Mar 4 2009

Twitter, Google Maps Used To Track Down Two Missing Skiers

Yesterday, a group of technology entrepreneurs from the UK on a skiing vacation in the Swiss Alps (Verbier) lost two of their party around 4 PM CET. Other members of the group put out a request on Twitter in order to learn the numbers of their mobile phones, so they could use the signals to track them down.

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Mar 3 2009

7 Must-Have Additions for Next iPhone: iPhone Wishlist 2009

I don’t know how you feel, but I think the world is ready for a new and improved iPhone. Yes, it was the best phone that 2008 brought out but with the likes of the Palm Pre, HTC Touch Diamond2 and HTC Magic about to hit town, the title for Best Phone of 2009 may just go elsewhere.

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Mar 3 2009

Detecting Click Tracks

jamie found a blog entry by Paul Lamere, working for audio company Echo Nest, in which he experiments with detecting which songs use a click track. Lamere gives this background: “Sometime in the last 10 or 20 years, rock drumming has changed. Many drummers will now don headphones in the studio (and sometimes even for live performances) and synchronize their playing to an electronic metronome — the click track. …some say that songs recorded against a click track sound sterile, that the missing tempo deviations added life to a song.” Lamere’s experiments can’t be called “scientific,” but he does manage to tease out some interesting conclusions about songs and artists past and present using Echo Nest’s developer API.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 2 2009

Apple iPhone controls over 66% of all mobile web use

In its first detailed look at web market share for cellphones, a research firm has found that Apple’s iPhone represents a staggering 66.61 percent of mobile traffic while its competitors have only just gained a foothold.

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Mar 2 2009

This iPhone App Will Result In At Least One Accidental Shoot

The RNSK “Bang! Bang!” iPhone app recreates the sound of several firearms using authentic Hollywood special effects, and will probably get you shot up for real. You even hold it like a real gun.

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Mar 2 2009

Reading the New York Times On a Kindle 2

reifman links to his thorough and thoughtful review of the experience of reading a newspaper on the Kindle 2. “I’ve been eager to try The New York Times on the Kindle 2; here’s my review with a basic video walk-through and screenshots. I give the Kindle 2 version of The Times a B. Software updates could bring it up to an A-. Kindle designers should have learned more from the iPhone 3G. Unfortunately, my Kindle display scratched less than 24 hours after it arrived. As I detail in the review, Amazon customer service was not very accommodating. Is it my fault — or will Kindle 2 evolve into an Apple 1G Nano-like .5M settlement? You can read about Hearst’s e-reader for newspapers from earlier today on Slashdot.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 1 2009

Should Cell Phone Jamming be Legal?

Cops, jails, hospitals, and even theaters argue they have legitimate reasons to block cell phone communications.

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Mar 1 2009

Cloud file sharing on the iPhone, four ways

Among the crowded field of cloud sharing and file synchronization services, there are plenty of interesting options (we’ve been partial to Dropbox around here, but check around for more), but when you add ‘must work well with iPhone’ to the requirements list, the choices narrow a bit.

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Mar 1 2009

Japanese "Hate" For the iPhone All a Big Mistake

MBCook writes “AppleInsider has posted a great article explaining that Wired’s story about Japanese iPhone hate was completely false and has been edited at least twice. The comments in the article were recycled and taken out of context, with those interviewed blogging about the mistakes. The piece then goes on to analyze the iPhone’s standing in Japan, as well as some of the major factors working for and against it. At last it points out that the Wall Street Journal tried the same myth of failure just after the phone’s launch in Japan, recycled from a myth the year before, pushed by a research company with a possible anti-Apple agenda.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 1 2009

Japanese "hate" for iPhone all a big mistake

A report intending to portray the iPhone as “hated” in the Japanese market turns out to have been built upon fake quotations from industry writers and observers who were misrepresented by remarks attributed to them that they never made. Their actual comments on the iPhone’s prospects in Japan are far more interesting.

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