’s exclusive deal to sell the iPhone in the U.S. expires next year, and AT&T CEO Stephenson is in talks with Apple for an extension until 2011.

Share

Apr 14 2009

Devs invited to test push notifications in iPhone OS 3.0

Apple sent out an e-mail to developers opening the doors to live push notification testing. Ars looks at push and tells you how it measures up to notifications from SMS and e-mail.

Share

Apr 13 2009

Apple placed chip order for 32GB iPhones

Apple has reportedly ordered 100 million units of 8 gigabit and 16 gigabit NAND flash chips, with the majority of the sizable order is expected to be applied toward the 16 gigabit (Gb) NAND, signaling that a 32 gigabyte (GB) iPhone is in the works to debut in June, said Daniel Amir, a Lazard Capital Markets analyst.

Share

Apr 13 2009

iPhone Jailbreaking Still Going Strong

snydeq writes “Despite the productivity promises of Apple’s forthcoming 3.0 firmware update, jailbreaking should continue to push the iPhone’s productivity envelope, as users increasingly demand the Holy Grail of smartphone power use: applications that run in the background, InfoWorld reports. Copy and paste, video recording and streaming, Internet tethering, and content search are just a few of the features over which iPhone users have sought to jailbreak their devices — a practice Apple itself has done little to crack down on. Jailbreak apps circumvent hardware and software restrictions that Apple says ensure a consistent, responsive user interface and optimal battery endurance. In particular, jailbroken phones can run apps in the background, a capability Apple reserves for its own apps but prohibits in third-party programs. Jay Freeman, creator of the Cydia iPhone installer and Cydia Store, however, believes a free-market approach is the best way to satisfy power users’ demands for features without compromising the performance of their iPhones. And given Apple’s App Store overcrowding, it seems likely that jailbroken phones and app venues like Cydia Store will continue to be popular with iPhone customers and developers, even after the 3.0 firmware ships.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 11 2009

Apple Begins Countdown to 1 Billion IPhone Apps Downloaded

The countdown has begun. Apple posted a Web page on Friday counting down (or actually counting up) to the one billion app downloaded milestone on the App Store.

Share

Apr 11 2009

Rockstar Games Develops Connection Between Flash Gaming, Nintendo DS

An anonymous reader writes “It’s been a long-talked-about but never fully realized aim of developers, publishers and format holders to create a game that runs on multiple platforms, but connects and exchanges assets between them — e.g. you play a game as an FPS on a console/PC but control it as an RTS on mobile devices. Now, Rockstar Games seems to have cracked it, on a small scale, with news that a new Flash game will allow PC gamers to generate in-game cash — true to form for GTA-creator Rockstar, it’s through ‘money laundering’ — that is then transferred to its new Nintendo DS title, Chinatown Wars. GameSpy’s online technology seems to be responsible for this latest gimmick, but most interesting is the idea that this could allow an interface between platforms like the iPhone and consoles as well. How long until an indie developer creates an MMO that has different interfaces for PC and mobile?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share